(Cite
as: 147 P.3d 306)
Court
of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma,Division No. 3.
In
the Matter of the ADOPTION OF R.L.A., a Minor Child,
Jeremy
Dewayne Overton and Jennifer Lynn Overton, Petitioners/Appellants,
v.
William
Eagle Lee Arpoika, Respondent/Appellee.
No.
103,076.
Released
for Publication by Order of the Courtof Civil Appeals of
Oklahoma, Division No. 3.
Sept.
22, 2006.
OPINION
ADAMS,
Judge.
¶
1
The mother (Mother) and stepfather (collectively, Petitioners) of the minor
child R.L.A. appeal the denial of their Application For Order
Determining Child Eligible For Adoption Without Consent of Natural Parent,
arguing the trial court incorrectly applied the Indian Child Welfare
Act (ICWA), 25 U.S.C. §
1901 et
seq., and required them to prove the factual bases for their
application by proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
Because we conclude the heightened burden of proof required by
25 U.S.C. §
1912(f)
applies only to the federally required determination “that
the continued custody of the child by the parent or
Indian custodian is likely to result in serious emotional or
physical damage to the child,”
we reverse the trial court's order and remand the case
for determination based upon the correct burden of proof.
¶
2
Respondent (Father), Mother, and R.L.A. lived together from July of
2000 until *308 November of 2002.
Mother filed for divorce from Father in March of 2003.
Father was incarcerated for several violations of law beginning in
June of 2003 under a delayed sentencing program.
A divorce was granted in July of 2003, and Mother
received custody of R.L.A. Father was ordered to have no
visitation with R.L.A. “due
to his incarceration with the Department of Corrections.”
¶
3
In September of 2003, when a decree memorializing an agreement
setting child support was filed, Father was still incarcerated.
He was released from custody and placed on probation in
October of 2003.
According to his testimony, after his release he worked for
room and board on a family member's ranch.
Father was re-incarcerated in late February of 2004 for a
second violation of law, and the probation for the prior
convictions was revoked.
¶
4
In the meantime, Petitioners married in late January of 2004.
They filed their application for adoption without Father's consent on
April 13, 2005.
The application alleged that Father's consent was not required under
10 O.S.2001 §
7505-4.2(B)(1)FN1 and 10 O.S.2001 §
7505-4.2(H)(1).FN2 At
that time, Father was still incarcerated.
He remained incarcerated until December 17, 2005, and appeared and
testified at the February 3, 2006 hearing on the application.
FN1.
This
subsection provides, in pertinent part:
B.
Consent
to adoption is not required from a parent who, for
a period of twelve (12) consecutive months out of the
last fourteen (14) months immediately preceding the filing of a
petition for adoption of a child ...,
has willfully failed, refused, or neglected to contribute to the
support of such minor:
1.
In substantial compliance with an order entered by a court
of competent jurisdiction adjudicating the duty, amount, and manner of
support.
FN2.
This
subsection provides:
“Consent
to adoption is not required from a parent who fails
to establish and/or maintain a substantial and positive relationship with
a minor for a period of twelve (12) consecutive months
out of the last fourteen (14) months immediately preceding the
filing of a petition for adoption of the child.”
¶
5
Father claimed that the minor child was eligible for enrolled
membership in the Muscogee (Creek) Nation due to his own
enrollmentFN3 and that, as a consequence, the ICWA applied.
Both Petitioners and Father, in their respective closing arguments, agreed
that Petitioners were required to prove the factual elements of
their application by “clear
and convincing evidence.”
However, the trial court imposed a “beyond
a reasonable doubt”
standard, concluding that it was required by the ICWA, and
denied Petitioners' application.
FN3.
Tribal
notification was not at issue.
The Muscogee (Creek) Nation was notified of the proceedings and
stated, in a January 30, 2006 letter, that it “will
consent to and support”
the adoption of the minor child.
[1]
¶
6
At the outset, we must reject Petitioners' suggestion that because
a stepparent sought to adopt, the trial court proceedings herein
were ones “springing
out of a divorce action”
and are therefore exempt from the ICWA under 25 U.S.C.
§
1903(1).
The parties to a divorce are the husband and wife
seeking to dissolve the marital union, not a subsequent spouse
of one of them who has become a stepparent.
Proceedings for adoption without consent are not matters “springing
out of a divorce action”
but instead are independent statutory proceedings.
¶
7
Moreover, a stepparent is not “one
of the parents”
whose claim is one “springing
out of a divorce action”
under the ICWA because under the definitions set forth in
25 U.S.C. §
1903(2),
a stepparent is specifically defined as one of the persons
who qualifies as an “extended
family member.”
An “extended
family member”
is not one of the parents.
¶
8
Petitioners ask that this Court “only
make a determination that ICWA should not apply to a
step parent adoption, because the child's custodial biological parent who
is participating in the adoption process, [sic] continues to have
the fundamental right to determine if his/her child shall participate
in any Indian heritage.”
This argument is too restrictive a view of the process
and ignores that the federal statutory scheme recognizes rights of
tribes, Indian parents, and an Indian child's extended family under
tribal customs when dealing with the custody of an Indian
child.FN4
FN4.
In
addition, when enacting the ICWA, Congress specifically noted that an
“alarmingly
high percentage”
of Indian children were being placed in non-Indian homes, 25
U.S.C. §
1901(4),
and, in 25 U.S.C. §
1902,
Congress declared “it
is the policy of this Nation to protect the best
interests of Indian children and to promote the stability and
security of Indian tribes and families”
by establishing “minimum
Federal standards”
for the placement of Indian children into “adoptive
homes which will reflect the unique values of Indian culture.”
The request by Petitioners essentially asks the courts to ignore
the stated policies and findings of Congress when a stepparent
is involved in adoption proceedings.
No authority for this proposition is given, and we will
not create such an exception in derogation of the expressions
by Congress via the judicial process.
*309 [2]
¶
9
We also must reject the suggestion by Petitioners based upon In
re B.R.W., 2003 OK CIV APP 92, 78 P.3d 1243, that the
ICWA does not apply. B.R.W. applied the Indian family exception described in In
the Matter
of Adoption of D.M.J, 1985 OK 92, 741 P.2d 1386.
The continued viability of that exception was rejected in In
the Matter
of Baby Boy L, 2004 OK 93, 103 P.3d 1099, and the Court expressly
overruled D.M.J. and several other cases applying that exception.
Consequently, the determination of the non-applicability of the ICWA due
to the Indian family exception in B.R.W., since explicitly rejected, does not advance the analysis here.
¶
10
It is undisputed that R.L.A. qualifies as an Indian child
as that term is defined in both the Oklahoma Indian
Child Welfare Act (OICWA) and ICWA. See 10 O.S.2001 §
40.2(2)
and 25 U.S.C. §
1903(4).
A child custody proceeding is defined, under §
1903(1)(ii),
as including and meaning “any
action resulting in the termination of the parent-child relationship”
as well as, under §
1903(1)(iv),
“any
action resulting in a final decree of adoption.”
¶
11
The Legislature has provided in the OICWA that with the
exceptions of “[a]
child custody proceeding arising from a divorce proceeding,”
10 O.S.2001 §
40.3(A)(1),
or one from an adjudication of delinquency “unless
there has been a request for termination of parental rights,”
10 O.S.2001 §
40.3(A)(2),
the OICWA “applies
to all child custody proceedings involving any Indian child.”
10
O.S.2001 §
40.3(A).
Further, the OICWA provides that it “applies
to all state voluntary and involuntary child custody court proceedings
involving Indian children, regardless
of whether or not the children involved are in the
physical or legal custody of an Indian parent or Indian
custodian at the time state proceedings are initiated,”
10 O.S.2001 §
40.3(B).
(Emphasis
added.)
However, save and excepting when an emergency removal of an
Indian child occurs, the OICWA does not specify the burden
of proof for proceedings. FN5 The
expressed focus of the OICWA is to “ensure
that the intent and provisions of the federal Indian Child Welfare Act are enforced.”
10
O.S.2001 §
40.1.
Thus, we must look to the ICWA to discover any
increased burden of proof on Petitioners, and the ICWA was
the basis of the trial court's decision.
FN5.
For
an emergency removal, the OICWA provides that “clear
and convincing evidence and the testimony of at least one
qualified expert witness”
must support the trial court's determination that “custody
of the child by the parent or Indian custodian is
likely to result in serious emotional or physical damage”
for a pre-adjudicatory custody order for the emergency removal of
an Indian child from a parent or Indian custodian to
remain in effect for more than thirty days, although such
a pre-adjudicatory custody order may be extended for an additional
period of sixty days for “good
and sufficient cause shown,”
10 O.S.2001 §
40.5(B).
Similarly,
the ICWA provides that “[n]o
foster care placement”
may be ordered in an involuntary proceeding “in
the absence of a determination, supported by clear and convincing
evidence, including testimony of qualified expert witnesses, that the continued
custody of the child by the parent or Indian custodian
is likely to result in serious emotional or physical damage
to the child.”
25
U.S.C. §
1912(e).
[3][4]
¶
12
In order to obtain an order determining a child eligible
for adoption without the consent of a natural parent, the
prospective adoptive parents have the burden of proving the existence
of one or more of the statutory grounds for such
an order, as delineated in 10 O.S.2001 §
7505-4.2
by clear and convincing evidence.Merrell
v. Merrell, 1985 OK 107, 712 P.2d 35.
The question presented here is whether individuals seeking to adopt
an “Indian
child,”
as defined in the ICWA, must be held to a
higher standard of proof on the facts supporting those grounds.
*310 ¶
13
The conclusion that Petitioners had a “beyond
a reasonable doubt”
burden of proof on the factual questions necessary to prove
the grounds asserted in their application must be premised, if
at all, on the language of 25 U.S.C. §
1912(f),
which provides:
No
termination of parental rights may be ordered in such proceeding
in the absence of a determination, supported by evidence beyond
a reasonable doubt, including testimony of qualified expert witnesses, that
the continued custody of the child by the parent or
Indian custodian is likely to result in serious emotional or
physical damage to the child.
¶
14
Any reasonable grammatical reading of this statute yields the conclusion
that it only requires “evidence
beyond a reasonable doubt, including testimony of qualified expert witnesses”
to demonstrate “that
the continued custody of the child by the parent or
Indian custodian is likely to result in serious emotional or
physical damage to the child.”
It is silent concerning the burden of proof on other
issues in a termination case.
¶
15
Because no provisions of the ICWA displace the burden of
proof on other issues, we can find no proper basis
for imposing a higher standard of proof on Petitioners than
they would have if this case did not involve an
Indian child.
In so concluding, we join the courts of numerous other
states, which have held that the state-law mandated burden of
proof is applicable to state law requirements for termination and
that the burden of proof provided in §
1912(f)
applies only to the specific factual determination required by that
section.See Termination
of Parental Rights to Daniel R.S., 286 Wis.2d 278, 706 N.W.2d 269 (2005).FN6
FN6.
This
well-reasoned opinion includes, at Footnote 62 on page 321, citations
to other states which have adopted a dual burden of
proof in ICWA cases.
Our research has revealed no state which has squarely addressed
this issue and reached an opposite conclusion.
¶
16
We reach this conclusion aware of the provisions of OUJI-Juv.
No. 5.23, and similar Uniform Jury Instructions for Juvenile Cases,
which would require the State to prove all of the
elements of a termination case beyond a reasonable doubt where
the ICWA is applicable.
The drafting committee's premise for requiring a unitary burden of
proof is unconvincing, and to some extent inaccurate.
¶
17
In its Introductory Note to Chapter Five of the Uniform
Jury Instructions for Juvenile Cases, which prefaces the instructions concerning
ICWA cases, the committee states:
Section
1912(f), supra, specifies a beyond a reasonable doubt standard of proof for
termination of parental rights proceedings.
A number of other jurisdictions use a dual standard of
proof in ICWA cases in which a clear and convincing
standard is applied to the state law requirements for termination
of parental rights and the reasonable doubt standard is applied
only to the requirement in 25 U.S.C. §
1912(f)
that continued custody by the parent is likely to result
in serious emotional or physical damage to the child. E.g., In
re H.A.M., 25 Kan.App.2d 289, 961 P.2d 716, 719 (1998).
The prevailing practice in Oklahoma trial courts has been to
use the reasonable doubt standard for both the state law
requirements for termination of parental rights and the requirements in
25 U.S.C. §
1912(f),
however.
In addition, in In
the Matter
of T.L., 2003 OK CIV APP 49, ¶
15,
71 P.3d 43, the Oklahoma Court of Civil Appeals applied
the reasonable doubt standard to both the requirements in 25
U.S.C. §
1912(f)
and the Oklahoma state law requirements that the parent failed
to correct conditions leading to adjudication and that the child
had been in foster care for 15 of the 22
months preceding the filing of the termination proceedings.
Using the reasonable doubt standard for both the state law
requirements and the requirements in 25 U.S.C. §
1912(f)
avoids the difficulty of explaining different standards of proof to
the jury, and is therefore less confusing to the jury.
Applying the higher reasonable doubt standard also gives greatest effect
to the ICWA, and it is therefore less likely to
result in reversal of a termination of parental rights decision
than applying the lower clear and convincing evidence standard.
Accordingly, the reasonable doubt standard is used in these *311 instructions for both the state law requirements and the requirements
in 25 U.S.C. §
1912(f).
In
Re Oklahoma Uniform Jury Instructions for Juvenile Cases, 2005 OK 12, 116 P.3d 119, 163.
¶
18
The first sentence of that note is not an accurate
reading of §
1912(f),
for as noted above, it does not “specify”
a beyond a reasonable doubt “standard
of proof”
for termination cases.
It “specified”
that burden only for a particular determination that section requires to be made
in those cases.
Had Congress intended to apply that burden of proof to
all issues in termination cases, it would have done so.
¶
19
Nor are we persuaded that the case from another division
of this Court cited by the drafting committee, In
the Matter
of T.L., 2003 OK CIV APP 49, 71 P.3d 43, constitutes a holding that the beyond a reasonable doubt standard must be applied
to issues other than the determination required by §
1912(f).
The T.L. Court was not called upon to decide the issue presented
here, and the opinion contains no analysis of the dual
burden of proof argument and case law nor of the
statutory language.
To the extent T.L. may be read as approving the application of a beyond
a reasonable doubt burden of proof to state-law mandated issues
in a termination case, we respectfully decline to follow it.
¶
20
Finally, the note suggests a unitary burden of proof will
be less confusing to the jury and less likely to
result in reversal on appeal.
We are not aware of any basis for treating one
set of litigants and a child differently than others, absent
controlling case law or a statute, merely because it will
be easier to decide the case.
The members of Oklahoma juries are perfectly capable of making
the precise determination required by §
1912(f)
based upon proof beyond a reasonable doubt, while all other
issues are covered by a clear and convincing evidence burden
of proof.FN7
FN7. In
Re Oklahoma Uniform Jury Instructions for Juvenile Cases, 2005 OK 12, ¶
2,
116 P.3d 119, requires “all
trial courts in Oklahoma”
to use the uniform instruction “if
the court determines that the subject of the instructions would
be appropriate in the particular matter on trial and unless
the trial court determines that such recommended instruction does not
accurately state the law.”
If a trial court declines to use a uniform instruction,
it must state the reasons for doing so on the
record.
Although the order does not require this appellate Court to do so, this opinion adequately explains our reasons
for declining to follow the instruction.
¶
21
Petitioners were entitled to prevail on their application if they
presented evidence to support the grounds asserted in that application
which the trial court found to be clear and convincing.
The trial court erred in applying a beyond a reasonable
doubt burden of proof to the issue presented by this
application, and its order must be reversed.
[5]
¶
22
Although this is an equitable proceeding, and therefore we should
enter the order the trial court should have entered, we
may do so only where it is possible.See Matter
of Estate of Bartlett, 1984 OK 9, 680 P.2d 369.
It is not possible or appropriate in a fact-dependent case
such as this where the trial court has not evaluated
the evidence of those facts under the correct burden of
proof.
Moreover, we may not simply grant Petitioners the relief they
requested from the trial court by accepting the assertion contained
in their brief that the trial court stated it would
have granted their application if it applied a clear and
convincing evidence burden of proof.
Petitioners cite no place in the record where such a
statement appears, and we can find nothing in the record
to support their assertion.
¶
23
Although, as concluded in Merrell, an order determining a child eligible for adoption without the
consent of a parent does not result in a termination
of that parent's parental rights, we need not determine, at
this time, whether such an order, or even a final
order for adoption is a “termination
of parental rights”
as contemplated by 25 U.S.C. §
1912(d) FN8 and §
1912(f).FN9
FN8.
This
subsection provides:
Any
party seeking to effect a foster care placement of, or
termination of parental rights to, an Indian child under State
law shall satisfy the court that active efforts have been
made to provide remedial services and rehabilitative programs designed to
prevent the breakup of the Indian family and that these
efforts have proved unsuccessful.
FN9.
It
might be argued that Congress' choice to separately include “any
action resulting in the termination of the parent-child relationship,”
25 U.S.C. §
1903(1)(ii),
and “any
action resulting in a final decree of adoption,”
25 U.S.C. §
1903(1)(iv),
in the definition of “child
custody proceeding”
indicates that an adoption case would not be included within
“any
action resulting in the termination of the parent-child relationship.”
*312 ¶
24
The trial court's order is reversed.
The case is remanded for further proceedings in accordance with
views expressed in this opinion.
REVERSED
AND REMANDED
BUETTNER,
C.J., and MITCHELL, P.J., concur.
Okla.Civ.App.
Div.
3,2006.
In
re Adoption of R.L.A.
147
P.3d 306, 2006 OK CIV APP 138
|