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Dependency Of: B.b.b.

2023-08-14

Summary

Holding. Affirmed. RCW 13.34.065(7)(a)(i) does not require monthly shelter care review hearings when a child remains in continuing shelter care beyond the initial thirty-day period, and therefore the trial court did not err in denying the mother's request for an additional hearing absent a contested issue or change in circumstances.

When the Department of Children, Youth, and Families placed an infant in shelter care, the trial court ordered a series of reviews every thirty days as initial practice. However, after the first thirty-day review order was entered, the court declined to schedule an additional hearing when the mother requested one, reasoning that the applicable statute did not mandate ongoing monthly hearings absent a specific contested issue or change in circumstances. The mother appealed, contending that Washington's dependency statute required continuous review hearings every thirty days while a child remained in shelter care.

The appellate court examined the plain language of the relevant statute and concluded that it does not mandate monthly review hearings for shelter care extending beyond thirty days. The statute requires only that any order authorizing shelter care longer than thirty days be signed by a judge—it does not specify how frequently the court must hold hearings to renew that authorization. The court noted that while amendments to shelter care orders may occur at any time if a party requests it, the statute contains no requirement for mandatory periodic hearings absent a requested modification.

Summary generated by law.co from the public-domain opinion. The opinion text itself is public domain.

Key issues

  • Whether state dependency statute requires monthly shelter care review hearings
  • Interpretation of 'continued shelter care' and 'order' language in RCW 13.34.065(7)(a)(i)
  • Distinction between amended and continuing shelter care orders
  • Whether case is moot but reviewable under continuing public interest exception

Procedural posture

The mother appealed the trial court's July 1 order denying her request to schedule a fourth consecutive thirty-day shelter care review hearing, and a commissioner granted discretionary review.

Authorities cited

Opinion

majority opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In the Matter of the Dependency of:

No. 84266-8-I

B.B.B.,

DIVISION ONE

Minor Child.

PUBLISHED OPINION

CHUNG, J. — B.B.B. was placed in shelter care beginning in February

2022. After the initial 72-hour shelter care hearing, the court held three

subsequent “30-day” shelter care hearings. B.B.B.’s mother moved at a fourth

hearing to schedule a fifth hearing in another thirty days. The court denied the

motion, reasoning that under RCW 13.34.065(7)(a)(i), shelter care continuing

more than thirty days requires “an order,” but not a hearing every month, despite

the court’s past practice. A commissioner of this court granted discretionary

review. Because the statute’s plain language does not require monthly review

hearings for continuing shelter care, we affirm.

FACTS

This case concerns the shelter care of an infant child, B.B.B., born in

January 2022, who was the subject of a dependency petition filed by the

Department of Children, Youth, and Families (DCYF or the State) the following No. 84266-8-I/2

month. The court ordered B.B.B. to be placed in shelter care on February 17,

2022.

Following the 72-hour initial shelter care hearing required by statute,

B.B.B. was placed with his maternal grandmother on February 22. At that

hearing, the father waived his parental rights. 1 The court set a 30-day shelter

care hearing for March 23.

That shelter care hearing was continued twice and ultimately was held on

April 7. The court’s ensuing order stated, “The order entered on 2/22/22 remains

in full force and effect,” and, “[p]ursuant to the requirements of RCW

13.34.065(7), the court authorizes continued shelter care for the child.” The order

also stated, “No contested issues were noted for the 30 Day Shelter Care

hearing,” and, based on evidence from DCYF, ordered that the mother’s

visitation was now unsupervised but that supervision of the father’s visitation

should continue. Finally, the court order checked the box indicating “[a]n

additional shelter care review hearing is necessary . . . to address the following

issues,” and specified as the issue the “mother’s request to release the child to

her care,” and scheduled the hearing for May 4.

After B.B.B.’s second 30-day shelter care hearing on May 4, the court’s

order noted no contested issues, authorized continued shelter care, and kept in

effect the terms of the prior orders. The court again found “[a]n additional shelter

1 The father is not a party to the case on discretionary review.

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care review hearing is necessary . . . to address the following issues,” but this

time wrote, “as noted by any party per local rule.”

B.B.B.’s third 30-day shelter care hearing was held on June 1. The

resulting order again noted no contested issues, authorized continued shelter

care, and kept in effect the terms of the prior orders. As in the May 4 order, the

court again found “[a]n additional shelter care review hearing is necessary . . . to

address the following issues: as noted by any party per local rule.” However, this

time the court ordered the parties to brief the issue of “whether a parent is

entitled to an additional shelter care hearing every 30 days when one 30-Day

Shelter Care Hearing has already occurred and the parent’s visits are

unsupervised.”

At B.B.B.’s fourth 30-day shelter care hearing on June 29, as to whether

an additional shelter care hearing was needed, the mother argued that under the

statute, continuing shelter care requires a judge to either hold a hearing or enter

an uncontested order. She further contended that such hearings are necessary

for due process and that the local rule, KING COUNTY SUPER. CT. LOCAL JUV.

COURT RULE (LJuCR) 2.5, unfairly prejudiced parents by shifting to them the

burden of showing changed circumstances. In support, the mother provided

affidavits from attorneys in Mason, Pierce, Snohomish, and Whatcom counties

stating that those courts schedule hearings every thirty days while a child is in

shelter care. For its part, the State acknowledged and deferred to “a change in

practice” announced by the dependency bench in King County, reflected in

LJuCR 2.5(b).

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No. 84266-8-I/4

The court noted the mother had already had three 30-day shelter care

hearings and “that the mother’s insistence of having a 30-day shelter care

hearing in May and now in June, yet going on the record and just signing a status

quo order because her visits are unsupervised at this time[,] is a waste of judicial

resources not contemplated by the statute.” The court concluded that its first 30-day shelter care order dated April 8 satisfied the statute, and denied the mother’s

request to set another 30-day shelter care hearing. The court also noted,

“Yesterday the judges approved an amendment to [LJuCR] 2.5” to take effect

later in September, but “under the current [LJuCR] 2.5 . . . the [c]ourt is happy to

hear any motions that need to be set under [LJuCR] 2.5 if there’s an issue that

needs to be addressed.”

In its written order, the court incorporated by reference “its oral findings,

conclusions, and ruling on the issue of the meaning of RCW 13.34.065(7)(a)(i) in

its denial of the mother’s request for an additional 30-day shelter care hearing.”

Other than denying the request for an additional shelter care review hearing, like

the previous shelter care orders, the court’s July 1 order noted no contested

issues, authorized continued shelter care, and kept in effect the terms of the prior

orders.

The mother moved this court for discretionary review of the court’s July 1

order. A commissioner of this court granted review under RAP 2.3(b)(3). 2

2 RAP 2.3(b)(3) provides that discretionary review may be accepted only when “[t]he

superior court has so far departed from the accepted and usual course of judicial proceedings, or so far sanctioned such a departure by an inferior court or administrative agency, as to call for review by the appellate court.”

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No. 84266-8-I/5

DISCUSSION

I. Mootness

The parties agree the issue is moot because B.B.B.’s mother

subsequently agreed to a dependency order, and generally an appellate

court will not review a moot case. In re Dependency of L.C.S., 200 Wn.2d

91, 99, 514 P.3d 644 (2022). But an appellate court may nevertheless

review a moot case if the contested issue is a matter of continuing and

substantial public interest. Id.

The mother argues the exception applies because the issue “is

guaranteed to reoccur, at least in King County,” and its resolution will

provide guidance as to the statute’s meaning. The State argues this

exception does not apply because it was the mother’s decision not to

follow King County’s local rule, and the rule still allows a parent to request

a hearing to amend a shelter care order, so this case is not an issue of

public interest. We agree with the mother.

In deciding whether a case presents an issue of continuing and

substantial public interest, this court considers the following factors:

whether the issue is of public or private nature; whether an authoritative

determination is desirable to provide future guidance, and whether the

issue is likely to reoccur. Id. The court may also consider the adverseness

of the parties, the quality of the advocacy, and the likelihood that the issue

will escape review. Id.

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No. 84266-8-I/6

Here, the issue raised pertains to the interpretation of a statute

frequently employed by juvenile courts and a local rule in the state’s

largest superior court. The former LJuCR 2.5 (2021), in effect when the

court ruled on B.B.B.’s mother’s motion, provided that a second 30-day

hearing “shall” be set within 30 days, but “[u]nless a party has filed and

served written notice of new issues . . . a hearing in open court will not

occur; parties[’] presence will be excused; and an order continuing the

terms of the 72 hour shelter care hearing will be entered by the court.”

Former LJuCR 2.5(a)(1), (2). New issues required “reasonable” advance

notice to the court. Former LJuCR 2.5(a)(3). And a shelter care order

could be modified at any time on six days’ notice of a change in

circumstance. Former LJuCR 2.5(b).

The amended local rule, in effect since September 2022, contains

those same provisions and also adds detail regarding procedural

requirements. LJuCR 2.5(a)(3), (b). In addition, the amended rule provides

that no hearing will occur if either the court previously ordered

unsupervised visitation or no party has timely provided a report that

includes evidence that removing previously ordered visit supervision or

monitoring would create a risk to the child’s safety. LJuCR 2.5(a)(2)(A),

(B).

This court has previously reviewed shelter care issues despite

mootness, in part because “such proceedings routinely come before the

superior court but typically evade appellate review given ‘the short time

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No. 84266-8-I/7

between the initial shelter-care hearing, the 30-day hearing and the factfinding hearing.’ ” In re Welfare of B.D.F., 126 Wn. App. 562, 569, 109

P.3d 464 (2005) (quoting In re Dependency of H., 71 Wn. App. 524, 528,

859 P.2d 1258 (1993)). The statute’s proper meaning, and whether King

County’s local rule comports with it, is a public issue that would benefit

from further guidance. We agree with B.B.B.’s mother that the issue is

likely to reoccur because the court’s decision represents a change in the

usual course of judicial proceedings. Thus, the continuing and substantial

public interest exception to mootness applies and we reach the merits of

the dispute.

II. Does RCW 13.34.065(7)(a)(i) require monthly hearings?

Turning to the merits, B.B.B.’s mother alleges the court erred by

“abdicating its . . . duty to conduct monthly review hearings . . . as required

by RCW 13.34.065.” The State argues the court correctly interpreted the

statute when it declined to schedule an additional 30-day shelter care

hearing absent the identification of a contested issue. We agree with the

State.

Statutory interpretation is a question of law that the appellate court

reviews de novo. In re Dependency of Z.J.G., 196 Wn.2d 152, 163, 471

P.3d 853 (2020). The purpose of statutory interpretation is to determine

legislative intent and to do so in such a way so as to carry out that intent.

Columbia Riverkeeper v. Port of Vancouver USA, 188 Wn.2d 80, 91, 392

P.3d 1025 (2017).

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No. 84266-8-I/8

“ ‘If the plain language is subject to only one interpretation, our

inquiry ends because plain language does not require construction.’ ” In re

Adoption of T.A.W., 186 Wn.2d 828, 840, 383 P.3d 492 (2016) (quoting

HomeStreet, Inc. v. Dep’t of Revenue, 166 Wn.2d 444, 451, 210 P.3d 297

(2009)). We also examine the statutory scheme. B.D.F., 126 Wn. App. at

572 (interpreting statute authorizing shelter care hearings). Plain meaning

“is derived from the context of the entire act as well as any ‘related

statutes which disclose legislative intent about the provision in question.’ ”

Z.J.G., 196 Wn.2d at 163 (quoting Jametsky v. Olsen, 179 Wn.2d 756,

762, 317 P.3d 1003 (2014)). Historical versions of the same or similar

statutes shed light on a statute’s meaning. Graffell v. Honeysuckle, 30

Wn.2d 390, 399, 191 P.2d 858 (1948) (observing that “resort to repealed

and superseded statutes may be had, and is of great importance in

ascertaining the intention of the legislature.”).

Shelter care is embedded within an “ongoing process” that governs

dependency and termination. In re Dependency of Chubb, 112 Wn.2d

719, 724, 773 P.2d 851 (1989); ch. 13.34 RCW.3 At the initial stage of a

dependency proceeding, RCW 13.34.050 gives the court authority to order

a law enforcement officer, a probation counselor, or a child protective

services official to take a child into custody in certain circumstances,

3 The short title of Chapter 13.34 RCW is “Juvenile Court Act in Cases Relating to

Dependency of a Child and the Termination of a Parent and Child Relationship.” RCW 13.34.010.

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No. 84266-8-I/9

including, as relevant here, if a dependency petition is filed with the

juvenile court.

RCW 13.34.060 requires that any child taken into custody must

have an initial shelter care hearing within 72 hours—i.e., the 72-hour

hearing. Then, whether or not the child is in shelter care, the court must

hold a fact-finding hearing on the dependency petition no later than 75

days after the petition is filed, absent exceptional circumstances. RCW

13.34.070(1). After the fact-finding hearing, the court must either dismiss

the petition or enter a dependency order. RCW 13.34.110. 4

The specific language at issue here appears in RCW 13.34.065,

which is entitled “Shelter care—Hearing—Recommendation as to further

need—Release” and sets out detailed requirements for the shelter care

hearing and the topics for the court’s inquiry at the hearing. 5 The relevant

subsection reads as follows:

A shelter care order issued pursuant to this section may be

amended at any time with notice and hearing thereon. The

shelter care decision of placement shall be modified only

upon a showing of change in circumstances. No child may

be placed in shelter care for longer than thirty days without

an order, signed by the judge, authorizing continued shelter

care.

4 Chapter 13.34 RCW implements federal law governing the services to be provided to

children in foster care. See 42 U.S.C. § 671(a)(15); Washington State Coal. for the Homeless v. Dep’t of Soc. & Health Servs., 133 Wn.2d 894, 919, 949 P.2d 1291 (1997) (“RCW 13.34 was enacted to conform with federal law governing what services are to be provided to children in foster care.”).

5 For example, the subsections of RCW 13.34.065 provide that a child in custody must

have a hearing regarding shelter care within 72 hours, that parents must receive notice, and that a case conference must be scheduled. RCW 13.34.065. Amendments effective July 1, 2023, do not affect subsection 7.

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No. 84266-8-I/10

RCW 13.34.065(7)(a)(i) (emphasis added).

Here, the parties both claim RCW 13.34.065(7)(a)(i) is

unambiguous. They disagree, however, as to its meaning. The mother

argues that the statute “requires a court [to] provide . . . ongoing review

every thirty days,” and that the trial court “read[] out the term ‘continued’

and render[ed] it superfluous.” But nothing in the plain language of this

subsection requires a court to conduct a shelter care review hearing every

thirty days.

The phrase “continued shelter care” must be read in the context of

the chapter on juvenile dependencies. When a child is first taken into

custody pursuant to RCW 13.34.050, the child “shall be immediately

placed in shelter care.” RCW 13.34.060(1). “No child may be held longer

than [72] hours . . . unless a court order has been entered for continued

shelter care.” RCW 13.34.060 (emphasis added). Thus, the initial period of

custody, even prior to the 72-hour hearing, is the initial period of shelter

care. Any further shelter care beyond this initial period, which the court

may order only after the 72-hour hearing, is “continued shelter care.”

The plain language of the subsection at issue here requires that if

the court authorizes shelter care for longer than thirty days, it must do so

with “an order, signed by the judge, authorizing continued shelter care.”

RCW 13.34.065(7)(a)(i). Other than the 72-hour hearing, the statute does

not require a hearing for “an order . . . authorizing continued shelter care.”

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No. 84266-8-I/11

While the subsection at issue allows for shelter care orders to be

amended “at any time” with notice and a hearing, it does not, in contrast to

the initial 72-hour hearing, include any notice or hearing requirement for

an order authorizing continued shelter care where there is no amendment

requested. RCW 13.34.065(7)(a)(i). And only modifications of “[t]he shelter

care decision of placement” specifically require a showing of change of

circumstance. Id. (emphasis added). Thus, although a party may request

amendment to an order for “continued shelter care”—i.e., any period of

shelter care following the 72-hour hearing—if there are no requested

amendments, the statute does not require a hearing, nor subsequent

hearings every thirty days. 6

The mother argues that this court already stated in In re

Dependency of H.W., 70 Wn. App. 552, 559, 854 P.2d 1100 (1993), that

shelter care hearings are held on a “monthly basis.” 7 However, that case

did not address whether such monthly hearings are statutorily required.

Instead, in H.W., the issue was whether appellant’s due process rights

were violated by failing to allow the appellant to compel disclosure of

6 The distinction between a 72-hour hearing and “an order . . . authorizing continued

shelter care” dates to the original version of the Act. Compare former RCW 13.34.060(1) (1977) (“The court shall hold a preliminary shelter care hearing if one is requested”) with former RCW 13.34.060(8) (1977) (“No child shall be detained for longer than thirty days without an order, signed by the judge, authorizing continued shelter care.”).

7 The State notes that the former RCW 13.34.060(10) in H.W. is a different statute from

the current RCW 13.34.065(7)(a)(i) at issue here. However, the substantive language of the slightly differently numbered statutes is all but identical despite the three decades separating them, with the only changes being from “[n]o child may be detained for longer than thirty days” in former RCW 13.36.060(10) (1993) (emphasis added), to “[n]o child may be placed in shelter care for longer than thirty days,” in the current RCW 13.34.065(7)(a)(i) (emphasis added).

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No. 84266-8-I/12

statements to police that led to a shelter care order regarding his two

children. 70 Wn. App. at 555. This court held that, while the appellant was

subjected to manifest unfairness, infringement on the appellant’s due

process rights was not prejudicial because of the interlocutory nature of

shelter care. Id. at 559. We reasoned that shelter care orders do not

infringe on parental rights as permanently or severely as a dependency

adjudication or full termination “[b]ecause shelter care hearings are

reviewed on a monthly basis.” Id. at 559. In a footnote, the court noted that

“[a] shelter care decision is subject to review every 30 days. [Former]

RCW 13.34.060(10).” Id. at 556 n.2. However, “[i]n cases where a legal

theory is not discussed in the opinion, that case is not controlling on a

future case where the legal theory is properly raised.” Berschauer/Phillips

Const. Co. v. Seattle Sch. Dist. No. 1, 124 Wn.2d 816, 824, 881 P.2d 986

(1994). Consequently, H.W. does not control the interpretation of the

current statute’s plain language in the present case.

The mother further argues that additional review hearings are not “a

waste of time” even “if the parties agree that nothing has changed,” but

instead, are required because of “this [c]ourt’s conclusion in B.D.F.: even if

a nothing changes [sic], a trial court still must make determinations on the

record.” There, the trial court ruled that it lacked jurisdiction to order a

shelter care hearing under RCW 13.34.050 because the Department of

Social and Health Services was the only party that could request a shelter

care hearing. B.D.F., 126 Wn. App. at 570-71. Division II reversed and

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No. 84266-8-I/13

vacated the trial court’s order, holding that a guardian ad litem could

request a shelter care hearing. Id. at 575. In so doing, the court stated that

“RCW 13.34.065 emphasizes the court’s essential role in determining the

need for further shelter care.” Id. at 574.

In support of her argument, B.B.B.’s mother notes that the B.D.F.

court also stated, “For example, if a child is taken into custody under RCW

13.34.050 and a parent or other interested party ‘desires to waive the

shelter care hearing, the court shall determine, on the record and with the

parties present, whether such waiver is knowing and voluntary.’ RCW

13.34.060(1)(b) (emphasis added).” Id. at 573-74. But the provision the

B.D.F. court cites sets out specific requirements for the initial 72-hour

hearing and any shelter care order issued at that time. The B.D.F. court

did not address the statutory provision at issue here, RCW 13.34.065(7),

which concerns the amendment of an existing shelter care order for

continued shelter care beyond thirty days. Thus, the B.D.F. court’s holding

regarding a different statute does not control the interpretation of the plain

language of the statutory provision at issue here. 8

Courts undoubtedly have an important gatekeeping and parens

patriae role in safeguarding due process in dependency proceedings, as

8 The mother makes a similar argument that regular hearings are required based on In re

Dependency of K.N.J., 171 Wn.2d 568, 257 P.3d 522 (2011). There, the court noted that by statute, “the court must periodically review the status of all dependent children” and must “review the progress of the parties and determine whether court supervision should continue.” Id. at 579. The court cited to RCW 13.34.138. Id. But that case is about dependency review hearings under RCW 13.34.138, not shelter care.

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both children and parents have vital and fundamental liberty interests at

stake. 9 See Matter of Dependency of S.K.-P., 200 Wn. App. 86, 98, 401

P.3d 442 (2017) (discussing children’s and parents’ respective liberty

interests), aff’d sub nom. Matter of Dependency of E.H., 191 Wn.2d 872,

427 P.3d 587 (2018); In re Dependency of M.S.R., 174 Wn.2d 1, 20, 271

P.3d 234 (2012) (“Judges are forced to make incredibly difficult and

important determinations” in dependency proceedings). We are mindful of

the power of both the State and the courts in such proceedings, as well as

the potential of each decision, starting with an initial shelter care order, to

create a deep and lasting impact on parents and their children.

Nevertheless, we must look to the relevant statute to set out the process

that protects the parties’ interests. Here, RCW 13.34.065(7)(a)(i) does not

require ongoing monthly review hearings of shelter care that continues

beyond thirty days. Thus, King County’s LJuCR 2.5 is not contrary to RCW

13.34.065(7)(a)(i).

We recognize that hearings every thirty days have long been the

practice in King County and continue to be the practice in at least several

other counties. While we hold that RCW 13.34.065(7)(a)(i) does not

require such hearings, it also does not prohibit courts from holding such

hearings.

9 We disapprove of the trial court’s ill-considered words to the extent they suggested that

the court’s performance of its role in dependency proceedings is “a waste of judicial resources.”

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We affirm.

WE CONCUR:

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