In Re Interest of Kevin K.
In Re Interest of Kevin K., a Child Under 18 Years of Age. State of Nebraska, Appellant, v. Kevin K. and Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services, Appellees
Attorneys
Kara E. Mickle and Alicia B. Henderson, Deputy Lancaster County Attorneys, for appellant., Dennis R. Keefe, Lancaster County Public Defender, and Elizabeth Elliott, for appellee Kevin K., Jon Bruning, Attorney General, and B. Gail Steen, Special Assistant Attorney General, for appellee Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services.
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
Applying a best interests test, a divided panel of the Nebraska Court of Appeals held in this case that the separate juvenile court of Lancaster County erred in terminating its jurisdiction of a juvenile previously adjudicated for habitual truancy. 1 After the juvenile reached the age of 16, his mother authorized discontinuance of his enrollment in school pursuant to Neb. Rev. Stat. § 79-201 (Cum. Supp. 2006). On further review, we conclude that because the lawful discontinuation of school enrollment necessarily ended the juvenileâs status as a truant, which was the sole basis for his adjudication, the juvenile court did not err in concluding that it was no longer necessary or appropriate to exercise its jurisdiction.
BACKGROUND
The State of Nebraska, through the Lancaster County Attorney, commenced this juvenile proceeding by filing a truancy petition in the separate juvenile court on March 22, 2005. The State alleged that Kevin K. had been truant from school on various dates in January and February 2005. Kevin, born on August 21, 1989, was 15 years old when the action was commenced. He resided with his mother in Lincoln, Nebraska.
At an adjudication hearing on April 22, 2005, Kevin admitted the allegations of truancy in his motherâs presence and with her consent. He was adjudicated pursuant to Neb. Rev. Stat. *680 § 43-247(3)(b) (Reissue 2004) based upon a finding by the juvenile court that he had been habitually truant from school as alleged in the petition. The juvenile court placed Kevin in the temporary legal custody of the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) and ordered that he participate in a summer school program if it could be arranged by DHHS and that he cooperate with any evaluations arranged by DHHS. Following a disposition hearing at which it received and considered a report and evaluation submitted by DHHS, the juvenile court entered an order on July 14, 2005, in which it concluded that âreturning legal custody to the parent would be contrary to the welfare of the child at this time due to the need to monitor Kevinâs school attendance and to provide supportive services to Kevin to assist him in correcting his truancy problem while residing in his parentâs home.â The court ordered Kevin to continue in the temporary legal custody of DHHS âfor placement, treatment and careâ while remaining in the physical custody of his mother. The order further provided that Kevin was to âattend all scheduled classes without any truancies or tardiesâ and that â[a]ny illnesses shall be verified through a medical provider, school nurse or health paraprofessional.â Kevinâs mother was ordered not to âexcuse Kevin . . . from school without prior approvalâ of DHHS.
On November 21, 2005, Kevin filed a motion to terminate jurisdiction. He alleged that after he reached the age of 16 on August 21, his mother signed a release pursuant to § 79-201 (3)(d) which discontinued his enrollment in school effective November 3. At a hearing on the motion, the DHHS caseworker assigned to Kevinâs case requested that âthe case be closedâ because Kevin was no longer in school and there were no further services which DHHS could provide to him. The caseworker testified that Kevinâs mother discussed the release with the caseworker before signing it, explaining that she wanted to give Kevin a fresh start by allowing him to enroll in a GED program or find a job. At the time of the hearing, Kevin had done neither. The caseworker testified that he tried to discourage Kevinâs mother from authorizing discontinuation of Kevinâs school enrollment because he believed that remaining in school would be in Kevinâs best interests; but he told *681 her that if she decided to do so, DHHS would ask the juvenile court to terminate jurisdiction. The caseworker testified that Kevinâs mother did not need DHHSâ permission to authorize discontinuation of Kevinâs school enrollment when he reached the age of 16.
Kevinâs mother testified that she decided to withdraw Kevin from school so that he could âexplore his other options.â She confirmed that despite her urging, Kevin had not enrolled in a GED program or obtained employment. Kevin testified that he planned to get a job, but had not been âin a hurryâ to find one.
The juvenile court found that Kevinâs best interests would not be served by a termination of jurisdiction because he âhas no daily program, is not enrolled in a GED program, is not employed and indeed has no significant work history whatsoever.â Referring to one of the purposes of the Nebraska Juvenile Code, the court noted that Kevinâs situation âdoes not bode well for his âdevelopment of his capacity for a healthy personality, physical well-being, and useful citizenship and to protect the public interest.â â 2
However, the court concluded that a best interests standard did not apply to the termination of its jurisdiction in this case because the provision of § 79-201 (3)(d) permitting a parent or custodian to authorize discontinuation of enrollment in school at the age of 16 âin effect negates his or her status or definition as a âhabitually truantâ juvenile over whom the court should exercise jurisdiction under Neb. Rev. Stat. Section 43-247 (3)(b).â The court noted that this provision of the compulsory education statute made no exception for juveniles under the jurisdiction of the juvenile court and used broad language in authorizing a âparent or legal guardianâ to discontinue school enrollment when the child reached the age of 16. The juvenile court concluded:
[Wjhen a youth, by virtue of a parentâs exercise of a right granted by the State of Nebraska, has been lawfully withdrawn from school and is no longer legally required to be enrolled in schpol, it is no longer necessary nor appropriate *682 for the Court to exercise jurisdiction in a case based solely upon the youthâs truancy.
The State, through the Lancaster County Attorney, appealed this decision to the Nebraska Court of Appeals. DHHS appeared as an appellee and argued that the decision of the juvenile court was correct and should be affirmed. In its majority opinion reversing the juvenile courtâs decision, the Court of Appeals reasoned that the Nebraska Juvenile Code âdoes not set forth that the factual basis justifying the juvenile courtâs acquisition of jurisdiction must continue to exist throughout the duration of the juvenile courtâs exercise of that jurisdiction.â 3 Noting that Kevin remained a minor, and relying in part on an Illinois Court of Appealsâ decision, 4 the majority reasoned that a best interests test should be applied. Adopting the findings of the juvenile court in its de novo review, the majority concluded that termination of jurisdiction was not in Kevinâs best interests. It reversed, and remanded to the juvenile court for further proceedings.
A dissenting judge noted that the decision of the majority had the effect of placing a limitation on the statutory right of a parent to authorize discontinuance of a 16-year-old childâs school enrollment âby excluding children who are under the jurisdiction of the juvenile court.â 5 The dissent reasoned that while such a limitation may be appropriate, âit is for the Legislature, and not the courts, to make this decision.â 6 The dissent concluded that because Kevinâs mother had authorized discontinuation of his school enrollment, Kevin could no longer be considered truant, and that the sole basis for the exercise of the juvenile courtâs jurisdiction had ceased to exist.
We granted a petition for further review filed jointly by Kevin and DHHS.
*683 ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
Kevin and DHHS contend, restated, that the Nebraska Court of Appeals erred in concluding that § 43-247 requires a juvenile court to retain jurisdiction over a minor who has been adjudicated as habitually truant from school, but is subsequently withdrawn from school by a parent pursuant to § 79-201(3)(d).
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Juvenile cases are reviewed de novo on the record, and an appellate court is required to reach a conclusion independent of the juvenile courtâs findings. 7
Statutory interpretation is a question of law, which an appellate court resolves independently of the trial court. 8
ANALYSIS
Like any juvenile truancy case, this appeal involves the interplay between the Nebraska Juvenile Code and Nebraskaâs compulsory education statutes. Under the code, a juvenile court may exercise jurisdiction over a juvenile who is âhabitually truant from . . . school,â 9 but neither the code nor the compulsory education statutes define the term âtruant.â In In re Interest of K.S., 10 this court held that âthe mere fact that the child is not complying with the compulsory education laws without being first excused by school authorities establishes truancyâ and, accordingly, jurisdiction under the truancy provisions of the Nebraska Juvenile Code. We further noted in that case that under the compulsory attendance law then in effect, only school authorities had authority to grant permission to be absent, and that thus, parental consent to an absence of a child who was legally required to attend school did not alter the fact of truancy.
Due to a subsequent amendment in the compulsory school attendance statutes, this principle no longer applies in the case of certain children who have not reached the mandatory *684 attendance age. Prior to 2004, Nebraska law made school attendance mandatory for any child âwho is not less than seven years of age and not more than sixteen years of age.â 11 In 2004, the compulsory attendance law was amended to make school attendance mandatory for children between the ages of 6 and 18 who have not obtained a high school diploma or completed a program of instruction in certain schools, subject to a parental right to withdraw a child from school when he or she reaches the age of 16. 12 The law now provides that school attendance is not mandatory where a child â[h]as reached the age of sixteen years and such childâs parent or guardian has signed a notarized release discontinuing the enrollment of the child on a form provided by the school.â 13 There is no statutory restriction on the right of a parent or guardian to authorize discontinuance of school enrollment for children who have reached the age of 16, and the statute makes no specific reference to children who are subject to the jurisdiction of a juvenile court when they reach that age. In its present form, the compulsory education statute can be said to articulate two related principles of public policy: (1) that it is generally in the best interest of children who have not graduated from high school or completed a program of instruction to remain in school until they reach the age of 18 and (2) that parents and guardians have an unqualified right to determine whether this general principle should apply to their 16- and 17-year-old children.
By adjudicating Kevin as a habitual truant, the juvenile court obtained jurisdiction over his mother as well. 14 Although the court ordered her not to excuse Kevin from school without prior approval of DHHS, we do not read this provision of the dis-positional order as prohibiting Kevinâs mother from exercising her statutory right to discontinue his school enrollment when he reached the age of 16, and we do not reach the issue of whether a juvenile court could lawfully impose such a restriction. The record reflects no judicial determination that Kevinâs mother *685 was unfit or legally incompetent at the time she executed the release authorizing the discontinuance of Kevinâs enrollment in school. On the effective date of the release, Kevin was no longer subject to the compulsory school attendance statutes, and as a matter of law, he was no longer truant.
Truancy is not a crime, and juveniles who aire adjudicated as habitually truant under § 43-247(3)(b) are considered â[sjtatus offendersâ under the Nebraska Juvenile Code. 15 Kevinâs status changed when his mother lawfully authorized discontinuation of his enrollment in school. Although he was still a juvenile within the meaning of the code, he was not and could never again be truant, because he was no longer subject to the compulsory education statutes. The Nebraska Juvenile Code provides that a juvenile courtâs jurisdiction over an adjudicated individual âshall continue until the individual reaches the age of majority or the court otherwise discharges the individual from its jurisdiction.â 16 There is no statutory requirement that in all cases, termination of jurisdiction must be shown to be in the best interests of the juvenile.
We hold that where a juvenile is adjudicated solely on the basis of habitual truancy from school pursuant to § 43-247(3)(b), and the status of truancy is subsequently terminated by the lawful execution of a parental release authorizing discontinuation of school enrollment pursuant to § 79-201 (3)(d), a juvenile court may terminate its jurisdiction without a finding that such termination is in the best interests of the juvenile. We agree with the determination of the juvenile court that under the circumstances presented in this case; it is neither necessary nor appropriate to continue to exercise its jurisdiction.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and this matter is remanded to that court with directions to affirm the judgment of the juvenile court terminating its jurisdiction in this case.
Reversed and remanded with directions.
In re Interest of Kevin K., 15 Neb. App. 641, 735 N.W.2d 812 (2007).
See Neb. Rev. Stat. § 43-246(1) (Reissue 2004).
In re Interest of Kevin K., supra note 1, 15 Neb. App. at 645, 735 N.W.2d at 816.
In Interest of C.W., 292 Ill. App. 3d 201, 684 N.E.2d 1076, 226 Ill. Dec. 80 (1997).
In re Interest of Kevin K, supra note 1, 15 Neb. App. at 647, 735 N.W.2d at 817 (Moore, Judge, dissenting).
In re Interest of Jeffrey K., 273 Neb. 239, 728 N.W.2d 606 (2007).
Jones v. Shelter Mut. Ins. Cos., ante p. 186, 738 N.W.2d 840 (2007).
§ 43-247(3)(b).
In re Interest of K.S., 216 Neb. 926, 931, 346 N.W.2d 417, 420 (1984).
§ 79-201 (Reissue 2003).
2004 Neb. Laws, L.B. 868, § 1.
§ 79-201(3)(d) (Cum. Supp. 2006).
See § 43-247(5).
Neb. Rev. Stat. § 43-245(15) (Reissue 2004).
§ 43-247.