| Minn. Stat. § 260C.163
Minnesota
Statutes
Public Welfare and Related Activities (Ch. 245-267)
Chapter
260C. Child Protection
Procedures
260C.163. Hearing
Subdivision
1. General.
(a) Except for hearings arising under section 260C.425, hearings on any
matter shall be without a jury and may be conducted in an informal manner.
In all adjudicatory proceedings involving a child alleged to be in need
of protection or services, the court shall admit only evidence that would
be admissible in a civil trial. To be proved at trial, allegations of
a petition alleging a child to be in need of protection or services must
be proved by clear and convincing evidence.
(b)
Except for proceedings involving a child alleged to be in need of protection
or services and petitions for the termination of parental rights, hearings
may be continued or adjourned from time to time. In proceedings involving
a child alleged to be in need of protection or services and petitions
for the termination of parental rights, hearings may not be continued
or adjourned for more than one week unless the court makes specific findings
that the continuance or adjournment is in the best interests of the child.
If a hearing is held on a petition involving physical or sexual abuse
of a child who is alleged to be in need of protection or services or neglected
and in foster care, the court shall file the decision with the court administrator
as soon as possible but no later than 15 days after the matter is submitted
to the court. When a continuance or adjournment is ordered in any proceeding,
the court may make any interim orders as it deems in the best interests
of the minor in accordance with the provisions of sections 260C.001 to
260C.421.
(c)
Except as otherwise provided in this paragraph, the court shall exclude
the general public from hearings under this chapter and shall admit only
those persons who, in the discretion of the court, have a direct interest
in the case or in the work of the court.
(d)
Adoption hearings shall be conducted in accordance with the provisions
of laws
relating to adoptions.
Subd.
2. Right to participate in proceedings.
A child who is the subject of a petition, and the parents, guardian, or
legal custodian of the child have the right to participate in all proceedings
on a petition. Official tribal representatives have the right to participate
in any proceeding that is subject to the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978,
United States Code, title 25, sections 1901 to 1963.
Any grandparent of the
child has a right to participate in the proceedings to the same extent
as a parent, if the child has lived with the grandparent within the two
years preceding the filing of the petition. At the first hearing following
the filing of a petition, the court shall ask whether the child has lived
with a grandparent within the last two years, except that the court need
not make this inquiry if the petition states that the child did not live
with a grandparent during this time period. Failure to notify a grandparent
of the proceedings is not a jurisdictional defect.
If,
in a proceeding involving a child in need of protection or services, the
responsible social services agency recommends transfer of permanent legal
and physical custody to a relative, the relative has a right to participate
as a party, and thereafter shall receive notice of any hearing in the
proceedings.
Subd.
3. Appointment of counsel.
(a) The child, parent, guardian or custodian has the right to effective
assistance of counsel in connection with a proceeding in juvenile court.
(b)
Except in proceedings where the sole basis for the petition is habitual
truancy, if the child, parent, guardian, or custodian desires counsel
but is unable to employ it, the court shall appoint counsel to represent
the child who is ten years of age or older or the parents or guardian
in any case in which it feels that such an appointment is appropriate.
(c)
In any proceeding where the sole basis for the petition is habitual truancy,
the child, parent, guardian, and custodian do not have the right to appointment
of a public defender or other counsel at public expense. However, before
any out-of-home placement, including foster care or inpatient treatment,
can be ordered, the court must appoint a public defender or other counsel
at public expense in accordance with paragraph (b).
(d)
Counsel for the child shall not also act as the child's guardian ad litem.
(e)
In any proceeding where the subject of a petition for a child in need
of protection or services is not represented by an attorney, the court
shall determine the child's preferences regarding the proceedings, if
the child is of suitable age to express a preference.
Subd.
4. County attorney.
Except in adoption proceedings, the county attorney shall present the
evidence upon request of the court. In representing the agency, the county
attorney shall also have the responsibility for advancing the public interest
in the welfare of the child.
Subd.
5. Guardian ad litem.
(a) The court shall appoint a guardian ad litem to protect the interests
of the minor when it appears, at any stage of the proceedings, that the
minor is without a parent or guardian, or that the minor's parent is a
minor or incompetent, or that the parent or guardian is indifferent or
hostile to the minor's interests, and in every proceeding alleging a child's
need for protection or services under section 260C.007, subdivision 6,
except proceedings where the sole allegation is that the child is a runaway
or habitual truant. In any other case the court may appoint a guardian
ad litem to protect the interests of the minor when the court feels that
such an appointment is desirable. The court shall appoint the guardian
ad litem on its own motion or in the manner provided for the appointment
of a guardian ad litem in the district court. The court may appoint separate
counsel for the guardian ad litem if necessary.
(b)
A guardian ad litem shall carry out the following responsibilities:
(1)
conduct an independent investigation to determine the facts relevant to
the situation of the child and the family, which must include, unless
specifically excluded by the court, reviewing relevant documents; meeting
with and observing the child in the home setting and considering the child's
wishes, as appropriate; and interviewing parents, caregivers, and others
with knowledge relevant to the case;
(2)
advocate for the child's best interests by participating in appropriate
aspects of the case and advocating for appropriate community services
when necessary;
(3)
maintain the confidentiality of information related to a case, with the
exception of sharing information as permitted by law to promote cooperative
solutions that are in the best interests of the child;
(4)
monitor the child's best interests throughout the judicial proceeding;
and
(5)
present written reports on the child's best interests that include conclusions
and recommendations and the facts upon which they are based.
(c)
Except in cases where the child is alleged to have been abused or neglected,
the court may waive the appointment of a guardian ad litem pursuant to
clause (a), whenever counsel has been appointed pursuant to subdivision
2 or is retained otherwise, and the court is satisfied that the interests
of the minor are protected.
(d)
In appointing a guardian ad litem pursuant to clause (a), the court shall
not appoint the party, or any agent or employee thereof, filing a petition
pursuant to section 260C.141.
(e)
The following factors shall be considered when appointing a guardian ad
litem in a case involving an Indian or minority child:
(1)
whether a person is available who is the same racial or ethnic heritage
as the child or, if that is not possible;
(2)
whether a person is available who knows and appreciates the child's racial
or ethnic heritage.
(f)
The court shall require a background study for each guardian ad litem
as provided under section 518.165. The court shall have access to data
collected pursuant to section 245C.32 for purposes of the background study.
Subd.
6. Examination of child.
In any child in need of protection or services proceeding, neglected and
in foster care, or termination of parental rights proceeding the court
may, on its own motion or the motion of any party, take the testimony
of a child witness informally when it is in the child's best interests
to do so. Informal procedures that may be used by the court include taking
the testimony of a child witness outside the courtroom. The court may
also
require counsel for any party to the proceeding to submit questions to
the court before the child's testimony is taken, and to submit additional
questions to the court for the witness after questioning has been completed.
The court may excuse the presence of the child's parent, guardian, or
custodian from the room where the child is questioned in accordance with
subdivision 7.
Subd.
7. Waiving presence of child, parent.
The court may waive the presence of the minor in court at any stage of
the proceedings when it is in the best interests of the minor to do so.
In any proceeding, the court may temporarily excuse the presence of the
parent or guardian of a minor from the hearing when it is in the best
interests of the minor to do so. The attorney or guardian ad litem, if
any, has the right to continue to participate in proceedings during the
absence of the minor, parent, or guardian.
Subd.
8. Rights of parties at hearing.
The minor and the minor's parent, guardian, or custodian are entitled
to be heard, to present evidence material to the case, and to cross-examine
witnesses appearing at the hearing.
Subd.
9. Factors in determining neglect.
In determining whether a child is neglected and in foster care, the court
shall consider, among other factors, the following:
(1)
the length of time the child has been in foster care;
(2)
the effort the parent has made to adjust circumstances, conduct, or conditions
that necessitates the removal of the child to make it in the child's best
interest to be returned to the parent's home in the foreseeable future,
including the use of rehabilitative services offered to the parent;
(3)
whether the parent has visited the child within the three months preceding
the filing of the petition, unless extreme financial or physical hardship
or treatment for mental disability or chemical dependency or other good
cause prevented the parent from visiting the child or it was not in the
best interests of the child to be visited by the parent;
(4)
the maintenance of regular contact or communication with the agency or
person temporarily responsible for the child;
(5)
the appropriateness and adequacy of services provided or offered to the
parent to facilitate a reunion;
(6)
whether additional services would be likely to bring about lasting parental
adjustment enabling a return of the child to the parent within an ascertainable
period of time, whether the services have been offered to the parent,
or, if services were not offered, the reasons they were not offered; and
(7)
the nature of the efforts made by the responsible social services agency
to rehabilitate and reunite the family and whether the efforts were reasonable.
Subd.
10. Waiver.
(a) Waiver of any right which a child has under this chapter must be an
express waiver voluntarily and intelligently made by the child after the
child has been fully and effectively informed of the right being waived.
(b)
Waiver of a child's right to be represented by counsel provided under
the juvenile court rules must be an express waiver voluntarily and intelligently
made by the child after the child has been fully and effectively informed
of the right being waived. In determining whether a child has voluntarily
and intelligently waived the right to counsel, the court shall look to
the totality of the circumstances which includes but is not limited to
the child's age, maturity, intelligence, education, experience, and ability
to comprehend, and the presence and competence of the child's parents,
guardian, or guardian ad litem. If the court accepts the child's waiver,
it shall state on the record the findings and conclusions that form the
basis for its decision to accept the waiver.
Subd.
11. Presumptions regarding truancy or educational neglect.
(a) A child's absence from school is presumed to be due to the parent's,
guardian's, or custodian's
failure to comply with compulsory instruction laws if the child is under
12 years old and the school has made appropriate efforts to resolve the
child's attendance problems; this presumption may be rebutted based on
a showing by clear and convincing evidence that the child is habitually
truant. A child's absence from school without lawful excuse, when the
child is 12 years old or older, is presumed to be due to the child's intent
to be absent from school; this presumption may be rebutted based on a
showing by clear and convincing evidence that the child's absence is due
to the failure of the child's parent, guardian, or custodian to comply
with compulsory instruction laws, sections 120A.22 and 120A.24.
(b)
Consistent with section 125A.091, subdivision 5, a parent's refusal to
provide the parent's child with sympathomimetic medications does not constitute
educational neglect.
CREDIT(S)
Laws 1999, c. 139, art.
3, § 13. Amended by Laws 2000, c. 260, § 35; Laws
2000, c. 357, § 1; Laws 2001, c. 178, art. 1, § 44; Laws 2001,
1st Sp., c. 6, art. 3, § 15, eff. July 1, 2001; Laws 2002, c. 220,
art. 6, § 12; Laws 2002, c. 314, § 4; Laws 2003, 1st Sp., c.
2, art. 7, § 4; Laws 2004, c. 294, art. 5, § 17; Laws 2005,
1st Sp., c. 4, art. 1, § 48, eff. July 15, 2005.
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