931 N.E.2d 472
No. 10-P-441.Appeals Court of Massachusetts. Plymouth.June 10, 2010.
August 12, 2010.
Present: KANTROWITZ, KATZMANN, HANLON, JJ.
Adoption, Care and protection, Dispensing with parent’s consent. Minor, Adoption, Care and protection. Parent and Child, Adoption, Care and protection of minor, Dispensing with parent’s consent to adoption. Practice, Civil, Assistance of counsel.
In a proceeding to dispense with parental consent to adoption, the father received ineffective assistance of counsel, requiring a new trial, where the behavior of the father’s counsel fell measurably below that which might be expected from an ordinary fallible lawyer, in that counsel did not attempt to refute with available witnesses the evidence of the father’s unfitness, which, while sufficient, was not overwhelming, and thereby prejudiced the father in his defense. [368-370]
PETITION filed in the Plymouth County Division of the Juvenile Court Department on April 25, 2008.
The case was heard by John P. Corbett, J.
Ann Balmelli O’Connor for the father.
Kiernan E. Joliat, Assistant Attorney General, for Department of Children and Families.
Daniel R. Katz for the child.
KANTROWITZ, J.
In this case, the ineffectiveness of counsel constrains us to reverse a decree adjudicating the father as unfit and terminating his parental rights.
Following the trial where his parental rights were terminated, the father unsuccessfully moved for a new trial on the basis of ineffective assistance of counsel, claiming that his attorney failed to prepare for trial or file proposed findings of fact, and failed to call witnesses on his behalf, including several who
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were available to testify at the hearing. On appeal he argues the same in addition to claiming insufficiency of the evidence.
Facts. The child was born in July of 2006, to unmarried parents. Due to ongoing safety concerns, the Department of Children and Families (DCF) became involved, ultimately seeking to terminate the parental rights of the mother and father. On or about May 15, 2008, the child was placed in what would turn out to be her preadoptive home with her paternal uncle and aunt, the brother and sister-in-law of the father.
On the first day of trial, June 16, 2009, the father requested new counsel, claiming his attorney had not prepared him or spoken to any potential witnesses who were willing and available to testify on his behalf. When the judge asked for a response to the father’s assertion, father’s counsel replied, “I have spoken to witnesses. I have summonsed people in.”[2] The judge denied the father’s request, responding that “[t]here’s no way I can possibly have an attorney withdraw at this late date.”
At trial, witnesses for DCF and the child offered testimony regarding the unfitness of the parents. Cutting to the chase, there is no question that the mother, who has not filed an appeal, was unfit. The mother has chronic drug and alcohol abuse problems and a history of leaving the home for days at a time while out abusing substances. Despite repeated attempts at treatment, she has been unable to remain sober and drug free and has repeatedly failed to comply with her DCF service plan, including the requirement to complete an inpatient substance abuse program.
On October 9, 2006, a report pursuant to G.L. c. 119, § 51A (§ 51A report), was filed, alleging neglect of the child based on the mother’s substance abuse and an incident where drug dealers threatened the mother in the home while the child was present. As a result, DCF filed a care and protection petition and temporarily took custody of the child until the seventy-two hour hearing, following which the father regained custody. The mother entered a nine-month treatment program, but left after six months and relapsed shortly thereafter.
On April 24, 2008, another § 51A report was filed following a verbal and physical fight between the mother and father. At the time of the incident, the father acknowledged that he had
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left the child with the mother, who had been drinking. On April 25, 2008, DCF took custody of the child following a report by the father that the mother had been suicidal in the past month and was mentally unstable.[3] The judge concluded that the mother’s “prognosis for her mental health and for remaining drug and alcohol free is extremely poor.”[4]
The father’s unfitness, while warranted by the evidence at trial, is a closer question. From the beginning of their relationship, the father was aware of the mother’s substance abuse, yet continually left the child alone in her care despite admonitions from DCF not to do so. DCF had ongoing concerns about the father’s continued contacts with the mother and the extent to which his relationship with the mother took priority over his relationship with the child; there was also concern about the father’s “enabling behavior towards [the mother].”[5]
Additionally, the judge found that the father’s “unemployment is chronic,” that he “no longer has a place of his own and will be staying with family,” and that “[h]e has always abdicated
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the day to day care of [the child] to others.”[6] The foster mother testified that a car seat provided to them by the father was not functional and that the child’s clothes were in poor condition. The foster father testified that the father’s behavior during visits with the child was inappropriate, that the father encouraged the mother’s alcoholism, and that the father indicated he was willing to sign custody of the child over to the foster parents as long as DCF was not involved.
Father’s counsel did little to counter such testimony, notwithstanding a plethora of favorable evidence available to her. During trial, father’s counsel received a parent evaluation report from DCF that reflected favorably on the father’s parenting skills and his behavior when interacting with the child.[7] , [8] Counsel failed to obtain the evaluator’s testimony or even attempt to have the contents of the report admitted in evidence.
Additionally, trial counsel did not call the father’s therapist as a witness. The father began seeing a licensed mental health counsellor in May of 2008. According to her affidavit, the therapist would have testified that she had “no real concerns about [the father’s] ability to parent his [child],” that he was not controlling
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of women, and that she was not concerned about his living situation.
Lastly, and perhaps most significantly, counsel failed to call five of the father’s relatives as witnesses, despite the fact that four of them were present during the trial (with a fifth being on call) and that the father wanted them to testify on his behalf.[9] The father’s aunt, a twenty-year employee of the Harvard School of Public Health, would have testified that when the child lived with the father, she was always clean and well-cared for and that the foster parents misrepresented the father’s relationship with the child. His sister would have testified as to the instability within the home of the foster family.[10] The father’s mother, also the mother of the foster father, would have testified that the child “always appeared well-cared for” by the father and that the foster father misrepresented his knowledge of the relationship between the parties.[11] , [12]
On September 21, 2009, the Juvenile Court judge issued decrees terminating the father’s and mother’s parental rights. On December 21, 2009, the father filed a motion seeking a new trial on grounds of ineffective assistance of counsel, claiming that trial counsel failed to prepare for trial and present witnesses. The Juvenile Court judge denied the motion in an order and memorandum of decision issued on February 3, 2010, following an apparently nonevidentiary hearing on January 6, 2010.[13]
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In his memorandum denying the motion, the judge noted that while trial counsel “could have been more energetic in her defense,” the affidavits from family members “contain little of substance and seem aimed primarily at bolstering father[‘]s rather doubtful, credibility and undermining the credibility of the foster parents.” He concluded that “[n]othing in the affidavits serve to undermine the reliability of the essentially undisputed evidence that although [the father] is capable of the biological acts necessary for fatherhood, he has never acted as a parent for any of his children and has maintained a rootless life of marginal employment, unstable housing, and dependence on others for his own support, shelter and care of his children.”
Further, the judge determined that the proposed testimony by the father’s therapist and the parent evaluator would have been irrelevant to the outcome, concluding that the evaluator’s “report is superficial at best and is almost exclusively based on [the father’s] self reports.”
Ineffective assistance of counsel. On the question of ineffective assistance of counsel, “[f]irst, we look to determine whether the `behavior of counsel [fell] measurably below that which might be expected from an ordinary fallible lawyer’ and, if so, we further inquire `whether [counsel’s conduct] has likely deprived the defendant of an otherwise available, substantial ground of defence.'” Care Protection of Stephen, 401 Mass. 144, 149 (1987), quoting from Commonwealth v Saferian, 366 Mass. 89, 96 (1974). Adoption of Yvette (No. 1), 71 Mass. App. Ct. 327, 345 (2008). Under the second prong, prejudice must be shown; prejudice is not shown if there is overwhelming evidence of unfitness. Adoption of Holly, 432 Mass. 680, 690 (2000). Care Protection of Georgette, 439 Mass. 28, 33-34 n. 7 (2003). Lastly, “[w]here a strategic choice is at issue, `[a]n attorney’s tactical decision amounts to ineffective assistance of counsel only if it was manifestly unreasonable when made.'” Adoption of Yvette (No. 1), supra, quoting from Commonwealth v. Martin, 427 Mass. 816, 822 (1998).
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Here, both prongs of the standard were met. The failure to interview witnesses and have them testify demonstrated behavior of counsel falling measurably below that which might be expected from an ordinary fallible lawyer.[14] See Department of Pub. Welfare v. J.K.B., 379 Mass. 1, 4
(1979) (finding that marshaling of evidence by counsel helps ensure that courts reach decisions on parental rights with “utmost care”). As for the second prong, simply, the evidence of unfitness, while sufficient, was not overwhelming.
The judge reached his decision without “an extra measure of evidentiary protection,” that would have existed had the father’s trial counsel attempted to refute DCF’s evidence with the available witnesses. Se ibid. Indeed, trial counsel was unaware of the father’s aunt, who was prepared to provide supportive testimony and had attempted to relay this information to trial counsel in person but was rebuffed. With respect to the father’s parenting skills, trial counsel completely ignored the DCF parenting evaluation that reflected favorably upon the father’s ability to parent the child.
Trial counsel also failed to marshal evidence favorable to the father concerning the father’s relationship with the mother and the extent to which the child’s interest was best met by placement with the foster parents. Multiple witnesses would have testified regarding the lack of an ongoing relationship between the father and mother, his fitness as a parent, and the instability of the foster parents’ marriage. Trial counsel let valuable witnesses and evidence sit silent, contravening in a meaningful way the judge’s conclusion that the best interests of the child were served by her placement with the foster parents. Contras Adoption of Holly, 432 Mass. at 691. While the father was not entitled to a defense free of mistakes, Delle Chiaie v. Commonwealth, 367 Mass. 527, 536 (1975), he was entitled to the effective assistance of counsel, which he did not receive here.
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Conclusion. The judge was placed in a difficult position by having the father, on the morning of trial, indicate a not uncommon dissatisfaction with counsel. Perhaps by further ferreting out the reasons for the dissatisfaction, the judge would have been in a better position to determine an appropriate remedy, if any. Here, the judge was kind in his assessment that counsel “could have been more energetic in her defense.” In fact, the father’s counsel not only fell “measurably below that which might be expected from an ordinary fallible lawyer,” but also prejudiced the father in his defense. See Care Protection of Georgette, 439 Mass. at 33. As such, a new trial is mandated. We do not intimate at all the result of that new proceeding.[15]
Order denying motion for new trial reversed.
(2005). Trial counsel could not have made a reasonable tactical decision regarding the testimony of the family members and the therapist without first conducting interviews with them, which did not occur. Se Commonwealth v. Baker, 440 Mass. 519, 529 (2003) (“Until [counsel] commenced such an investigation, [counsel] simply had no way of making a reasonable tactical judgment”).
We are not, however, as charitable to the performance of counsel, whose conduct is highly troubling. As she was court-appointed, we are referring this matter to the Committee for Public Counsel Services in the hope that such shortcomings will be addressed.
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