top of page

Court needn't reference statute when ruling on "best interest of the child" factors

  • Ehren Hasz
  • Dec 7, 2022
  • 2 min read

The sole issue in this TPR appeal is whether the circuit court failed to consider the "best interests" of D.H.'s daughter. D.H. noted that the circuit court's oral decision "wholly omits consideration of and reference to the best interest factor." Opinion, ¶13. That argument failed because the circuit court is not required to "utter any magic words" when performing its "best interests" analysis. Opinion, ¶16 (citing State v. Robert K., 2005 WI 152, ¶33, 286 Wis. 2d 143, 706 N.W.2d 257).

The court of appeals reviewed the record for evidence that the circuit court in fact considered the 6 "best interests of the child" factors in § 48.426(3) even though it did not explicitly reference the statute. It held:

¶18 . . . The record reflects that the circuit court carefully considered each of the statutory factors and the court’s comments repeatedly expressed concern for A.H. and her future. We are satisfied that the circuit court properly considered the best interests of A.H. and the best interests standard when it determined that the TPR of her parents’ rights was warranted.

The court of appeals quoted parts of the circuit court's reasoning demonstrating that it considered each of the "best interests" factors. However, it's worth noting that the circuit court stepped out of bounds in its analysis of the "child's wishes" factor. D.H.'s daughter is only 4. She did not testify. Nevertheless, according to the circuit court, if the daughter "could process all of this she would tell that she wants to stay where she is safe and well cared for." Opinion, ¶8. (Emphasis supplied). Since when does a judge get to divine what a non-testifying witness would say and rely on that to terminate a person's parental rights? The court of appeals just let this slide.

 
 
 

Recent Posts

See All

Comments


Contact Us

Disclaimer

On Point is sponsored by the Wisconsin State Public Defender. All content is subject to public disclosure. Comments are moderated. If you have questions about this blog, please email on.point@opd.wi.gov.

On Point provides information (not legal advice) about important developments in the law. Please note that this information may not be up to date. Viewing this blog does not create an attorney-client relationship with the Wisconsin State Public Defender. Readers should consult an attorney for their legal needs.

bottom of page