                                                              FILED
                                                         May 04 2017, 8:33 am

                                                              CLERK
                                                          Indiana Supreme Court
                                                             Court of Appeals
                                                               and Tax Court




ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT                                 ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEES
John S. Terry                                           Charles P. Rice
Stephenie K. Gookins                                    Murphy Rice, LLP
Cate, Terry & Gookins LLC                               South Bend, Indiana
Carmel, Indiana



                                          IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

L.G.,                                                   May 4, 2017
Appellant-Respondent,                                   Court of Appeals Case No.
                                                        29A04-1607-AD-1756
        v.                                              Appeal from the Hamilton
                                                        Superior Court
S.L., et al.,                                           The Honorable Steven R. Nation,
Appellees-Petitioners.                                  Judge
                                                        Trial Court Cause No.
                                                        29DOl-1511-AD-1454




Najam, Judge.




Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017              Page 1 of 41
                                           Statement of the Case
[1]   This appeal arises from a discovery dispute between L.G. (“Father”) 1 and S.L.

      and W.L. (“Adoptive Parents”) that resulted in the dismissal of Father’s motion

      to contest the adoption of his putative child, Infant Male R. (“Child”), and the

      trial court’s entry of a decree of adoption. The overarching issue is whether

      Father caused undue delay in the proceeding when he objected to Adoptive

      Parents’ repeated requests for the release of his mental health records. Adoptive

      Parents characterized Father’s objections to their requests for those records as

      unjustified attempts to thwart and delay the adoption proceeding. But Father

      had a right to object to the unqualified release of his mental health records, and

      it was Adoptive Parents’ failure to comply with the Indiana Code that delayed

      the proceeding until April 11, 2016. Nonetheless, the trial court dismissed

      Father’s petition to contest the adoption on procedural grounds, which

      prevented Father from vindicating his parental rights.


[2]   We hold that the trial court erred when it dismissed Father’s motion to contest

      the adoption. The record on appeal demonstrates that Father has been actively

      engaged in protecting his putative parental rights over Child. Father filed both

      a putative father affidavit and a petition to establish paternity before Child’s

      birth. He then filed a motion to dismiss the adoption petition, a motion to




      1
        For ease of discussion, we refer to L.G. as “Father” even though he is only the putative father. L.G.
      submitted a DNA test to the trial court to establish his paternity, but the court did not rule on his paternity
      petition.

      Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017                               Page 2 of 41
      contest the adoption, a petition to revoke Adoptive Parents’ temporary custody

      of Child, and a petition for parenting time. He both propounded and responded

      to discovery, which included signing authorizations for the release of his mental

      health records following a hearing on Adoptive Parents’ request for those

      records as required by statute. And, prior to the final hearing, he participated in

      two hearings in person and in other hearings by counsel or by telephone. In

      sum, Father did not unduly delay the proceeding.


[3]   On appeal, Father presents two issues for our review, which we restate as the

      following three issues:

              1.      Whether the trial court erred when it found that Father
                      had failed to timely provide complete discovery.

              2.      Whether the trial court erred when it found that Father’s
                      failure to attend a motions hearing on April 22, 2016, in
                      person warranted dismissal of his motion to contest the
                      adoption.

              3.      Whether the trial court erred when it found that Father’s
                      failure to attend his first scheduled deposition warranted
                      dismissal of his motion to contest the adoption.


      We also address one issue sua sponte:


              4.      Whether the trial judge should recuse himself on remand.




      Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017       Page 3 of 41
[4]   We reverse and remand for further proceedings.2


                                   Facts and Procedural History
[5]   In September 2008, Father, who is from Senegal, moved to New Jersey to

      attend boarding school. Several years later, Father met A.R. (“Mother”), and

      the two began a romantic relationship. During 2014, Father and Mother lived

      together in Indianapolis and in Sewickley, Pennsylvania, and the couple had a

      daughter together. In August 2014, Father enrolled in college at Robert Morris

      University near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, but he continued to visit Mother and

      their daughter, who were then living in Indiana, on weekends and during

      breaks from school.


[6]   At some point, Mother became pregnant with Child. During the pregnancy, in

      the Fall of 2015 Mother told Father that she intended to place Child for

      adoption. On October 23, prior to the birth of the Child, Father filed a petition

      to establish paternity in the Marion Superior Court.


[7]   On November 7, Mother gave birth to Child in a hospital in Fishers, but she did

      not immediately notify Father about Child’s birth. When Mother eventually

      did tell Father about the birth and the pending adoption, Father wrote what the

      Adoptive Parents characterize as “a suicide letter,” which Father gave to




      2
        We heard oral argument in this case on March 27, 2017. Normally, such arguments are available to the
      public online. However, because the parties referred to each other, and Child, by name at the oral argument,
      we have not posted the video recording of that argument online.



      Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017                          Page 4 of 41
      “administrators” at his college “and directed that a copy be sent” to Mother.

      Appellant’s App. Vol. II at 213. Father was “subsequently admitted to a

      hospital for a mental health evaluation.”3 Id.


[8]   On November 9, Adoptive Parents filed their petition to adopt Child in the

      Hamilton Superior Court, and the court thereafter consolidated Father’s

      paternity action with the adoption proceeding. In their petition, Adoptive

      Parents alleged in relevant part that Father’s consent to the adoption was

      unnecessary under Indiana Code Section 31-19-9-124 because he was “unfit to

      be a parent.” Id. at 21. On November 19, Father filed a motion to dismiss the

      adoption petition. And, on November 30, Father timely filed his motion to

      contest the adoption in the trial court. In the meantime, the trial court awarded

      temporary custody of Child to Adoptive Parents.5


[9]   On December 15, the trial court held a hearing on Father’s motion to dismiss

      and denied that motion, and the court denied Father’s motion to stay the final

      hearing on the adoption petition. The court also granted the parties until

      January 11, 2016, to respond to discovery requests and ordered Father “to

      immediately review” authorizations permitting Adoptive Parents to obtain his




      3
         While the existence of the letter and Father’s subsequent admission to a hospital for a mental health
      evaluation are not disputed, there is no evidence in the record on appeal regarding these events, including
      either the contents of the letter or the results of the mental health evaluation.
      4
        This statute applies to the rights of putative fathers rather than fathers whose paternity has been
      established.
      5
        Father filed a petition for revocation of temporary custody and a petition for parenting time, but a hearing
      on those petitions has not yet been held.

      Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017                                  Page 5 of 41
       mental health records and “to determine” if he had objections to those requests.

       Id. at 6. The court set a hearing on Father’s motion to contest the adoption for

       April 25, 2016.


[10]   On January 11, 2016, Father submitted his responses to Adoptive Parents’

       thirty-four interrogatories and forty-four requests for production of documents,

       including more than 2,000 pages of documents. In response to Adoptive

       Parents’ request for information and documentation regarding Father’s health,

       including his mental health, Father objected on the grounds that those requests

       sought “information, diagnoses, treatment, and records protected by the

       physician-patient privilege, protected by HIPAA, and [also] protected by the

       Indiana 39-1-1, et seq. [sic].” Id. at 46. Father also objected to several of the

       other requests for production and interrogatories on the grounds that they were

       overbroad6 and/or sought privileged information. On January 15, Father filed

       a motion to quash subpoenas to nonparties that Adoptive Parents had

       submitted in an effort to obtain information including his mental health records.

       On February 1, Adoptive Parents filed a motion to compel discovery. While

       that motion was pending, Father responded to a second set of discovery

       requests from Adoptive Parents.




       6
         For example, Father objected to Interrogatory No. 6, which requested that he list details regarding every
       health-related appointment for the past ten years, including visits to chiropractors, dentists, and orthodontists.
       Father also objected to Interrogatory No. 9, which requested that he “list each and every time [he] consumed
       alcoholic beverages within the last five (5) years,” including the date, place, and time of consumption, the
       names of people Father was with when he drank, and the type and number of alcoholic beverages consumed
       on each occasion. Appellant’s App. Vol. II at 67.

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017                                Page 6 of 41
[11]   Following a telephonic hearing on February 29, on March 9 the trial court

       entered an order denying Father’s motion to quash subpoenas, granting

       Adoptive Parents’ motion to compel discovery, setting for a hearing Father’s

       petition for revocation of temporary custody and petition for parenting time for

       April 25, and setting a discovery deadline of April 18. In addition, the court

       ordered Father to sign authorizations for the release of his medical, mental

       health, school, and employment records.


[12]   On March 15, Father filed a motion to continue the evidentiary hearing on his

       motion to contest the adoption on the grounds that the discovery deadline of

       April 18 did not provide sufficient time to prepare for the hearing. Also on

       March 15, Father filed a motion to reconsider and for a stay of its March 9

       order. In that motion, Father reiterated his objections to releasing information

       regarding his mental health and alleged that the subpoenas proffered by

       Adoptive Parents were overbroad in that they sought information regarding

       Father’s mental health. Father alleged that the trial court’s March 9 order did

       not comply with “the procedures and protections set forth in Indiana Code § 16-

       39-3-1 et[] seq. (2015) regarding a Court Order for the release of [mental health]

       records over the objection of a party.” Id. at 86. In particular, Father requested

       a hearing required by statute, see I.C. § 16-39-2-8, regarding, among other

       things, the need for the requested records.


[13]   On March 21, the trial court held a hearing on Father’s motion to reconsider

       and for a stay. During that hearing, although they had not filed a petition for

       the release of Father’s mental health records under Indiana Code Section 16-39-

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017   Page 7 of 41
       3-3, Adoptive Parents moved the trial court to dismiss Father’s motion to

       contest the adoption. Adoptive Parents’ motion was based on Trial Rule 37, as

       a sanction of dismissal for discovery violations, and Indiana Code Section 31-

       19-10-1.2, for Father’s alleged failure to prosecute the motion to contest the

       adoption without “undue delay.” The trial court denied that oral motion.


[14]   Instead, following the hearing, on March 23 the court issued an order granting

       Father’s motion to reconsider “as to the Mental Health Records” and stating:


               c.     That concerning Mental Health Records, the Court deems
               the Motion to Compel filed on February 1, 2016[,] by the
               Petitioners to be a Petition for Release of Mental Health Records
               pursuant to I.C. [§] 16-39-3-3.

               d.    That pursuant to I.C. [§] 16-39-3-4 the Petitioners must
               provide Notice to 1) the patient, 2) the guardian . . . , and 3) the
               provider that maintains the record or the attorney general if the
               provider is a state institution.


       Id. at 101. The court then set a hearing “concerning the Release of Mental

       Health Records” for April 11. Id. Still, the trial court denied Father’s motion

       to reconsider “in all other respects” and ordered Father to “respond on or

       before March 31, 2016, concerning any and all other outstanding discovery

       and/or shall provide any and all requested authorizations as set forth in the

       Order filed on March 9, 2016.” Id. at 102. On March 28, Father filed his

       motion for a finding of paternity, to which he attached a copy of the paternity

       DNA test results that appeared to show that he is Child’s biological father. And

       Father filed a motion for interpreter under Indiana Code Section 34-45-1-1.

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017         Page 8 of 41
[15]   On April 11, the date of the statutory hearing on the release of Father’s mental

       health records, Adoptive Parents filed their Supplement to Motion for Sanction

       of Dismissal Under Trial Rule 37 and Indiana Code Section 31-19-10-1.2(g) for

       Failure to Prosecute. In that filing, Adoptive Parents alleged that Father had

       failed to cooperate with discovery when he refused to execute authorizations for

       the release of records concerning mental health treatment, drug and alcohol

       treatment, and HIV/AIDS status. Adoptive Parents also stated that Father had

       been “intentionally thwarting [their] legitimate discovery requests for these

       records” and had, “at every turn, intentionally obstructed the necessary and

       legitimate discovery of this evidence and the ability to obtain a timely

       determination of the Motion to Contest.” Id. at 132. Adoptive Parents alleged

       that Father “has been throwing sand in the gears from day one” and had

       “sought to delay these proceedings” by, among other means, moving to transfer

       venue, moving for the trial judge to recuse, moving for an interpreter, moving

       to quash subpoenas, and refusing to respond to interrogatories and requests for

       production. Id.


[16]   During the hearing on April 11, the trial court heard argument on Father’s

       motion for an interpreter and denied that motion, finding it “groundless and

       frivolous” and finding that it was “filed so as to cause delay.”7 Appellees’ App.




       7
         Father’s motion for an interpreter did not request that any scheduled hearing be delayed, only that the trial
       court appoint him an interpreter “for all matters before this Court.” Appellees’ App. Vol. II at 10. In the
       motion, Father stated that his native language is French; that he required an interpreter “in order to be
       effectively represented in the Court proceedings”; that Adoptive Parents’ attorney had “previously claimed he


       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017                            Page 9 of 41
       Vol. II at 16. Also during that hearing, Adoptive Parents again argued that

       Father’s adoption contest should be dismissed for his failure to “execute all the

       necessary authorizations” for obtaining his mental health records, as well as

       records for any treatment involving alcohol, drugs, communicable diseases,

       and/or HIV/AIDS. Id. at 17. Father’s counsel responded that “she understood

       that the Court’s grant[] of her Motion to Reconsider . . . gave her the

       opportunity to argue [at the April 11 hearing] whether the mental health records

       would be ordered produced, and if not, such authorizations would not be

       necessary.” Id.


[17]   In an order issued on April 12, the trial court clarified that, “although the Court

       was to decide whether such records were to be disclosed, [Father] had to

       provide authorizations so as to not delay these proceedings.” Id. at 17-18. In

       other words, the trial court ordered Father to execute authorizations for the

       release of his mental health records before the statutory hearing to determine

       whether and to what extent those records were discoverable. And the trial

       court found that Father’s “failure to provide such authorizations and/or

       discovery have created a delay in the proceedings.” Id. at 18. Accordingly,

       while the trial court denied Adoptive Parents’ motion to dismiss, the court

       advised Adoptive Parents that they could “ask the Court to reconsider such

       ruling in the event any more delays are created by the actions or by a failure to




       has difficulty understanding [Father]”; that he is entitled to an interpreter under Indiana Code Section 34-45-
       1-1; and that he cannot afford an interpreter. Id. Adoptive Parents do not explain how Father’s motion for
       interpreter would have caused any delay.

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017                            Page 10 of 41
       act by” Father or his counsel. Id. The trial court further found that, “based

       upon the testimony[,] . . . [Father’s] Mental Health Records should be and are

       hereby Ordered released and [Father] shall sign such authorizations and/or

       provide such discovery pursuant to the previously-entered Protective

       Order. . . .” Id. And the trial court granted Father’s motion to continue the

       evidentiary hearing on his motion to contest the adoption that had previously

       been set for April 25. The trial court did not reschedule the hearing.


[18]   That same day, April 12, Adoptive Parents filed a motion to reconsider the trial

       court’s April 12 order

               requesting that the Court reconsider and proceed with the
               hearing set April 25, 2016, imposing a lesser sanction than
               dismissal by having the Court take the position that the medical
               and mental health records are deemed as having an adverse
               inference to the biological father in terms of fitness.
               Additionally, counsel for Petitioners requested that [Father] be
               barred from introducing any evidence to the contrary.


       Appellant’s App. Vol. II at 147. The trial court set that motion for a hearing on

       April 22. In addition, the parties agreed and the court ordered that Adoptive

       Parents would take Father’s deposition in Indianapolis “on or before April 18,

       2016, and/or by agreement of the parties.” Id. at 218. The day following the

       trial court’s April 12 Order, Father’s counsel attempted to transmit by facsimile

       Father’s mental health records, but the facsimile transmission was terminated

       by the receiving party. Also on April 13, as ordered, Father provided to

       Adoptive Parents signed authorizations for release of his mental health records.


       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017     Page 11 of 41
[19]   On April 14, Father filed his Combined Response to Petitioners’ Motion to

       Reconsider, Motion to Dismiss Petitioners’ Motion to Reconsider, Motion to

       Dismiss Petitioners’ Petition for Adoption as a T.R. 37 Sanction, and Notice of

       Clerical Error in April 12, 2016, Court Order. In that response, Father alleged

       in relevant part as follows:


               •     Adoptive Parents did not file a petition under Indiana
               Code Section 16-39-3-3 for release of Father’s mental health
               records after Father objected to discovery of those records.
               Rather, on March 23, 2016, the trial court deemed Adoptive
               Parents’ February 1 motion to compel to be a petition for
               Father’s mental health records under the statute.

               •      The morning of March 24, Father provided to Adoptive
               Parents the information regarding his health care providers. But
               Father signed authorizations for the release of his health care
               records excluding his mental health records in light of the trial
               court’s order setting the matter of his mental health records for a
               hearing on April 11.

               •     Father’s first motion to recuse was based on the fact that
               Adoptive Parents’ attorney, during the pendency of this case,
               “had written and submitted a letter of reference for the Judge in
               this matter,” which “recommendation has a chilling effect upon
               [Father’s] confidence that he will receive a fair and unbiased
               hearing in this matter.”

               •      Adoptive Parents’ “repeated refusal to meet with the
               requirements of Indiana Code [Section] 16-39-3-1 is an
               unreasonable delay by [Adoptive Parents] and [their] failure to
               respond to [Father’s] request for production of documents and
               interrogatories[,] even after the Court entered an order of
               protection and specifically ordered [Adoptive Parents] to do so, is
               an unreasonable delay and without a legitimate basis[.]”

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017      Page 12 of 41
       Id. at 150-65.


[20]   During the evening of April 17, Father contacted his attorney, Rakuya Trice, an

       attorney with Indiana Legal Services, to inform her that he was having

       “transportation issues” and could not travel from Pittsburgh to Indianapolis in

       time for the deposition scheduled for the morning of the next day. Id. at 198.

       At 9:17 p.m. that night, Trice emailed Adoptive Parents’ attorney, Charles

       Rice, to advise him that Father might not be able to attend the deposition, and

       Trice asked whether they could reschedule the deposition for later in the week.

       Rice told Trice that he had already arrived in Indianapolis and checked into his

       hotel and that he expected Father to attend the deposition. Trice then asked, by

       email, whether the deposition could be rescheduled from the morning to the

       afternoon of April 18, but Rice refused.


[21]   In an email during the morning of April 18, Trice asked whether Father could

       appear for the deposition by telephone or whether it could be rescheduled. Rice

       responded: “Given [Father’s] pattern of obstruction and delay in this case, no.”

       Id. at 195. And Rice stated that, if Father did not show up for the deposition by

       10:30, one hour after the original start time, Rice would “close the record and

       move for dismissal.” Id. In response to that email, in an email sent at 8:15 a.m.

       on April 18, Trice wrote as follows:


               [Father] has not engaged in any obstruction. This is a
               transportation issue. He has incurred many expenses responding
               to your discovery which your clients haven’t reimbursed. He was
               present, due to your objections to him [sic] appearing at the
               hearing by telephone, at the hearing on April 11 and has to be

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017   Page 13 of 41
               present in person on April 22nd due to your objections to him
               [sic] appearing by telephone at the hearing. You are aware he is
               a college student and eligible for [representation by Indiana Legal
               Services]. He is available by telephone and as stated is willing to
               reschedule. He cannot be present by 10:30 a.m.


       Id. Rice did not agree to conduct the deposition over the telephone or to

       reschedule the deposition for later in the same day or at any other time.


[22]   After Father did not appear for his deposition, on April 18 Trice filed a motion

       to withdraw as Father’s attorney, which the trial court granted. Father did not

       appear in person for the April 22 hearing, which was set to address various

       pending motions other than Father’s motion to contest the adoption. Father

       did appear by telephone8 at the April 22 hearing and asked that new counsel be

       appointed to represent him. Father also asked that the hearing be continued.

       The trial court appointed new counsel for Father, and Father’s new counsel also

       moved to continue the April 22 hearing. The trial court granted that motion

       over Adoptive Parents’ objection. The trial court set a hearing for May 10 to

       address Adoptive Parents’ motion to dismiss Father’s motion to contest the

       adoption, and the court ordered Father to show cause why his motion to

       contest the adoption should not be dismissed for failure to comply with

       discovery orders.




       8
        The CCS states that Father “appeared by telephone and requested appointment of counsel.” Appellant’s
       App. Vol. II at 15.

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017                    Page 14 of 41
[23]   At the hearing on May 10, Father appeared in person and by counsel. After

       argument by both parties’ attorneys, Father testified regarding his participation

       in the discovery process and the reasons for his failure to appear for his

       deposition. After the hearing concluded, the court asked attorneys for both

       parties to submit proposed orders.


[24]   Six weeks later, on June 23, the trial court entered an order dismissing Father’s

       motion to contest the adoption and concluding that his consent to the adoption

       was implied by statute. The trial court’s order included the following findings

       and conclusions:


               21. The Court . . . finds that [Father’s] course of frivolous objections
               to the production of mental health records was designed to impede the
               ability of the Adoptive Parents [to] try this case on April 25, 2016.

                                                      ***

               32. [Father] failed, without justifiable cause, to appear for his
               deposition which was properly noticed and set for April 18, 2016.

                                                      ***

               38. Judging [Father]’s credibility and all of the inferences from
               the evidence presented, the Court finds that [Father] has not
               shown cause why his Motion to Contest should not be dismissed
               for:

                       •        a failure by [Father] to appear at his deposition
                                on April 18, 2016;

                       •        a failure by [Father] to appear at the hearing
                                on April 22, 2016, and/or


       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017             Page 15 of 41
                •        a failure to provide complete discovery.

                                               ***

        41. [Father]’s actions are deserving of dismissal. Given
        [Father]’s history of threatening suicide, [Father] was keenly
        aware that his mental health records would be important
        evidence in this case. By intentionally hindering the Adoptive
        Parents’ legitimate discovery requests for these records, [Father]
        has impeded the ability of the Adoptive Parents to present crucial
        evidence regarding [Father]’s Mental Health. This Court
        concludes that [Father] has consistently and intentionally
        obstructed the necessary and legitimate discovery and the ability
        to obtain a timely determination of the Motion to Contest.
        Moreover, [Father] continued his pattern of non-cooperation and
        delay in the face of clear Warnings from this Court that further
        delay would result in dismissal of his Motion to Contest.
        [Father]’s failure to attend his deposition and subsequent failure
        to attend the hearing set for April 22, 2016[,] are the final straw.

                                               ***

        43. In adoption cases, if the court finds that a father is failing
        to [p]rosecute a challenge to the adoption without undue delay,
        the Court shall dismiss any challenge to the adoption and the
        person’s consent to the adoption shall be irrevocably implied.
        I[.]C[. §] 31-19-10-1.2(g). . . . [Father] has failed to prosecute his
        Motion by the actions he has taken or failed to take.

        44. I[.]C[. §] 31-19-9-12(2) further provides that a putative
        father’s consent to adoption is irrevocably implied without
        further court action if the putative father “having filed a motion
        to contest the adoption in accordance with I[.]C[. §] 31-19-10,
        fails to appear at the hearing set to contest the adoption.[”] [Father]
        failed, without justifiable cause, to appear in court on April 22,
        2016 despite being ordered to appear personally.


Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017            Page 16 of 41
                                                      ***

               It is therefore ORDERED as follows:

               1.    The Motion to Contest filed by [Father] is dismissed, with
               prejudice.

               2.      [Father]’s consent to the adoption is irrevocably implied
               pursuant to I[.]C[. §] 31-19- 9-12(2) I[.]C[. §] 31-19-10-l.2(g) and
               I[.]C[. §] 31-19-9-l8(a) and (b).

                                                      ***

               7.      The Court further finds pursuant to Trial Rule 54 that
               there is no just reason for delay and directs that this order shall be
               a final judgment as to [Father].


       Id. at 217-24 (emphases added). On July 20, the trial court issued the adoption

       decree. This appeal ensued.


                                      Discussion and Decision
                                                    Overview

[25]   Father’s putative parental rights over Child are at stake in this litigation. Father

       has expressed his unwavering desire to be a parent to Child. Father filed his

       putative father affidavit and his petition to establish paternity before Child’s

       birth and before Adoptive Parents’ petition for adoption. The paternity and

       adoption proceedings were subsequently consolidated. Father then petitioned

       the trial court to revoke Adoptive Parents’ custody of Child and, in the

       alternative, for parenting time. Father submitted to the trial court a DNA test

       that appears to show that he is Child’s biological father. But the trial court did

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017      Page 17 of 41
       not rule on those petitions. Instead, the court dismissed Father’s motion to

       contest the adoption and his petitions to establish paternity and custody, which

       terminated Father’s putative parental rights.


[26]   Writing for a unanimous Indiana Supreme Court, Chief Justice Rush recently

       emphasized that “[f]ew liberties are as central to our society as the right of

       parents to raise their children. Our General Assembly has thus set a high bar

       for terminating parental rights[.]” D.B. v. Ind. Dep’t of Child Servs. (In re Bi.B.), 69

       N.E.3d 464, 465 (Ind. 2017). In R.S. v. Marion County Department of Child

       Services (In re R.S.), 56 N.E.3d 625, 628 (Ind. 2016), our Supreme Court further

       stated:


                 As this Court and the United States Supreme Court have
                 reiterated many times, “[a] parent’s interest in the care, custody,
                 and control of his or her children is ‘perhaps the oldest of the
                 fundamental liberty interests.’” Bester v. Lake Co. Office of Family
                 & Children, 839 N.E.2d 143, 147 (Ind. 2005) (quoting Troxel v.
                 Granville, 530 U.S. 57, 65 (2000)). Although parental interests
                 are not absolute, “the parent-child relationship is ‘one of the most
                 valued relationships in our culture.’” Id. at 147 (citing Neal v.
                 DeKalb Cty. Div. of Family & Children, 796 N.E.2d 280, 285 (Ind.
                 2003)).


[27]   A natural parent enjoys a presumptively superior right over a nonparent to

       custody of a child, and a third party who seeks to displace a parent as custodian

       always bears the burden of overcoming the parent’s superior right. McIntyre v.

       Medaris (In re M.D.), 612 N.E.2d 1068, 1074 (Ind. Ct. App. 1993), trans. denied.

       A petitioner for adoption must prove by clear and convincing evidence both


       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017       Page 18 of 41
       that the parent is unfit to be a parent and that it would be in the best interests of

       the child for the court to dispense with the parent’s consent. Ind. Code § 31-19-

       9-8(a) (2017); Evans v. Murray (In re M.A.S.), 815 N.E.2d 216, 219 (Ind. Ct. App.

       2004).


[28]   The primary issue on appeal is whether Father’s conduct during the discovery

       phase of this litigation warranted dismissal. As explained below, it was

       Adoptive Parents, not Father, who caused the delays between January 11,

       2016—when Father lawfully objected to the unqualified release of his mental

       health records—and April 11, 2016—when the court finally held the hearing

       required under the statute to determine whether those records should be

       released. Our review of the record, as well as oral argument, leave us

       convinced that counsel for Adoptive Parents pursued an unrelenting narrative

       that unfairly characterized Father as dilatory and uncooperative. The trial

       court agreed with Adoptive Parents and, after Father failed to appear for his

       first scheduled deposition and in person for a motions hearing, the court

       dismissed Father’s motion to contest the adoption.


                                             Standard of Review

[29]   Father appeals the trial court’s order dismissing his motion to contest the

       adoption under Trial Rule 37 and Indiana Code Section 31-19-10-1.2(g)

       following an evidentiary hearing. Trial Rule 37 provides


                broad latitude for the trial court to impose sanctions to ensure
                cooperative discovery, and thus encompasses remedies which
                may be sought by or imposed against either party. See Ind. Trial

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017     Page 19 of 41
               Rule 37 (“Failure to make or cooperate in discovery:
               Sanctions”). Trial Rule 37(B) permits the trial court to “make
               such orders . . . as are just,” including “treating as a contempt of
               court the failure to obey,” “prohibiting [the disobedient party]
               from introducing designated matters into evidence,” “dismissing
               the action or proceeding or any part thereof, or rendering a
               judgment by default against the disobedient party” when that
               party “fails to obey an order to provide or permit discovery.”
               T.R. 37(B).


       Wright v. Miller, 989 N.E.2d 324, 327 (Ind. 2013) (emphasis added). Similarly,

       Indiana Code Section 31-19-10-1.2(g) provides in relevant part that, if a court

       finds that the person who filed the motion to contest the adoption has failed to

       prosecute the motion without undue delay, the court shall dismiss the motion to

       contest with prejudice. The trial court relied on both Trial Rule 37 and Indiana

       Code Section 31-19-10-1.2(g) when it dismissed Father’s motion to contest the

       adoption.


[30]   Both grounds for the court’s judgment turn on the court’s findings and

       conclusions related to Father’s alleged delays in releasing his mental health

       records, his failure to appear in person for a motions hearing, and his failure to

       appear for his first scheduled deposition. Because the court’s judgment follows

       an evidentiary hearing on Adoptive Parents’ motion to dismiss, and because the

       court entered findings and conclusions based on the evidence presented at that

       hearing, we review the court’s judgment under our clearly erroneous standard




       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017     Page 20 of 41
       of review.9 We review the issues covered by the findings with a two-tiered

       standard of review that asks whether the evidence supports the findings and

       whether the findings support the judgment. See Steele-Giri v. Steele, 51 N.E.3d

       119, 123 (Ind. 2016).


[31]   In Finding 38, the trial court concluded that dismissal was warranted based on

       the following three facts found by the court:


                •        Father’s “failure to provide complete discovery”;

                •        Father’s failure to appear at the April 22, 2016, hearing;
                         “and/or”

                •        Father’s failure to appear at his deposition on April 18,
                         2016.


       Appellant’s App. Vol. II at 220. The court emphasized Father’s “pattern of

       non-cooperation and delay” in the face of the requests for his mental health

       records and characterized Father’s failure to appear in person at the April 22

       hearing and at his deposition as “the final straw.” Id. at 222. Those findings

       were the basis for the court’s judgment under both Trial Rule 37 and Indiana

       Code Section 31-19-10-1.2(g).




       9
         While a trial court’s ruling on discovery matters is usually reviewed for an abuse of discretion, because this
       appeal is taken from the court’s findings and conclusions following an evidentiary hearing, the clearly
       erroneous standard is the appropriate standard of review here.

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017                             Page 21 of 41
[32]   Accordingly, on appeal Father contends that (1) he is not at fault for the delay

       in the release of his mental health records; (2) his failure to attend the April 22

       motions hearing in person did not warrant dismissal; and (3) his failure to

       appear at his deposition did not warrant dismissal. We address each of those

       three issues in turn.10 We then consider, sua sponte, whether the trial judge

       should recuse himself from this proceeding on remand.


                                      Issue One: Mental Health Records

[33]   Father maintains that the trial court’s conclusion that he is responsible for the

       delay in obtaining his mental health records is clearly erroneous. In particular,

       Father asserts that, because Adoptive Parents did not comply with Indiana

       Code Section 16-39-3-3 until March 23, 2016—when the trial court deemed

       their motion to compel as a petition to release mental health records—and

       because the court scheduled a hearing on that petition for April 11, Adoptive

       Parents, not Father, are responsible for the delay in obtaining those records

       prior to April 11. Thus, Father continues, the trial court erred when it

       attributed that delay to Father and dismissed his motion to contest the

       adoption, in whole or in part, on that basis. We must agree.


[34]   “Discovery of mental health records [is] subject to the particularized

       requirements” of Indiana Code Chapters 16-39-2 and -3. See Williams v. State,



       10
          To the extent the trial court based its dismissal on Father’s motions to recuse and motion for an
       interpreter, there is no evidence in the record that those motions caused any undue delay and, as such, they
       cannot support dismissal. In any event, in Finding 38, the trial court lists only three bases for the dismissal,
       none of which relate to Father’s motions to recuse or request for an interpreter.

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017                              Page 22 of 41
       819 N.E.2d 381, 385 (Ind. Ct. App. 2004), trans. denied. Indiana Code Section

       16-39-2-3 provides in relevant part that a patient’s mental health record is

       confidential and shall be disclosed only with the consent of the patient unless

       otherwise provided in Indiana Code Chapters 16-39-2 and -3. In his discovery

       responses on January 11, Father objected to the unqualified release of his

       mental health records. Adoptive Parents were then required to file a petition

       for release of the records, I.C. § 16-39-3-3(2), and provide notice to Father and

       the mental health providers of a hearing on that petition, I.C. § 16-39-3-4. Then

       the trial court was required to hold a confidential hearing, I.C. § 16-39-3-6, and

       make findings that (1) other reasonable methods of obtaining the information

       were not available or would not be effective, and (2) the need for disclosure

       outweighed the potential for harm to the patient, I.C. § 16-39-3-7.11


[35]   At oral argument counsel for Adoptive Parents initially asserted that whether

       they had complied with the mental health records statutes was a “red herring”

       and was, at most, “harmless error.” We think not. Indeed, counsel for

       Adoptive Parents ultimately conceded both that Father had a right to insist on



       11
           In their brief on appeal, Adoptive Parents make much of the fact that Father “now concedes his mental
       health was a central issue in the trial court proceedings.” Appellees’ Br. at 23. But Adoptive Parents are
       incorrect that, merely because his mental health is at issue, Father has no right to object to the release of his
       mental health records without a hearing. Quoting Owen v. Owen, 563 N.E.2d 605, 608 (Ind. 1990), Adoptive
       Parents assert that “in child custody proceedings, the mental and physical health of all parties involved
       become subjects for consideration by the trial court.” Appellees’ Br. at 23. But Owen was decided three years
       before the effective date of Indiana Code Section 16-39-3-3, which requires a party seeking mental health
       records over an objection to file a petition, and Indiana Code Section 16-39-3-7, which sets out what findings
       a trial court must make following a hearing on the petition. In essence, Adoptive Parents argue that they can
       nullify the confidentiality of a mental health patient’s records by simply asserting that the patient’s mental
       health is at issue. This argument disregards Indiana Code Chapters 16-39-2 and -3, and we reject it.



       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017                             Page 23 of 41
       compliance with the Indiana Code’s provisions regarding the discovery of

       mental health records and that it was Adoptive Parents’ burden to comply with

       those statutes.


[36]   But Adoptive Parents never filed the petition required by Indiana Code Section

       16-39-3-3(2).12 Instead, on March 23, some seven weeks after-the-fact, the trial

       court “deemed” Adoptive Parents’ February 1 motion to compel to be a

       petition for Father’s mental health records under Section 16-39-3-3 and set a

       hearing on that petition for April 11.13 As such, the delay in obtaining Father’s

       mental health records to that date is not attributable to Father. Rather, the

       delay until April 11 is due to Adoptive Parents’ noncompliance with the

       Indiana Code and, thus, is wholly attributable to them.


[37]   In its findings, and throughout the course of the proceeding, the trial court

       attributed the delay in the production of the mental health records to Father.

       For instance, in its April 12 order, the trial court stated that Father’s failure to

       provide signed authorizations for the release of his mental health records before

       the April 11 hearing “have created delay in the proceedings.” Appellees’ App.

       Vol. II at 18. And, in the dismissal order, in Finding 21 the court found that



       12
          We note that, at oral argument counsel for Adoptive Parents claimed that any error with regard to the
       violation of the mental health records statutes has been waived by Father for failure to raise it on appeal. But
       in his brief, Father makes cogent argument with citations to Indiana Code Chapter 16-39-3 and this court’s
       opinion in Buford v. Flori Roberts, Inc., 663 N.E.2d 1159 (Ind. Ct. App. 1996), which is direct authority on this
       issue. In their brief, Adoptive Parents did not argue waiver, but wholly failed to address Father’s argument
       under the relevant statutory and case law.
       13
          Further, the trial court does not appear to have made the necessary findings under the statute before
       ordering Father to disclose his mental health records. I.C. § 16-39-3-7.

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017                             Page 24 of 41
       Father’s “course of frivolous objections to the production of mental health

       records was designed to impede the ability of the Adoptive Parents [to] try this

       case on April 25, 2016.” Appellant’s App. Vol. II at 217.


[38]   We hold that the trial court’s findings that Father’s “frivolous objections” to the

       production of his mental health records caused undue delay in the proceedings

       are clearly erroneous and do not support dismissal of Father’s motion to contest

       the adoption. As a matter of law, Father was entitled to object to Adoptive

       Parents’ demands for the unqualified release of his confidential mental health

       records until they had filed a petition and requested a hearing in compliance

       with the Indiana Code. Father’s objections were based upon the unambiguous

       command of the statute enacted by our legislature and supported by this court’s

       precedent. See Buford, 663 N.E.2d at 1161; Williams, 819 N.E.2d at 385-86.

       Adoptive Parents were responsible for the delay in obtaining Father’s mental

       health records until April 11, the date of the hearing on their petition, and

       Father had complied with all other discovery requests by that time.14


[39]   We decline to endorse a double standard. To the extent that Father may be

       responsible for delay in completing other discovery, such delay was not

       significantly greater than the delay that Adoptive Parents undeniably caused by




       14
          In their brief on appeal and at oral argument, Adoptive Parents’ argument on this issue focuses on
       Father’s alleged failure to timely authorize the release of his mental health records. To the extent Father may
       have otherwise failed to timely comply with discovery requests, the evidence does not support dismissal on
       those grounds. In any event, counsel for Adoptive Parents acknowledged that Father had complied with all
       other discovery requests by March 28, 2016.

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017                           Page 25 of 41
       their failure to comply with Indiana Code Chapters 16-39-2 and -3. The trial

       court’s conclusion that dismissal was warranted because of Father’s failure to

       provide complete discovery without undue delay is not supported by the

       evidence and is clearly erroneous.


                         Issue Two: Failure to Appear at April 22 Hearing

[40]   Father also contends that the trial court erred when it dismissed his motion to

       contest the adoption based, in whole or in part, on his failure to appear in

       person at the April 22 motions hearing. On this issue, the trial court concluded

       in relevant part that

               I[.]C[. §] 31-19-9-12(2) further provides that a putative father’s
               consent to adoption is irrevocably implied without further court
               action if the putative father “having filed a motion to contest the
               adoption in accordance with I[.]C[. §] 31-19-10, fails to appear at
               the hearing set to contest the adoption.[”] [Father] failed, without
               justifiable cause, to appear in court on April 22, 2016[,] despite
               being ordered to appear personally.


       Appellant’s App. Vol. II at 223 (emphasis added). We must conclude that the

       trial court’s judgment on this issue is also clearly erroneous.


[41]   The record shows, unequivocally, that the April 22 hearing was not the hearing

       set to contest the adoption and, therefore, that Indiana Code Section 31-19-9-

       12(2) is inapplicable. Rather, while the trial court had initially set the final

       hearing for April 25, on Father’s motion to continue the court postponed the

       hearing for a date to be determined. The April 22 hearing was set to address

       various motions, see Appellant’s App. Vol. II at 148-49, but not Father’s motion

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017     Page 26 of 41
       to contest the adoption. At oral argument, Adoptive Parents’ counsel agreed

       that the April 22 hearing was a hearing on other motions.


[42]   Further, to the extent Adoptive Parents fault Father for not appearing at the

       April 22 hearing despite the trial court’s order that Father appear in person, the

       CCS shows that Father called the court and appeared by telephone. And

       Father moved to continue the hearing and requested that the court appoint him

       new counsel. Father was entitled to counsel in this proceeding, see Brooks v.

       McGee (In re G.W.B.), 776 N.E.2d 952, 954 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002), and the court

       granted both Father’s request for counsel and the motion to continue.


[43]   We hold that the trial court’s Finding 44, which refers to the April 22, 2016,

       hearing as “the hearing set to contest the adoption,” is clearly erroneous.

       Despite the trial court’s order that Father appear in person at the April 22

       motions hearing, Father’s failure to appear in person at that hearing does not

       support dismissal of his motion to contest the adoption and, in effect, a

       termination of his putative parental rights. Father appeared by telephone,

       requested new counsel, to which he was entitled, and the trial court granted

       Father’s and his new counsel’s motions to continue the April 22 hearing.

       Adoptive Parents have not shown that they were unduly prejudiced by Father’s

       failure to appear in person at the motions hearing. The trial court erred when it

       based its dismissal of Father’s motion to contest the adoption on Father’s

       failure to appear in person at the April 22 motions hearing.




       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017   Page 27 of 41
                              Issue Three: Failure to Appear at Deposition

[44]   Counsel for Adoptive Parents concluded his oral argument by stating that,

       “irrespective of what happened with the mental health records,” Father’s appeal

       “comes down to a question of whether [he] failed to appear for his deposition”

       and whether the trial court was entitled to dismiss on that ground. Father

       maintains that, because his putative parental rights are at stake in this

       proceeding, dismissal for his failure to appear at his first scheduled deposition

       on April 18, 2016, was unjust and did not warrant dismissal. We must agree

       with Father.


[45]   As Father points out, he lives approximately five and one-half hours away from

       Indianapolis, does not own an automobile, and depends on others for

       transportation to Indianapolis.15 And, as Father also notes, “[b]efore this

       deposition, Father had not failed to appear, either in person or by counsel, for

       any matter in this case.” Appellant’s Br. at 11. It is undisputed that Father did

       not merely fail to attend the deposition without explanation. Rather, he

       contacted his attorney, Trice, the night before to let her know that his planned

       transportation to Indianapolis had fallen through. Trice, in turn, immediately

       contacted Rice and asked that the deposition be rescheduled later in the week.

       Rice refused. Trice then asked that Father give the deposition over the



       15
           Adoptive Parents make much of the fact that Father had money to gamble and go to a strip club. There is
       no dispute that, rather than relying on a friend to arrange transportation by car to Indianapolis, Father could
       have purchased a bus ticket. But that is not the question on appeal. Rather, the question here is whether his
       failure to appear, without more, warrants dismissal and, in effect, a termination of his putative parental
       rights.

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017                            Page 28 of 41
       telephone or, in the alternative, that the deposition be rescheduled for the

       afternoon of April 18, but Rice categorically refused.


[46]   At the May 10 hearing, Father testified as follows with regard to the missed

       deposition:


               Q: Have you, let’s talk about the day before the deposition.
               What happened on April 17, 2016?

               A: Well, when I knew that the deposition was going to be
               videotaped, I asked her whether it’s common for that to happen
               and she said yeah. And I told her that I didn’t really want to be
               videotaped to be honest, but I would attend the deposition. And
               what happened that day is that the person who usually like help
               [sic] me rent a car which makes it cheaper for me to be able to
               travel back and forth since I have to attend two hearings in a
               short period of time, the deposition and then the hearing
               following I think April 22nd or 18th, I don’t remember. But,
               yeah, she didn’t respond to my text. What she said was she lost
               her phone at her sister’s house and she texted me the next day. I
               tried that night to come . . . .

               Q: Were you trying to get transportation to Indiana?

               A: Yeah, I actually did, yeah, look up the bus ticket. It was,
               there was one like $100 one way at 7 p.m. leaving Pittsburgh to
               get to Indiana like the next, I guess at 2 a.m. I checked at around
               6:30-ish and I couldn’t take that one for sure because coming to, I
               didn’t have like the funds or I did, like $400 funds in my account
               at that time. If I would have taken the Greyhound or the bus at
               7, it would have cost me $200 and then I would get here at 2 a.m.
               and wouldn’t found [sic] my way, I didn’t have a place to stay
               then or a hotel to stay because I didn’t have the right funds. I
               asked for Ms. Trice to ask Mr. Rice if they can extend it to the afternoon
               of the deposition day and he rejected our request.

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017         Page 29 of 41
       Tr. at 29-30 (emphasis added).


[47]   In support of his contention that dismissal of his motion to contest the adoption

       based on his failure to attend his deposition is unjust, Father cites this court’s

       opinion in Nagel v. Northern Indiana Public Service Company, 26 N.E.3d 30, 39-40

       (Ind. Ct. App. 2015), trans. denied, where we stated as follows:


               In determining the appropriateness of default judgment as a
               discovery sanction, there is a marked preference in Indiana for
               deciding disputes on their merits, “‘especially in cases involving
               material issues of fact, substantial amounts of money, or weighty
               policy determinations.’” Wright v. Miller, 989 N.E.2d 324, 328 (Ind.
               2013) (quoting Charnas v. Estate of Loizos, 822 N.E.2d 181, 185
               (Ind. Ct. App. 2005)). Courts should not apply an “overly
               formulaic approach” in deciding whether to impose the “drastic
               sanction” of default judgment in the case of a discovery violation.
               Id. If possible, trial courts should impose sanctions that have a minimal
               effect on the evidence presented at trial and should not impose sanctions
               at all if the circumstances indicate that sanctions would be unjust. Id. at
               330. We presume that a trial court will act in accord with what is
               fair and equitable in each case. Id.


       (Emphases added).


[48]   We hold that the trial court’s conclusion on this issue is clearly erroneous.

       Dismissal of Father’s motion to contest the adoption based solely on his failure

       to appear for his first scheduled deposition, despite his offer to be deposed later

       that same day, was unwarranted and, given the fundamental interests at stake,

       unjust. See Wright, 989 N.E.2d at 330. We agree with Father that the

       “fundamental importance of the issues specifically in this matter,” namely, his


       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017          Page 30 of 41
       putative parental rights, warranted “[l]ess draconian ways in which to sanction

       Father” for his failure to appear at his deposition. Appellant’s Br. at 12.


[49]   We reject Adoptive Parents’ contention that dismissal was warranted because

       they were unduly prejudiced by Father’s failure to appear at the deposition.

       Adoptive Parents maintain that, while the trial court had already vacated the

       April 25 hearing on Father’s motion to contest the adoption, they had asked the

       court to reconsider and they “still had the chance of a hearing taking place on

       [April] 25th”16 and, thus, it was essential that they depose Father on April 18.17

       But “the chance of a hearing” is mere speculation. Moreover, Father had

       offered to be deposed later in the day on April 18, but Rice flatly refused.

       When asked at oral argument to explain that refusal, counsel for Adoptive

       Parents responded that he “had no assurance that [Father] would show up.”

       But counsel acknowledged that Father had not failed to appear for any matter

       scheduled prior to April 18.


[50]   The trial court’s order provided that the deposition would be taken “on or

       before April 18, 2016, and/or by agreement of the parties.” Rice’s outright

       rejection of Father’s request to reschedule the deposition from the morning to

       the afternoon of the same day or at any other time was unreasonable. See, e.g.,




       16
          At oral argument counsel for Adoptive Parents initially alleged that, as of April 18, the April 25 final
       hearing date “was still on,” but he ultimately acknowledged that there was only “the chance of a hearing” on
       April 25 because the court had not yet ruled on their motion to re-instate the April 25 hearing date.
       17
            We note that the parties had not yet exchanged witness and exhibit lists as of April 18.



       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017                          Page 31 of 41
       Howard v. Dravet, 813 N.E.2d 1217, 1223 (Ind. Ct. App. 2004) (stating that

       counsel should cooperate and make “sincere efforts” to resolve discovery

       matters). Given that there was no hearing set to contest the adoption, Adoptive

       Parents have not shown undue prejudice by Father’s failure to appear at his first

       scheduled deposition.18


[51]   As Adoptive Parents correctly point out, in C.A.B. v. J.D.M. (In re C.B.M.), 992

       N.E.2d 687, 691 (Ind. 2013), our Supreme Court observed that “time is of the

       essence in matters involving children.” But the court also emphasized as

       follows:

                We understand the trial court’s concern for a speedy, permanent
                placement for [children subject to an adoption]. But a fit parent’s
                rights are fundamental and constitutionally protected, In re
                Visitation of M.L.B., 983 N.E.2d 583, 586 (Ind. 2013) (citing Troxel
                v. Granville, 530 U.S. 57, 64, 120 S.Ct. 2054, 147 L.Ed.2d 49
                (2000)), and even a matter as important as [children’s] best interests
                does not necessarily override that right. Id.


       992 N.E.2d at 691 (emphasis added). Here, Father has fought to establish his

       parental rights over Child since before Child’s birth. Father’s paternity and

       fitness to parent Child have not yet been determined, and he is entitled to an

       evidentiary hearing on those issues. Under the unique circumstances of this




       18
          Adoptive Parents make much of the fact that the trial court had “ordered” Father to appear for his
       deposition on April 18, but, again, the court’s order stated that he was to be deposed “on or before April 18,
       2016, and/or by agreement of the parties.” Appellant’s App. Vol. II at 148 (emphasis added).

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017                            Page 32 of 41
       proceeding, we hold that Father’s putative rights supersede any concern for a

       speedy, permanent placement for Child. See id.


[52]   In sum, the trial court erred when it dismissed Father’s motion to contest the

       adoption based on Father’s failure to appear at his first scheduled deposition.

       And, because the trial court erred when it dismissed Father’s motion to contest

       the adoption based on Father’s purported failure to provide complete discovery,

       his failure to appear at the April 22 hearing, and/or his failure to appear at his

       April 18 deposition, we reverse the trial court’s dismissal order and remand

       with instructions that the court hold an evidentiary hearing on Father’s motion

       to contest the adoption.19


                                         Issue Four: Recusal on Remand

[53]   Finally, we address, sua sponte, whether the trial judge should recuse himself on

       remand. We first note that Father moved the trial judge to recuse himself after

       counsel for Adoptive Parents wrote a letter of recommendation in support of

       the trial judge’s application to the Indiana Supreme Court while this proceeding

       was pending in the trial court. Counsel for Adoptive Parents characterized

       Father’s recusal motion as “simply another attempt to get a continuance,” but




       19
            On remand, the court shall first determine whether Father is Child’s biological father.



       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017                         Page 33 of 41
       we conclude that the motion was made for good cause, and we agree with

       Father that the judge should have recused himself at that time.20


[54]   Following Justice Dickson’s retirement announcement in November 2015,

       Judge Nation applied for the impending vacancy on the court. In his

       application, Judge Nation was required to provide the names of three attorneys

       who had been professional adversaries in the course of his practice or who had

       litigated substantial cases in his court and “who would be in positions to

       comment on [his] qualifications for appointment to the Indiana Supreme

       Court.” Appellant’s Supp. App. Vol. II at 8. Judge Nation designated

       Adoptive Parents’ counsel, Rice, as one of his three references. Accordingly,

       on February 4, 2016, three days after Adoptive Parents’ motion to compel, Rice

       wrote a letter to the Judicial Nominating Commission in which he endorsed

       Judge Nation’s application and described him as “the greatest jurist” he had

       encountered in his “state-wide” litigation practice. Id. at 2. On March 9, the

       court granted the motion to compel and ordered production of Father’s mental

       health records, even though, as explained above, Adoptive parents had wholly

       failed to comply with the mental health records statutes.


[55]   Rule 1.2 of the Code of Judicial Conduct provides that a judge shall act at all

       times in a manner that promotes public confidence in the independence,




       20
          Father filed a second motion to recuse based on an article that included the author’s characterization of
       the trial judge’s response to a question regarding the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Brown v.
       Board of Education during an interview for a vacancy on the Indiana Supreme Court. We express no opinion
       regarding the merits of Father’s second motion to recuse.

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017                          Page 34 of 41
       integrity, and impartiality of the judiciary, and shall avoid impropriety and the

       appearance of impropriety. And Rule 2.11 provides that a judge shall disqualify

       himself in any proceeding in which the judge’s impartiality might reasonably be

       questioned. We recognize Judge Nation as a capable and respected jurist with

       many years of distinguished public service. We ascribe no improper motive to

       the court or to counsel. Indeed, the Judicial Nominating Commission invites

       attorneys to comment on applicants for our appellate judiciary, and that is both

       necessary and useful.


[56]   But there is more here. In his application—submitted shortly before the

       adoption petition was filed in this case—Judge Nation expressly identified and

       designated Rice as one of his three required references. Rice subsequently

       wrote a letter of recommendation while this case was pending in Judge Nation’s

       court. Rice’s letter was not merely one of many letters, and it was not a

       gratuitous or coincidental endorsement. It was an integral part of Judge

       Nation’s application.


[57]   The appearance of impropriety, that is, the mere appearance of bias or partiality,

       may require recusal if an objective person, knowledgeable of all the

       circumstances, would have a rational basis for doubting the judge’s impartiality.

       See Bloomington Magazine, Inc. v. Kiang, 961 N.E.2d 61, 64 (Ind. Ct. App. 2012).

       The issue here is not whether the judge is biased or incapable of setting aside his

       relationship with Rice but, rather, whether an objective person would rationally

       doubt the judge’s impartiality given that Rice wrote the letter of

       recommendation after Judge Nation had expressly designated Rice as a

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017   Page 35 of 41
       reference. See id. This question is larger than this particular case and implicates

       public confidence in the administration of justice. See, e.g., State ex rel. Kirtz v.

       Delaware Cir. Ct. No. 5, 916 N.E.2d 658, 661 (Ind. 2009).


[58]   As the United States Supreme Court has observed,

               [a] fair trial in a fair tribunal is a basic requirement of due
               process. Fairness of course requires an absence of actual bias in
               the trial of cases. But our system of law has always endeavored
               to prevent even the probability of unfairness. To this end no man
               can be a judge in his own case and no man is permitted to try
               cases where he has an interest in the outcome. That interest
               cannot be defined with precision. Circumstances and
               relationships must be considered. This Court has said, however,
               that “[e]very procedure which would offer a possible temptation
               to the average man as a judge . . . not to hold the balance nice,
               clear, and true between the State and the accused denies the latter
               due process of law.” Tumey v. State of Ohio, 273 U.S. 510, 532, 47
               S. Ct. 437, 444, 71 L.Ed. 749 [(1927)]. Such a stringent rule may
               sometimes bar trial by judges who have no actual bias and who would do
               their very best to weigh the scales of justice equally between contending
               parties. But to perform its high function in the best way “justice must
               satisfy the appearance of justice.” Offutt v. United States, 348 U.S. 11,
               14, 75 S. Ct. 11, 13 [(1954)].


       In re Murchison, 349 U.S. 133, 136 (1955) (emphasis added).


[59]   Here, put simply, there can be no doubt that the timing of the judge’s

       application and Rice’s letter to the Commission demonstrates at least an

       appearance of impropriety. See, e.g., Kirtz, 916 N.E.2d at 661. Thus, we

       conclude that Judge Nation should have granted Father’s first motion to recuse.



       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017        Page 36 of 41
[60]   Father has not raised this issue on appeal, and we emphasize that we do not

       reverse on that ground. However, given our disposition of the three issues that

       are raised on appeal, the same concerns that indicate the motion to recuse

       should have been granted in the first instance also inform our consideration of

       whether Judge Nation should recuse himself on remand.


[61]   And we conclude that he should. In United States v. Robin, 553 F.2d 8, 10 (2d

       Cir. 1977), the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit observed

       as follows:


               Absent proof of personal bias requiring recusa[l], Title 28 U.S.C.
               [§] 144, the principal factors considered by us in determining
               whether further proceedings should be conducted before a
               different judge are (1) whether the original judge would
               reasonably be expected upon remand to have substantial
               difficulty in putting out of his or her mind previously-expressed
               views or findings determined to be erroneous or based on
               evidence that must be rejected, (2) whether reassignment is
               advisable to preserve the appearance of justice, and (3) whether
               reassignment would entail waste and duplication out of
               proportion to any gain in preserving the appearance of fairness.

               Where a judge has made detailed findings based on evidence
               erroneously admitted or factors erroneously considered, the
               circumstances sometimes are such that upon remand he or she
               either cannot reasonably be expected to erase the earlier
               impressions from his or her mind or may tend to lean over
               backwards or overreact in an effort to be fair and impartial. A
               new fact-finder would not labor under any such handicap. The
               seriousness of this problem in any particular case will depend
               upon a number of factors, including the nature of the proceeding,
               the firmness of the judge’s earlier-expressed views or findings,
               and the reasons for the reversal. Upon remand for a retrial, an

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017   Page 37 of 41
               additional factor bearing upon whether to reassign to another
               judge is whether the retrial will be before the judge as a fact-
               finder or sitting with a jury. Where the judge sits as the fact-
               finder, reassignment is the preferable course, since it avoids any
               rub-off of earlier error. A classic example is the retrial of a
               criminal non-jury case resulting from a reversal attributed to the
               erroneous denial of a motion to suppress evidence, where
               reassignment is essential to preclude any possible consideration
               being given upon retrial to the suppressed evidence. No such
               problem is usually confronted upon retrial before a different jury.


       (Citations omitted).


[62]   Apart from the above-stated concerns with respect to the appearance of

       impropriety, the trial court’s findings and conclusions demonstrate the court’s

       negative assessment of Father’s credibility and character, as well as his motives

       for objecting to the unqualified release of his mental health records despite his

       statutory right to make those objections. Based on the proposed order

       submitted by counsel for Adoptive Parents, the court’s findings and conclusions

       mimic the harsh tenor of the arguments advanced by Adoptive Parents in

       support of dismissal throughout the proceeding. For example, the trial court

       characterized Father’s lawful objections to the unqualified release of his mental

       health records before the April 11 hearing as “frivolous,” as “intentionally

       hindering . . . the legitimate discovery requests for these records” by Adoptive

       Parents, and “designed to impede the ability of the Adoptive Parents [to] try

       this case on April 25, 2016.” Appellant’s App. Vol. II at 217, 222. In addition,

       notwithstanding Father’s insistence that Adoptive Parents comply with the

       mental health records statutes, the court described Father’s conduct as

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017    Page 38 of 41
       “contumacious” and “consistently seeking a de facto stay [of the proceeding]

       through delay.” Id. at 220. Finally, the court described Father’s failure to

       appear at his deposition and in person at the April 22 hearing after his

       “continued pattern of non-cooperation and delay” as “the final straw.” Id. at

       222.


[63]   We have a significant concern that the trial judge—or any trial judge similarly

       situated—would have difficulty setting aside such findings and conclusions,

       including the judge’s determination that Father was not credible, in considering

       the evidence on remand at a final hearing on Father’s motion to contest the

       adoption. See, e.g., Diehl v. Clemons, 12 N.E.3d 285, 298 (Ind. Ct. App. 2014),

       trans. denied. Likewise, we are concerned that, if the trial judge were to remain

       on the case on remand, he “may tend to lean over backwards or overreact in an

       effort to be fair and impartial” in light of his earlier, strongly stated positions.

       See Robin, 553 F.2d at 10. Under the circumstances, namely, a contentious

       adoption contest where the court has already entered findings and conclusions

       adverse to Father’s credibility and character, the trial judge “cannot reasonably

       be expected to erase the earlier impressions from his . . . mind[.]” Id. We must

       endeavor “to prevent even the probability of unfairness.” In re Murchison, 349

       U.S. at 136. Given that Father’s putative parental rights are at stake on

       remand, we do not take these concerns lightly, and we recommend that the trial

       judge recuse himself from this proceeding.




       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017      Page 39 of 41
                                                  Conclusion

[64]   “The traditional right of parents to establish a home and raise their children is

       protected by the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.”

       Bailey v. Tippecanoe Div. of Family & Children (In re M.B.), 666 N.E.2d 73, 76 (Ind.

       Ct. App. 1996), trans. denied. And, as we have already observed, a natural

       parent enjoys a presumptively superior right over a nonparent to custody of a child,

       and a third party who seeks to displace a parent as custodian always bears the

       burden of overcoming the parent’s superior right. In re M.D., 612 N.E.2d at 1074.

       Here, while Father’s putative rights have not been established, he has acted in

       the manner prescribed by the Indiana Code for the protection of his putative

       rights pending the establishment of his parental rights. Contrary to the trial

       court’s conclusion that Father failed to prosecute his motion to contest the

       adoption without undue delay, Father has fought to establish his paternity and

       contest the adoption since before Child’s birth. The onus was on Adoptive

       Parents to comply with Indiana Code Section 16-39-3-3, see Williams, 819

       N.E.2d at 385-86, but, for many weeks, the trial court allowed Adoptive Parents

       to disregard the commands of that statute and then attributed the ensuing

       delays to Father.


[65]   We reverse the trial court’s order dismissing Father’s motion to contest the

       adoption. We also reverse the trial court’s order that Father’s consent to the

       adoption is implied by statute, for either his failure to appear at the April 22

       motions hearing or for failure to prosecute his petition without undue delay.

       See I.C. §§ 31-19-9-12(2), -18, -10-1.2(g). We hold that, on this record, Father’s

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A04-1607-AD-1756 | May 4, 2017    Page 40 of 41
       consent cannot be implied. We direct the trial court to set aside the adoption

       decree within seven days of the certification of this opinion. We remand for

       further proceedings, including discovery, as needed; a hearing on Father’s

       paternity petition; and a hearing on his motion to contest the adoption. Finally,

       again, “to perform its high function in the best way ‘justice must satisfy the

       appearance of justice.’” In re Murchison, 349 U.S. at 136 (quoting Offutt, 348

       U.S. at 14). Thus, we recommend that the trial judge recuse himself from this

       proceeding on remand.


[66]   Reversed and remanded for further proceedings.


       Bailey, J., and May, J., concur.




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