Colorado Court of Appeals Affirms Juvenile Case 25CA2063
Summary
The Colorado Court of Appeals affirmed the termination of parental rights for J.L. regarding child E.A.B. in Case No. 25CA2063, rejecting two claims: that the juvenile court's delayed entry of a written treatment plan order violated due process, and that insufficient time was provided to comply with the plan. The court held that mother received fundamentally fair procedures, the treatment plan was effectively adopted orally at an earlier hearing, and the termination was supported given the reasonable time available. The termination occurred nearly fourteen months after the dependency petition was filed, following a two-day hearing. The opinion is non-precedential under C.A.R. 35(e).
“The court terminated mother's parental rights nearly fourteen months after the petition was filed, following a two-day hearing.”
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What changed
The Colorado Court of Appeals affirmed the juvenile court's termination of J.L.'s parental rights to E.A.B., rejecting both claims raised on appeal. First, the court held that no due process violation occurred despite a ~9-month gap between oral adoption of the treatment plan and entry of the written order—the plan was orally adopted at an earlier hearing with mother's acknowledgment, and mother never objected or claimed lack of understanding. Second, the court found no error in the timeline, applying the fitness-within-a-reasonable-time standard. For affected parties, this decision confirms that juvenile courts need not delay treatment-plan implementation pending written orders when oral adoptions are properly memorialized with party acknowledgment, and that 14 months is a reasonable period to assess parental fitness under Colorado dependency and neglect law.
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Apr 24, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
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April 23, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note
Peo in Interest of EAB
Colorado Court of Appeals
- Citations: None known
- Docket Number: 25CA2063
Precedential Status: Non-Precedential
Combined Opinion
25CA2063 Peo in Interest of EAB 04-23-2026
COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS
Court of Appeals No. 25CA2063
Larimer County District Court No. 24JV30093
Honorable Ann Gail Meinster, Judge
The People of the State of Colorado,
Appellee,
In the Interest of E.A.B., a Child,
and Concerning J.L.,
Appellant.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED
Division V
Opinion by JUDGE WELLING
Tow and Lipinsky, JJ., concur
NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e)
Announced April 23, 2026
Ben Pearlman, County Attorney, Jeanne Banghart, Deputy County Attorney,
Cheryl Koh-Sicotte, Assistant County Attorney, Boulder, Colorado, for Appellee
Josi McCauley, Guardian Ad Litem
The Morgan Law Office, Kristofr P. Morgan, Colorado Springs, Colorado, for
Appellant
¶1 J.L. (mother) appeals the judgment terminating her parent-
child legal relationship with E.A.B. (the child). We affirm.
I. Background
¶2 The Larimer County Department of Human Services filed a
petition in dependency or neglect regarding the then-newborn child
because mother reported using fentanyl and methamphetamine
routinely during her pregnancy, including on the day of the child’s
birth.
¶3 Mother entered an admission, and the juvenile court
adjudicated the child dependent and neglected. The court then
adopted a treatment plan for mother requiring her to (1) address
any mental health and substance issues by, among other things,
participating in an integrated assessment, following treatment
recommendations, and submitting to sobriety monitoring;
(2) maintain contact with the Department and other professionals;
(3) enroll in a trauma-informed parent education program; and
(4) establish a relationship with the child by participating in family
time.
1
¶4 The Boulder County Department of Human Services later
moved to terminate mother’s parental rights.1 The court terminated
mother’s parental rights nearly fourteen months after the petition
was filed, following a two-day hearing.
II. Procedural Due Process
¶5 Mother first contends that she was denied her due process
right to a fundamentally fair proceeding because the juvenile court
didn’t issue an order adopting her treatment plan until two and a
half months before the termination hearing and after the
Department had moved to terminate her parental rights. We
disagree.
¶6 Mother raises her due process claim for the first time on
appeal. We ordinarily don’t review issues that weren’t raised to the
juvenile court. People in Interest of M.B., 2020 COA 13, ¶ 14. There
is a narrow exception for errors that result in “manifest injustice.”
Id. at ¶¶ 20, 24. But that exception applies only in “limited
situations,” such as where the error “negates the validity of the
1 The Boulder County Attorney’s Office substituted for the Larimer
County Attorney’s Office, and the Boulder County Department of
Human Services took over supervision of the case, after the child’s
father threatened professionals involved in the case.
2
judgment entered.” People in Interest of A.E., 914 P.2d 534, 539
(Colo. App. 1996). Mother doesn’t specifically invoke the
“miscarriage of justice” exception and argues only that “her rights
were substantially affected” because the court didn’t enter a written
order adopting mother’s treatment plan until the Department
moved to terminate her parental rights. Without more, such an
argument doesn’t satisfy the “miscarriage of justice” exception. See
M.B., ¶ 33 (declining to consider unpreserved due process argument
in termination proceeding).
¶7 Nevertheless, there was no due process violation. Due process
entitles parents to “fundamentally fair procedures” before their
parental rights are terminated. People in Interest of E.B., 2022 CO
55, ¶ 16 (citation omitted). Those procedures include “notice of the
allegations in the termination motion, the opportunity to be heard,
the opportunity to have counsel if indigent, and the opportunity to
call witnesses and engage in cross examination.” People in Interest
of A.M. v. T.M., 2021 CO 14, ¶ 18.
¶8 The record refutes mother’s argument regarding when the
court adopted her treatment plan. Two months after the
Department filed the petition, the parties stipulated to a treatment
3
plan and jointly asked the juvenile court to adopt it “as the
dispositional order for [mother].” The county attorney, guardian ad
litem, mother, and mother’s counsel signed the stipulation. On the
same day that the stipulation was filed, mother’s counsel told the
court that mother had entered an admission and agreed to the
treatment plan at a hearing held over a month earlier, and that the
parties had simply “memorialized it with this stipulation.” The
court had orally “adopt[ed] the treatment plan” at the earlier
hearing.
¶9 After the stipulation was filed, the court asked mother if she
had reviewed the treatment plan, felt that she understood what was
expected of her, and if she had any questions about it. After
mother confirmed that she was “okay with the treatment plan” and
had no questions, the court reaffirmed that the treatment plan was
“an order of the court.”
¶ 10 Although the court didn’t enter a written order confirming its
adoption of the treatment plan until nearly nine months later,
mother doesn’t cite any authority requiring the court to enter a
written order before its oral order adopting a treatment plan
becomes effective — particularly in the absence of any objection —
4
and mother never objected to the lack of a written order. Nor did
she ever assert that the court hadn’t adopted the treatment plan in
a timely manner. And mother never indicated, nor does she do so
on appeal, that she didn’t understand what her treatment plan
required.
¶ 11 Thus, we conclude that mother has failed to show a
miscarriage of justice that would require us to review her
unpreserved due process claim. M.B., ¶ 33. And even if we were to
consider her argument on the merits, we would conclude that she
has failed to show a due process violation.
III. Fitness Within a Reasonable Time
¶ 12 Next, mother argues that the juvenile court erred by
terminating the parent-child legal relationship without giving her
sufficient time to comply with the treatment plan. We discern no
error.
A. Applicable Law and Standard of Review
¶ 13 A juvenile court may terminate parental rights if it finds, by
clear and convincing evidence, that (1) the child has been
adjudicated dependent or neglected; (2) the parent hasn’t
reasonably complied with an appropriate treatment plan or the plan
5
has not been successful; (3) the parent is unfit; and (4) the parent’s
conduct or condition is unlikely to change within a reasonable time.
§ 19-3-604(1)(c), C.R.S. 2025.
¶ 14 The purpose of a treatment plan is to preserve the parent-child
legal relationship by assisting the parent in overcoming the
problems that required the government’s intervention. K.D. v.
People, 139 P.3d 695, 699 (Colo. 2006). A treatment plan is
successful if it either renders a parent fit or corrects the conduct or
condition that led to state intervention. People in Interest of C.A.K.,
652 P.2d 603, 611 (Colo. 1982).
¶ 15 When a child is under six years old, as in this case, the
juvenile court must also consider the statutory expedited
permanency planning (EPP) provisions, which require that the child
be placed in a permanent home as expeditiously as possible. See
§§ 19-1-102(1.6), 19-1-123, 19-3-702(5)(c), C.R.S. 2025. In an EPP
case, no parent shall be found to be in reasonable compliance with,
or have been successful at, a treatment plan if the parent
(1) exhibits the same problems addressed in the treatment plan
without adequate improvement and (2) is unable or unwilling to
provide nurturing and safe parenting adequate to meet the child’s
6
physical, emotional, and mental health needs and conditions.
§ 19-3-604(1)(c)(I)(B).
¶ 16 An unfit parent is one whose conduct or condition renders the
parent unable or unwilling to give a child reasonable parental care.
People in Interest of D.P., 160 P.3d 351, 353 (Colo. App. 2007).
Reasonable parental care requires, at a minimum, that the parent
provide nurturing and safe parenting sufficient to meet the child’s
physical, emotional, and mental health needs and conditions.
People in Interest of A.J., 143 P.3d 1143, 1152 (Colo. App. 2006).
¶ 17 Whether a juvenile court properly terminated parental rights
presents a mixed question of fact and law because it involves
application of the termination statute to evidentiary facts. A.M.,
¶ 15. We review the court’s factual findings for clear error, but we
review de novo its legal conclusions based on those facts. People in
Interest of S.R.N.J-S., 2020 COA 12, ¶ 10. The credibility of the
witnesses; sufficiency, probative value, and weight of the evidence;
and the inferences and conclusions drawn from the evidence are
within the juvenile court’s discretion. People in Interest of A.J.L.,
243 P.3d 244, 249-50 (Colo. 2010).
7
B. Analysis
¶ 18 Mother argues that she was only given four months to comply
with the treatment plan, and that if she was given what she
contends is a reasonable amount of time, she would have been
successful. But, as discussed above, the court adopted a treatment
plan, at the latest, over eleven months before the termination
hearing.
¶ 19 The juvenile court found that mother didn’t comply with the
treatment plan “in any significant respect,” and that mother had
not addressed her “long and very, very serious history of substance
use.” The court concluded that mother wouldn’t be “be available
and engaged in treatment,” or be able to meet the child’s needs “in
anything remotely resembling a reasonable period of time.”
¶ 20 The record supports the court’s findings. The first caseworker
testified that mother struggled with her sobriety and that she didn’t
engage in services or communicate consistently with professionals.
The caseworker opined that “concerns for [mother] gr[e]w over the
course of this case.” When the first caseworker transferred the case
to the second caseworker, mother hadn’t completed any treatment
or submitted any urinalysis tests.
8
¶ 21 The second caseworker testified that mother didn’t comply
with any treatment plan objectives. For example, mother didn’t
complete an integrated assessment or a parenting class, didn’t
submit any urinalysis tests, and had three active warrants for her
arrest. The caseworker referred mother to a residential treatment
program, but mother left the program on the day of her intake and
never tried to reengage in treatment. The caseworker testified that
mother “disappeared” and that they “weren’t able to work together
at all.” And mother didn’t appear for either day of the termination
hearing.
¶ 22 Mother also didn’t attend family time on a consistent basis.
The therapeutic family time supervisor testified that mother
attended only nine of the scheduled thirty-eight family time visits.
And when mother attended family time, the supervisor was
concerned that mother was intoxicated because she “tend[ed] to nod
off and ha[d] a hard time staying awake.”
¶ 23 Ultimately, the second caseworker opined that mother hadn’t
complied with her treatment plan and — noting that this was an
EPP case — that a reasonable time for reunification had elapsed.
9
¶ 24 Accordingly, given this record, we discern no error in the
court’s findings that mother was unfit and unlikely to become fit
within a reasonable time.
IV. Disposition
¶ 25 The judgment is affirmed.
JUDGE TOW and JUDGE LIPINSKY concur.
10
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