Opinion Number: 2000-NMCA-025
Filing Date: February 9, 2000
Docket No. 20,181
STATE OF NEW MEXICO ex rel.
CHILDREN, YOUTH & FAMILIES DEPARTMENT,
Petitioner-Appellee,
v.
VANESSA C.,
Respondent-Appellant.
APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY
Geraldine E. Rivera, District Judge
ANGELA L. ADAMS
Chief Children's Court Attorney
ROY E. STEPHENSON
Children's Court Attorney
Santa Fe, NM
for Appellee
ROBERT WATERWORTH
NANCY L. SIMMONS
Law Offices of Nancy L. Simmons
Albuquerque, NM
for Appellant
PICKARD, Chief Judge.
{1}
Mother appeals the termination of her parental rights
to Brittany and Alisha. On appeal, Mother raises five
issues: (1) the trial court violated her right to due
process by making a finding of futility (finding that
additional efforts to engage her in a treatment plan to
reunify her with her children would be futile) at an
informal judicial review hearing, even though no party asked
for a full evidentiary hearing; (2) the trial court's
finding of futility was erroneous because it relied on
hearsay in violation of Rule 11-802 NMRA 2000, even though
Mother did not object to the use of hearsay; (3) there was
not clear and convincing evidence to support the trial court's finding of futility; (4) there was not clear and
convincing evidence to support the trial court's finding
that the causes and conditions of abuse or neglect were
unlikely to change in the foreseeable future; and (5) she
received ineffective assistance of counsel, in part due to
the failures to object noted in the first two issues. We
consolidate the issues into three areas for discussion and
affirm.
BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
{2}
On May 31, 1996, the Children, Youth & Families
Department (the Department) took Brittany and Alisha into
custody after Mother was arrested on a charge of receiving
and transporting a stolen vehicle. Three days later, the
Department filed a petition alleging Mother had abused and
neglected her children. The trial court held a hearing on
the Department's petition on September 6, 1996.
{3}
About three weeks later, the trial court entered
judgment in which it concluded that Mother's children had
been neglected and that they should remain in the custody of
the Department. On that same date, the trial court adopted
the Department's proposed disposition and treatment plan.
Under the treatment plan, Mother had to (1) participate in
weekly random drug screening tests, (2) meet with a
psychotherapist to address the issues specified in her
psychological evaluation and the parenting issues identified
by her social worker, (3) maintain regular visitation with
her children, and (4) continue in her efforts to obtain
suitable housing for her and the children. The Department
proposed psychological therapy and drug treatment as part of
Mother's treatment plan because she had neglected her
children "due to [her history of] substance abuse and
domestic violence in California and New Mexico."
{4}
In March 1997, the trial court performed the first of
several judicial reviews regarding Mother's compliance with
the treatment plan. The trial court's review was generally
favorable. The trial court found that Mother had made
sincere efforts to find a stable place to live, was
employed, and had consistently attended her therapy sessions
with her psychotherapist. The only unfavorable finding the
trial court made was that Mother had not complied with the
drug screening part of her plan. The trial court adopted
the Department's proposed amended treatment plan to address
Mother's continuing drug issues.
{5}
In August 1997, the trial court conducted its second
judicial review. At the hearing, the Department advised the
trial court that Mother had made significant progress toward
completing the treatment plan. In particular, the
Department informed the trial court that Mother had
submitted five of the eight drug tests required of her, only one of which tested positive for amphetamine or
methamphetamine; Mother had completed all of her scheduled
psychotherapy sessions; Mother had consistently attended her
weekly supervised visits with her children; and Mother had
worked hard at developing a stable and secure environment
for her children. Based in large part on the Department's
judicial review report, the trial court returned Mother's
children to her physical custody on August 14, 1997.
{6}
Two weeks later, Mother's children were returned to the
Department's physical custody after Mother was arrested for
violating the terms of her probation. As a result of this
arrest, Mother's original probation was revoked and a new
probation was ordered. During the two-week time period that
Mother had physical custody of her children, Mother's social
worker attended a Citizen Review Board (CRB) hearing. At
the hearing, the CRB recommended that the trial court not
place Mother's children in her physical custody. The CRB
based its opinion on Mother's failure to comply with the
terms of her probation, her failure to attend substance
abuse counseling, her failure to acknowledge that Brittany
had been sexually abused, and the unknowns of her living
situation at the time. Mother's social worker also learned
that during the two-week period, Brittany had gone home to
an empty home on one occasion and that she had been
transported to school by two men unknown to her on another
occasion.
{7}
In March 1998, the Department submitted to the trial
court a very unfavorable judicial review report regarding
Mother's compliance with the treatment plan. In particular,
the Department informed the trial court that in October
1997, Mother had been arrested again for violating the terms
of her probation. At about the same time, Mother and her
partner were involved in a domestic violence altercation
during which Mother bit her partner's forearm three or four
times and cut his thumb with a razor. The trial court also
learned at the hearing that in December 1997 and January
1998, Mother had taken several drug tests, both for her
social worker and for her probation officer. During the
course of these two months, Mother's urine tested positive
for methamphetamine on at least five occasions. Mother's
probation officer stated that when he visited Mother at her
house to administer the drug tests, he observed that her
house was in bad condition, that it was "gross." The
Department stated in its judicial review report that it
intended to ask the trial court to enter a finding of
futility.
{8}
In June 1998, the trial court conducted its third
judicial review. At the hearing, the Department formally
asked the trial court to enter a finding of futility. In
support of its request, the Department reiterated the
information contained in its March 1998 judicial review
report and, in addition, informed the trial court that
Mother had failed to produce documentation regarding the
steps she had taken to comply with the treatment plan. The Department advised the trial court that Mother's
unwillingness to produce such documentation obstructed the
Department's ability to assess whether Mother was drug free.
The Department also produced letters from the children's
guardian ad litem, as well as their therapists. The letters
indicated that the children loved Mother and that she loved
them, but that Mother appeared incapable of recognizing or
changing the "aspects of her life (poor choice of domestic
partners, drug use, living on the 'edge' of the law) which
place her children at serious risk of neglect or abuse."
{9}
In her defense, Mother stated, through her attorney,
that she had attended drug rehabilitation programs at
Turquoise Lodge and the Milagro program. Mother indicated
that she had signed forms to release this information to the
Department and that she had continued providing urinalysis
throughout the course of her probation. Finally, Mother
claimed that she continued to visit her children and
continued to make efforts to comply with the treatment plan.
At the end of the hearing, the trial court found that the
Department had made reasonable efforts to reunite Mother and
her children and that further efforts to do so would be
futile. As a consequence of the trial court's ruling, the
Department no longer assisted Mother.
{10}
Two months later, in August 1998, the Department filed
a motion to terminate Mother's parental rights to Brittany
and Alisha. The trial court held the termination hearing in
December 1998. The trial court heard a great deal of
testimony which either clarified or corroborated the issues
that had been addressed at the June judicial review hearing.
At the end of the hearing, the trial court terminated
Mother's parental rights to Brittany and Alisha. The trial
court asked counsel to submit proposed findings of fact and
conclusions of law. The Department complied with the trial
court's request, while Mother did not. In January 1999, the
trial court wholly adopted the Department's proffered
findings and conclusions, and it entered an order
terminating Mother's parental rights.
DISCUSSION
I. & II. DUE PROCESS & HEARSAY
{11}
On appeal, Mother claims the trial court's reliance on
hearsay evidence and oral argument and its corresponding
failure to swear in witnesses and take formal testimony
deprived her of a fair hearing at the futility hearing. In
support of her claim, Mother relies on State ex rel. CYFD v.
Erika M., 1999-NMCA-036, 126 N.M. 760, 975 P.2d 373. In
Erika M., the trial court terminated the mother's parental
rights by summary judgment. See id. ¶ 1. We reversed the
trial court's decision because the mother presented evidence
that raised genuine issues of material fact, thus defeating
summary judgment. See id. ¶ 29.
{12}
In spite of our holding, we addressed the mother's claim that her due process rights had been violated because
the trial court's decision was based exclusively on facts
developed at judicial review hearings. See id. ¶¶ 26-28.
We noted that the termination of parental rights implicates
a liberty interest, an interest that must be protected by
providing the parent with a fair opportunity to be heard and
to present a defense. See id. ¶ 26. After discussing the
non-adversarial attributes of periodic review hearings, we
questioned whether a trial court could rely solely on facts
gleaned from such hearings to terminate parental rights.
See id. ¶ 28.
{13}
Mother's reliance on our dicta in Erika M. is
misplaced. In Erika M., we observed that "[t]ermination
hearings are more formal and comply with the rules of court
because of the weighty issue--final termination of parental
rights--that is being considered at them." Id. ¶ 27. That
observation is critical to the disposition of the case at
bar for two reasons.
{14}
First, a trial court's finding of futility does not
finally terminate a person's parental rights. A finding of
futility does result in the removal of a person's
expectation to the Department's reasonable assistance, but
it does not consign a parent to failure nor does it resolve
the ultimate issue of whether that person's parental rights
will be terminated. In the absence of the Department's
resources, a parent still has the opportunity to receive
assistance on her own and to alleviate the causes and
conditions that precipitated the state's intervention into
her family arrangement.
{15}
For example, in the case at bar, Mother independently
sought help from the Turquoise Lodge and Milagro programs.
According to Mother, her efforts were so successful that she
now deserves to have her children returned to her custody.
Mother's opportunity to protect her parental rights after
the trial court made its finding of futility argues against
the need for any additional procedural safeguards at the
judicial review hearing, particularly in the absence of any
objection by her. See Thomas v. Thomas, 1999-NMCA-135, ¶
24, ___, N.M. ___, 991 P.2d 7; see also M. L. B. v. S. L.
J., 519 U.S. 102, 127-128 (1996) ("In contrast to matters
modifiable at the parties' will or based on changed
circumstances, termination adjudications involve the awesome
authority of the State `to destroy permanently all legal
recognition of the parental relationship.'") (citations
omitted and emphasis added); cf. State ex rel. CYFD v.
Stella P., 1999-NMCA-100, ¶ 21, 127 N.M. 699, 986 P.2d 495
(holding that, even in the absence of any objection, trial
court has a duty to inquire as to whether a parent is
intentionally waiving the entire right to contest
termination proceedings).
{16}
Second, in Erika M., we were reviewing the trial
court's decision to terminate parental rights on the
Department's motion for summary judgment. Due to the fact that the trial court granted summary judgment based
exclusively on judicial review reports, we observed that the
mother not only lacked the opportunity to contest the
reports when they were first adopted, but more importantly,
she also lacked the opportunity to contest the reports at a
termination hearing. See id. ¶¶ 24, 29. We noted that the
mother "had no incentive to contest the Department's reports
when they were used . . . as progress reports, rather than
in support of termination." Id. ¶ 28. As a consequence, we
declined to hold the mother to the judicial review reports,
especially on summary judgment. See id. ¶¶ 28, 29.
{17}
In the case at bar, Mother knew far in advance of the
futility hearing that the Department intended to seek a
finding of futility based on the information contained in
its judicial review reports. The Department put Mother on
notice as early as March 1998 that it intended to ask the
trial court to enter a finding of futility. This advance
notice not only provided Mother with at least three months
to prepare for the futility hearing, but it also provided
her with every incentive to challenge any untoward
allegations contained in the March 1998 and June 1998
judicial review reports as well.
{18}
Most critically, Mother had the opportunity to contest
the judicial review reports at the futility hearing and she
did so, almost exclusively through nontestimonial documents
of her own. Mother appeared with her attorney at the June
1998 futility hearing. The attorneys for each side made
presentations to the trial court. The trial court did not
swear in any witnesses and no formal testimony was taken.
Instead, the Department, along with the children's guardian
ad litem, offered into evidence, and then reiterated to the
trial court, the information contained in the March 1998 and
June 1998 judicial review reports. Mother's attorney
presented letters that Mother had attended drug
rehabilitation and parenting training at the Turquoise Lodge
and Milagro programs. Attorneys for both sides also offered
their own observations about Mother's case, the steps she
had taken or failed to take to comply with the treatment
plan, and her chances of becoming an adequate parent for
Brittany and Alisha in the foreseeable future. Mother did
not object to the procedural aspects of these proceedings in
any way, either during the futility hearing or during the
final termination hearing. We believe Mother's advance
notice and her opportunity to contest the validity of the
previous judicial review reports significantly reduced her
interest in having additional procedural safeguards.
{19}
Upon balancing the factors herein, we conclude that
Mother's right to due process was not violated through the
procedures used at the trial court level. Mother had
adequate notice of the issue to be resolved, as well as the
opportunity to prepare and present a case on that issue.
Moreover, the trial court based its decision on matters that
did not appear to require live testimony. Put more
succinctly: either Mother tested positive for drugs or she did not, either Mother submitted documentation of her
compliance with the treatment plan or she did not, either
Mother was arrested for domestic violence or she was not,
and either Mother was employed or she was not. It is
neither coincidental nor inconsequential that, as Mother
points out, the testimony at the termination hearing
"clarified or corroborated many of the issues that arose at
the [futility hearing]." See Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S.
319, 345 (1976) (concluding that oral testimony is
unnecessary when an assessment can be made through written
documents).
{20}
We also conclude that the trial court's reliance on
hearsay evidence does not violate Rule 11-802. According to
Rule 11-802, "[h]earsay is not admissible except as provided
by these rules or by other rules adopted by the supreme
court or by statute." The trial court made its finding of
futility at a judicial review hearing. Judicial review
hearings, which are governed by NMSA 1978, § 32A-4-25
(1999), are not subject to the rules of evidence. See §
32A-4-25(E). We hold that the trial court did not err by
basing its finding of futility made at the judicial review
hearing on hearsay evidence.
{21}
In view of the fundamental interests that are at stake
in termination of parental rights cases, we recommend that
in the future, if the real potential for an adverse ruling
is in the offing at a judicial review hearing, and the
adverse ruling might be avoided through the exercise of
certain procedural safeguards, counsel should be prepared to
present evidence and cross-examine witnesses. Although the
rules of evidence do not necessarily apply in judicial
review hearings, the hallmarks of the adversarial
process_the presentation of evidence and the cross-examination of witnesses_are both contemplated in and
permitted by our statutes. See § 32A-4-25(D) ("At any
[periodic] review hearing . . ., the child's guardian ad
litem and all parties given notice . . . shall have the
opportunity to present evidence and to cross-examine
witnesses."), § 32A-4-25(E) ("The Rules of Evidence shall
not apply to hearings held pursuant to this section."). All
Mother had to do was object if she were truly concerned that
she was in danger of losing rights granted by statute or
constitution. We answer Mother's ineffective assistance
issue below.
III. & IV. SUFFICIENCY OF EVIDENCE
{22}
Mother claims that the trial court had insufficient
evidence to conclude, both at the futility hearing and at
the termination hearing, that she had done nothing to comply
with the treatment plan and thus erred in finding futility.
Mother also claims the trial court had insufficient evidence
to conclude at the termination hearing that the causes and
conditions of neglect which rendered her unable to properly
care for her children were unlikely to change in the
foreseeable future. As both of these claims concern the sufficiency of the evidence to support the trial court's
decision to terminate Mother's parental rights, we
consolidate them for consideration under the standard of
review applicable at termination proceedings.
{23}
A person's parental rights shall be terminated upon a
showing that her children have been neglected, and the
causes of the neglect are unlikely to change in the
foreseeable future despite reasonable efforts by the
Department to assist the parent in adjusting the conditions
that rendered her unable to properly care for her children.
See NMSA 1978, § 32A-4-28(B)(2) (1999). In determining
whether to terminate parental rights, the trial court must
"give primary consideration to the physical, mental and
emotional welfare and needs of the child[ren], including the
likelihood of the child[ren] being adopted if parental
rights are terminated." Section 32A-4-28(A).
{24}
The standard of proof in cases involving the
termination of parental rights is clear and convincing
evidence. See NMSA 1978, § 32A-4-29(J) (1999); In re
Termination of Parental Rights of Eventyr J., 120 N.M. 463,
466, 902 P.2d 1066, 1069 (Ct. App. 1995). However,
notwithstanding this standard of proof, this Court will not
reweigh the evidence on appeal. See In re R.W., 108 N.M.
332, 335, 772 P.2d 366, 369 (Ct. App. 1989). Instead, we
must view it in a light most favorable to affirmance. See
Eventyr J., 120 N.M. at 466, 902 P.2d at 1069. Nor do we
assess the credibility of the witnesses, deferring instead
to the conclusions of the trier of fact. See State v.
Tisthammer, 1998-NMCA-115, ¶ 25, 126 N.M. 52, 966 P.2d 760.
We will not substitute our judgment for that of the trial
court as to any factual matter. See In re Wayne R.N., 107
N.M. 341, 345, 757 P.2d 1333, 1337 (Ct. App. 1988). Our
standard of review is therefore whether, viewing the
evidence in a light most favorable to affirming the
termination of Mother's parental rights, the trial court
could properly determine that the clear and convincing
standard was met. See Eventyr J., 120 N.M. at 466, 902 P.2d
at 1069.
{25}
At the termination hearing, the trial court found that
Mother "has continually neglected the children[] by failing
to complete and progress in all of her substance abuse
treatment and by continuing to place herself in situations
involving domestic violence and suspected criminal
activity[.]" Mother claims the trial court "had
insufficient evidence to say that she had made no efforts in
complying with the treatment plan and therefore had
insufficient evidence" to find continuous neglect.
{26}
As our quote of the trial court's finding of neglect
indicates, the trial court did not find that Mother had made
no efforts to comply with the treatment plan. Rather, the
trial court found that Mother had failed to comply with
several key elements of her treatment plan, including her
need to avoid drugs, domestic violence, and other criminal involvement. The trial court determined that Mother's
failure to comply with the treatment plan caused her to
neglect Brittany and Alisha. The evidence in the record
supports the trial court's finding of neglect.
{27}
As Mother concedes, the trial court heard testimony at
the termination hearing that Mother was arrested in October
1997 for the domestic violence incident in which she bit her
partner's arm and cut his thumb with a razor; Mother
submitted seven urinalyses positive for methamphetamines in
December 1997 and January 1998; Mother failed to conform to
probation requirements, resulting in an unfavorable
discharge; Mother failed to provide the Department with any
releases regarding her participation in the Turquoise Lodge
and Milagro programs; Mother failed to conform to the rules
at Turquoise Lodge; Mother failed to show that she
participated in individual therapy after the Department
removed its resources and after leaving Turquoise Lodge;
Mother tested positive for drugs when she gave birth to her
daughter Jasmine in July 1998; Mother continued to maintain
that she did not need to participate in any aftercare
programs; and Mother was unemployed and without a dwelling
of her own.
{28}
Viewing the Department's evidence in a light most
favorable to affirming the trial court's finding of on-going
neglect, we hold that the trial court could properly
determine that the clear and convincing standard was met.
See Eventyr J., 120 N.M. at 466, 902 P.2d at 1069. We
reject Mother's claim that the trial court had insufficient
evidence of on-going neglect. We acknowledge that Mother
presented evidence that her August 1998 arrest was based on
a mistaken probation matter and that she signed and provided
releases for information and independently sought help by
participating in the Turquoise Lodge and Milagro programs.
We also acknowledge that Mother presented evidence that she
continued to work on family skills with the Department
through its Los Pasos Family Preservation Services (Los
Pasos) program in connection with her daughter Jasmine and
that her social worker at Los Pasos did not have any
concerns about whether Mother was still using drugs.
However, Mother's claim essentially requests that we reweigh
conflicting evidence in her favor. We cannot reweigh the
evidence. Conflicts in testimony are matters for the trial
court to resolve. See id.
{29}
Mother also claims the trial court had insufficient
evidence to say that she had "made no efforts in complying
with the treatment plan" and therefore had insufficient
evidence to make a finding of futility at the judicial
review hearing. This is essentially the same claim Mother
raised in the context of the trial court's finding of
neglect. As we stated above, the trial court did not base
its decision on the erroneous finding that Mother made no
efforts to comply with the treatment plan. Instead, the
trial court found that Mother had not done enough to comply
with the treatment plan. Based on this finding, the trial court concluded that it would be futile for the Department
to make further efforts to assist Mother. After two years
with limited or no long-term or sustained progress being
made, we believe the trial court could find that there was
clear and convincing evidence that the causes and conditions
of neglect would not change in the foreseeable future. See
id.
{30}
M other acknowledges that if the trial court's futility
finding at the judicial review hearing is legitimate, then
its futility finding at the termination hearing is also
legitimate. Mother concedes this point because the trial
court had virtually the same evidence before it at the
futility hearing that it had before it at the termination
hearing, although at the termination hearing, it was in such
form that it was subject to cross-examination and the other
formal rules of evidence. We held that the trial court's
first futility finding was legitimate and, accordingly, we
now hold that its second finding regarding change in the
foreseeable future was also legitimate.
V. INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE
{31}
Mother contends she received ineffective assistance of
counsel because (1) her trial attorney failed to submit
proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, thus
preventing this Court from reviewing her sufficiency of the
evidence arguments, and (2) her trial attorney performed
ineffectively in connection with her failure to object to
the absence of admissible evidence at the judicial review
hearing and her failure to object to the trial court's use
of the finding of futility at the termination hearing.
{32}
A parent has the right to effective counsel in
termination cases. See State ex rel. Children, Youth &
Families Dep't v. Tammy S., 1999-NMCA-009, ¶ 20, 126 N.M.
664, 974 P.2d 158. In Tammy S., 1999-NMCA-009, ¶ 20, we
recognized that "the majority of jurisdictions utilize the
same standard for effective assistance in [termination]
cases as in criminal cases, and we utilized the criminal
standard for the purposes of [In re Termination of Parental
Rights of James W.H., 115 N.M. 256, 259, 849 P.2d 1079, 1082
(Ct. App. 1993)]." We did not reach the issue of what the
standard for effective assistance of counsel should be in
Tammy S. because counsel's performance was inadequate
regardless of the standard. See id. ¶ 20. In contrast, in
In re James W.H., we concluded that even if the criminal
standard was used, the claim lacked merit. See id. at 259,
849 P.2d at 1082. The same is true in this case.
{33}
"In reviewing a claim of ineffective assistance of
counsel, we look at the proceedings as a whole. Litigants
alleging ineffective assistance of counsel have the burden
of establishing the claim and are required to show not only
that trial counsel was ineffective, but that trial counsel's
inadequacies prejudiced them." State ex rel. Children,
Youth & Families Dep't v. David F., 121 N.M. 341, 348, 911 P.2d 235, 242 (Ct. App. 1995) (citation omitted). The party
asserting ineffective assistance must prove both prongs of
the test. See State v. Hester, 1999-NMSC-020, ¶ 9, 127
N.M. 218, 979 P.2d 729. The burden of proof is upon the
party claiming ineffective assistance. See State v. Baca,
1997-NMSC-045, ¶¶ 20-21, 124 N.M. 55, 946 P.2d 1066.
Failure to prove either prong of the test is fatal to a
claim of ineffective assistance. See id. In the case at
bar, we hold that Mother did not receive ineffective
assistance of counsel.
{34}
First, her trial attorney's failure to submit proposed
findings of fact and conclusions of law has not prevented us
from reviewing her sufficiency of the evidence arguments
because her trial attorney called the trial court's
attention to the alleged insufficiency of the evidence. See
Cockrell v. Cockrell, 117 N.M. 321, 324, 871 P.2d 977, 980
(1994) (ruling that evidence may not be reviewed on appeal
when the party seeking review has failed to submit requested
findings of fact and conclusions of law and the appellant
has otherwise failed to object to the findings or call the
trial court's attention to the insufficiency of the
evidence).
{35}
Second, her trial attorney's alleged failure to object
to the trial court's use of the finding of futility did not
render her attorney's assistance ineffective, because the
trial court made its findings based on the testimony given
and the evidence presented at the termination hearing. The
trial court did not rely upon the futility hearing itself.
See Eventyr J., 120 N.M. at 473, 902 P.2d at 1076 (ruling
that a parent was not deprived of her due process rights by
the trial court taking judicial notice of prior adjudication
because it based its decision on the evidence presented at
termination hearing rather than relying upon prior
adjudication).
{36}
We deem it important to note that this is not a case in
which the earlier finding of futility prejudiced Mother in
any way, contrary to Mother's arguments. Her arguments may
have merit in the abstract or in another case, but they do
not have merit under the facts of this case. First, Mother
has made no attempt to show that the result of the judicial
review hearing would have been any different had she
insisted on her right to present admissible evidence and
cross-examine the Department's evidence. Thus, her
attorney's reliance on a presentation similar to that of the
Department at the judicial review hearing may well have been
an adequate strategy. See State v. Cooper, 1998-NMCA-180, ¶
11, 126 N.M. 500, 972 P.2d 1 (holding that reviewing court
will not second guess strategy and tactics). Second, the
motion to terminate parental rights was filed shortly after
the finding of futility. Third, the Department did not rely
on the time period following the finding of futility to show
that the causes and conditions of the abuse and neglect
would not change despite the Department's reasonable
efforts. As Mother acknowledges, the Department relied on the same events at the termination hearing as it did at the
judicial review hearing. Thus, Mother's concern that a
premature finding of futility could unduly prejudice a
parent, while potentially meritorious in the abstract, has
no application to the facts of this case.
CONCLUSION
{37}
We affirm.
{38}
IT IS SO ORDERED.
______________________________
LYNN PICKARD, Chief Judge
WE CONCUR:
______________________________
RICHARD C. BOSSON, Judge
________________________________
MICHAEL D. BUSTAMANTE, Judge