                                                                                      FILED*
                                                                              COURT OF APPEALS DIV I
                                                                             " STATE OF WASHINGTON

                                                                               2016 NOV 19 AN 9:5L4


          IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In the Matter of the Dependency of
J.E.J., DOB: 01/30/2018,                                No. 77950-8-1
                                                        (Consolidated with No. 77951-6)
                                    Minor Child,
                                                        DIVISION ONE
STATE OF WASHINGTON,
DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND
HEALTH SERVICES,                                        UNPUBLISHED OPINION

                                   Respondent,

                 V.
J.J.J.,

                                  Appellant.            FILED: November 19, 2018


          CHUN, J. — J.J.J. appeals an order terminating her parental rights to her

child, J.E.J. She contends the juvenile court violated her right to due process of

law when it denied her morning-of-trial motion for a continuance to complete a

court-ordered psychological evaluation. The court did not abuse its discretion by

denying the mother's motion. The mother does not otherwise challenge the

court's findings of fact as to the statutory elements required to support a

termination order. Accordingly, we affirm.


                                        BACKGROUND

          J.J.J. is the mother of J.E.J., a child born in January 2008.1 Since April

2015, a maternal uncle has primarily cared for the child.

         1 In October 2017, the juvenile court terminated by default the alleged father's parental
rights with the child. The alleged father is not a party to this appeal.
No. 77950-8-1/2


       On May 21, 2015, the Department of Social and Health Services

(Department)filed a dependency petition for J.E.J., alleging that the child was

abused or neglected. The Department also alleged that there was no parent or

guardian adequately capable of caring for the child.2 The petition recited

concerns about the mother's substance abuse and mental health; the mother's

history of abandoning the child; the child missing approximately 31 days of

school; and the child wandering the streets of Everett alone. The petition noted

at least three prior Child Protective Services referrals due to allegations of

maltreatment of the child resulting from the mother's substance abuse.

       In August 2015, the court entered a dependency order as to J.E.J. and

ordered the following services for the mother: a substance abuse evaluation;

random urinalyses (UAs); a mental health assessment; and a psychological

evaluation with a parenting component. The order required the mother, among

other things, to notify the Department "of any obstacles to accessing court

ordered services[,]" to maintain monthly contact with the Department social

worker, and to maintain safe, stable, and sober housing suitable for the care of

the child. The court also ordered that the mother be allowed one supervised visit

per week with J.E.J.

       At the first dependency review hearing in October 2015, the court

determined the mother not in compliance with the dependency order and was not

making progress correcting the issues that required the child's placement with



       2 On  May 22, 2015, the Department filed an amended dependency petition in which it
corrected the dates of several events.


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No. 77950-8-1/3


relatives. At that time, the mother was not visiting the child on a regular basis.

Several months later, following a March 2016 permanency planning hearing, the

court deemed the mother in partial compliance with the dependency order by

passing random UAs and completing a drug and alcohol assessment. However,

she had not yet started mental health treatment and continued to use

methamphetamines. The court also ruled the mother was making progress

correcting her parental deficiencies and had visited the child for five consecutive

weeks, including sporadic phone calls with the child.

       In July 2016, the Department asked the court to suspend the mother's

visitation. The Department's request followed a supervised visit on July 8 in

which the mother stated she would "no longer need the services of CPS" and that

she would "be taking [her child] home." The visitation specialist ended the

mother's visit early, but allowed the mother and child to have a good-bye hug. At

that point, the mother started walking away from the visitation supervisor while

holding the child. Law enforcement arrived shortly thereafter and, ultimately,

allowed the child to leave with the visitation supervisor. The mother "admits that

she had a meltdown on July 8" and attributed her conduct to an adjustment of her

medication needs. At a hearing on July 16, 2016, the court suspended the

mother's visits with the child and ordered the suspension be reviewed at a

hearing on August 3, 2016.

       On August 3, 2016, the court determined the mother to be in partial

compliance with the dependency order but that she had not made progress

toward correcting the problems necessitating the child's removal from her care.


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No. 77950-8-1/4


Regarding visitation, the court lifted the suspension and ordered the mother have

supervised visitation in a Department office once a week and the Department

"has discretion to stop the visitation if mother's behavior is inappropriate or

emotionally or physically harmful" to the child. The court also ordered the mother

to attend an August 15, 2016 psychiatric evaluation and follow all

recommendations.

        Less than a month later, at a review hearing on August 31, 2016, the court

concluded that the mother was not in full compliance with court-ordered

services.3 While noting its concern about the mother not being fully engaged in

services, the court ruled the mother's visits with the child to continue as follows:

one supervised visit per week; the mother to secure transportation by the

evening prior to the visit; and the mother shall call the visitation supervisor on the

night prior to the visit.

        In October 2016, the Department referred the mother to Dr. Steve Tutty for

a psychological evaluation with a parenting component. However, she did not

attend this assessment. The court determined at a January 2017 permanency

planning hearing, the mother still was not in compliance with the dependency

order and had not made any progress toward improvement.

        In May 2017, the Department filed a petition to terminate the mother's

parental rights to J.E.J. The Department alleged it offered or provided the

         3 At that time, the mother had not complied with her drug treatment and had not engaged
in treatment since late July 2016; she had not complied with her UAs and had missed three
random tests in August 2016; she had not complied with her mental health counseling and did not
attend counseling regularly to formulate treatment goals; she did not show up for an August 2016
medication management appointment; and she was neither regularly visiting nor regularly calling
the child.


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No. 77950-8-1/5


mother "a drug/alcohol evaluation and treatment, random UA testing, a

psychological evaluation with a parenting component, a mental health

assessment and counseling, medication management, AA/NA sober support

group at least three times per week, and casework management." The

termination petition alleged that there was little likelihood that the conditions

would be remedied so that the child could return to the mother because:

        The mother has significant substance abuse and mental health
        issues that will require long-term treatment. . .. The mother has
        failed to participate in random UA testing, a psychological
        evaluation with a parenting component, a mental health
        assessment, mental health counseling, medication management,
        ANNA sober support groups at least three times per week, or
        obtain safe and stable housing. The mother has not been visiting
        her child on a regular basis, and last visited in October 2016, and
        has not maintained phone contact. Because the mother has failed
        to have regular visits with her child, she will need to have a new
        parent-child contract. This will be the fourth parent-child visitation
        contract required, since August 2016. She has not demonstrated
        the ability to care for her child. For these reasons, the mother does
        not understand and is incapable of providing for the child's
        emotional, physical, mental, and developmental needs. The
        mother is incapable of safely parenting the child.

The court set the mother's termination fact-finding hearing for November 15,

2017.

        The mother achieved sobriety on June 23, 2017. She then reengaged in

services, including: obtaining a mental health evaluation, getting a drug and

alcohol evaluation, participating in UAs, and regularly contacting her assigned

social worker. The mother also began calling the child regularly in July 2017 and

resumed supervised visits with the child in October 2017.




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No. 77950-8-1/6


       On October 4, 2017, the mother requested a new referral for a

psychological evaluation with parenting component. The Department contacted

several psychologists in the mother's area to determine their availability and how

quickly they could produce a report prior to the original termination trial on

November 15, 2017. Ultimately, the Department referred the mother to

Dr. Benjamin Johnson.

       On November 15, 2017, the court continued the fact-finding hearing to

December 11, 2017, based on lack of an available trial judge and to allow for the

appointment of legal counsel on behalf of the child.

       The termination fact-finding hearing commenced on the morning of

December 11,2017. Immediately prior to opening statements, the mother

requested a continuance. The mother explained how she had attended three

appointments with Dr. Johnson but the parenting evaluation component was

scheduled for December 15, 2017. She argued Dr. Johnson's evaluation could

be "dispositive one way or the other as to her ability to parent." Both the

Department and the child's attorney opposed continuance of the trial. In its

opposition, the Department reminded the court that the mother was offered a

psychological evaluation with a parenting component in the fall of 2016 but she

failed to attend that assessment.

       The court denied the mother's request for continuance and explained that

it did not "find good cause for continuance based on the mother's dereliction of

getting the evaluation done." The Department and the mother then delivered

their opening statements.


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No. 77950-8-1/7


       During the two-day December 2017 fact-finding hearing, the court heard

testimony from the mother, the child's placement provider, the mother's chemical

dependency counselor, a DSHS social worker, the mother's chemical

dependency assessor and considered more than 40 exhibits.

       In relevant part, the mother said she understood the Department had

arranged for her to have a psychological evaluation with a parenting component

in October 2016 and that she was supposed to complete that assessment

pursuant to a court order. The mother explained she did not recall the October

2016 time frame and that it "was a big blur" for her. The mother also

acknowledged that, during the dependency process, she did not visit the child for

large periods, relapsed into drug use, became homeless, and was barely "able to

take care of[her]self at the time."

       After the Department called all its witnesses and rested its case-in-chief,

the mother chose not to call any witnesses and rested as well. The child's

attorney also did not call any witnesses.

       Following the presentation of evidence and in announcing its oral ruling on

the Department's termination petition, the court addressed the mother's concern

regarding a parenting evaluation report as follows:

      [The mother] was required to obtain a psychological evaluation with
      a parenting component. The Department made a referral in
      October 2016 to Dr. Stephen Tutty; however, the mother failed to
      attend. She admitted this during her testimony, that she didn't get
      this done, that this point in her life was a bit of a blur, and she was
      homeless.

       Just before the original trial date, she did ask to have this
       appointment set up again, and the Department again made


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No. 77950-8-1/8

        arrangements for her to attend an evaluation with Dr. Benjamin
        Johnson in King County in November of 2017. His report remains
        incomplete, as they have not yet completed the parenting
        component, and a report has not been generated.

        The Court finds that Dr. Johnson's report is not necessary to the
        Court's consideration of this case. There's no dispute as to the
        mother's mental health diagnosis of bipolar disorder type I. There's
        no dispute that she abandon [sic] the child twice during the
        dependency, going for months and, in fact, nearly a year with no
        contact with the child or the Department.

        On February 5, 2018, the court concluded the Department had met its

burden to prove all the statutory elements for termination by clear, cogent, and

convincing evidence.4 Specifically, in key part, the court ruled that "a

psychological evaluation with a parenting component is not necessary in light of

all of the other evidence, and may be cumulative" and that a continuation of the

parent-child relationship would clearly diminish the child's prospects for adoption.

The court then entered an order terminating the mother's parental rights to the

child. The mother appeals.


                                            ANALYSIS

        The mother contends the juvenile court abused its discretion and violated

her right to due process by denying her request for a continuance to allow her to

complete a parenting evaluation. The mother argues the court's refusal to grant

a continuance prevented her from providing "additional evidence regarding [her]

mental health diagnosis, her treatment options, whether medications were


         The mother did not ask the court to consider a subsequent report or document
produced by Dr. Johnson at any point during the nearly two-month period between the
termination trial and entry of the court's order terminating her parental rights as to the child on
February 5, 2018.



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No. 77950-8-1/9


necessary or appropriate for her, and the impact of her treatment choices on her

ability to parent" and denied her "the right to the meaningful assistance of

counsel and her right to present relevant, material evidence at the termination

trial."5

           "[P]arents have a fundamental liberty and privacy interest in the care and

custody of their children." In re Welfare of N.M., 184 Wn. App. 665, 672, 346

P.3d 762(2014)(citing Santoskv.
                             v. Kramer, 455 U.S. 745, 753, 102 S. Ct. 1388,

71 L. Ed. 2d 599 (1982)). Therefore, due process "requires that parents have the

ability to present all relevant evidence for the juvenile court to consider prior to

terminating a parent's rights." In re Welfare of R.H., 176 Wn. App. 419,425-26,

309 P.3d 620 (2013). When deciding a motion to continue, the court must

consider "diligence, due process, the need for an orderly procedure, the possible

effect on the trial, and whether prior continuances were granted." In re

Dependency of V.R.R., 134 Wn. App. 573, 581, 141 P.3d 85(2006). The denial

of a motion to continue does not violate constitutional due process rights unless a

parent demonstrates either prejudice or that the result of the trial would have

been different. V.R.R., 134 Wn. App. at 581.




         5 In addition to the denial of the motion to continue, the mother assigns error to the
court's Findings of Fact 2.5(d)(iii) and 2.5(d)(iv), which relate to necessary services offered to the
mother. However, she fails to assert any argument on these points in her brief or articulate how
those findings are not supported by the evidence. Unchallenged findings that parties fail to
specifically address and argue in the argument portion of their brief are considered verities on
appeal. In re Estate of Lint, 135 Wn.2d 518, 531-32, 957 P.2d 755(1998)(instructing that absent
direct argument on specific findings of act, the appellate court "would be assuming an obligation
to comb the record with a view toward constructing arguments for counsel as to what findings are
to be assailed and why the evidence does not support these findings. This we will not and should
not do.").
No. 77950-8-1/10


         We review a decision to deny a continuance for a manifest abuse of

discretion. V.R.R., 134 Wn. App. at 580. We will affirm the decision "'unless no

reasonable judge would have reached the same conclusion." N.M., 184 Wn.

App. at 673(quoting In re Marriage of Landry, 103 Wn.2d 807, 809-10, 699 P.2d

214 (1985)).

         The mother does not reference any legal authority that supports her

arguments. She does cite to R.H., but that case involved significantly different

facts.

         In R.H., the father requested a continuance one month before trial

because he had successfully identified a guardian for the children. The

Department was optimistic about the placement and had completed the

necessary background check. R.H., 176 Wn. App. at 424, 429. However, the

Department had failed to complete a home study or transition the children into

the placement. R.H. 176 Wn. App. at 423. The delay was not a result of the

father's lack of diligence in pursuing a guardianship as an alternative, and in

these circumstances, the denial of the father's timely motion for a continuance to

complete the investigation was an abuse of discretion. R.H., 176 Wn. App. at

429.

         Here, the mother's motion was made on the first day of trial as opposed to

a month before. The record suggests a lack of diligence and the failure to take

advantage of the prior continuance. The court considered all of the available

evidence and testimony relating to the mother's failure to obtain a psychological

evaluation with a parenting competent in October 2016. The record shows the


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No. 77950-8-1/11


mother did not attempt to secure another parenting evaluation until October

2017. While the record is unclear on why the mother's parenting evaluation

component was scheduled for a date after trial, it is clear that the mother did not

request a continuance prior to the start of the December 2017 trial.

       Additionally, unlike the material evidence about the suitability of an

identified guardian as an alternative to termination in R.H., the psychological and

parenting evaluation report the mother sought to present in this case, in the

court's view, was "not necessary" and "may be cumulative." See N.M., 184 Wn.

App. at 673(we review cases on a fact-specific basis to determine whether the

evidence the parent sought to admit was material). The court determined the

mother unfit because of her longstanding mental health issues and drug use; her

abandoning the child twice during the dependency with no contact with the child

or the Department; her homelessness; and her inability to provide a safe and

stable home for the child. The record indicated the child was well-adjusted in his

placement with relatives and did not seem to have a strong attachment to the

mother.

       The record also suggests that the mother had adequate assistance of

legal counsel. Her counsel attended the trial, offered an opening statement,

cross-examined all witnesses, admitted exhibits, and made closing arguments.

The mother, however, elected not to call any fact or expert witnesses in support

of her case.

       In summary, the court's denial of the mother's last-minute motion for a

continuance was not manifestly unreasonable under these circumstances. The


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mother cannot show either prejudice from the court's denial of her motion or that

the result would have been different. Accordingly, we hold that the trial court did

not abuse its discretion by denying the mother's motion to continue the

termination trial.

       Affirmed.




WE CONCUR:




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