By the Court, CHERRY, J.:
These consolidated original petitions for writs of mandamus challenge a district court order directing that the minor child be removed from her current adoptive foster home and placed with maternal relatives in Georgia based on a familial placement preference under NRS 432B.550(5). Because the placement order was entered after parental rights to the child were terminated, the parties dispute whether the statutory preference for placement with a family member still applies. We conclude that a familial placement preference survives the termination of parental rights, but the placement preference is then governed by NRS 128.110(2) rather than NRS 432B.550(5). We further conclude that the maternal relatives had a reasonable excuse for their delay in seeking placement and they were entitled to a familial placement preference. However, the district court failed to enter factual findings or give adequate weight to the child's best interest or the Department of Family Services' discretion to determine placement in this case under NRS 128.110(2). Accordingly, we grant the petitions for writs of mandamus.
In July 2015, Clark County Department of Family Services (DFS) removed one-month-old E.R. (the child) from the custody of her mother, Nellie S., because of neglect and placed the child in foster care. The juvenile division of the district court adopted a goal of reunification between Nellie and the child. DFS conducted a search for relatives with whom to place the child but the search proved unsuccessful. By August 2016, Nellie had not maintained visitation with the child or contact with DFS, and the district court changed the permanency goal to termination of parental rights and adoption. DFS initiated a separate proceeding in the district court to terminate Nellie's parental rights. In September 2016, the child was placed with
In October 2016, approximately 15 months after the child's initial removal, Nellie's first cousin Stephanie R. contacted DFS to request placement of the child with her and her husband Joey R. in Georgia (the maternal relatives). DFS initiated the process under the Interstate Compact for the Placement of Children for obtaining out-of-state placement approval for the maternal relatives. The placement was approved in March 2017.
In the meantime, the district court in the termination proceeding entered an order terminating the parental rights of Nellie and any fathers claiming paternity of the child on February 18, 2017. The termination order decreed "that the custody and control of [the child] is vested in [DFS] with authority to place the minor child for adoption." The foster parents began the process for adopting the child.
In April 2017, DFS placed the matter on the district court's calendar to allow the maternal relatives to address the court regarding placement. An evidentiary hearing was held before a court master to determine whether the child's placement should be changed. DFS caseworker Kristina Quinlan testified about DFS's search for relatives and provided that DFS was unaware of Stephanie until she contacted DFS in October 2016. Quinlan also testified that the then-two-year-old child was extremely bonded with the foster parents, whom she regarded as her mom and dad, and it was not in her best interest to be placed with the maternal relatives because it would delay permanency. Taryn Lamaison, a DFS supervisor and a national child trauma trainer, observed the child with the foster parents and opined that removing the child from their care was not in the child's best interest. Lamaison explained that removing a child at a young age can affect brain development and result in negative coping mechanisms. She also testified that the child was already very clingy and attached to the foster parents, another move would constitute the child's fourth removal and cause long-term trauma, and she would expect the child to regress. If the child were to be removed, Lamaison described a gradual transition to the new home that could lessen the trauma and would last several weeks and be accompanied by therapy.
The foster parents testified about the home, family, care, and educational development they had provided the child since September 2016, and that they were committed to an open adoption. Stephanie testified that although she knew Nellie had given birth to the child, she had never met the child and was unaware that the child was in protective custody until October 2016. Stephanie described the home and care she and Joey could provide the child, and she indicated her willingness to transition the child gradually in order to minimize the trauma.
Based on the testimony, the hearing master found that DFS should have located Stephanie earlier because DFS had contact with another relative who knew Stephanie, the maternal relatives demonstrated a reasonable excuse for the delay in requesting placement, and both couples would provide a good family and home for the child. The master found that although the child was "incredibly bonded" with the foster parents, the maternal relatives have a biological connection to the child and will likely end up with one of her siblings.
After hearing argument on the objections, the district court found that the master's findings were not clearly erroneous and affirmed the recommendation. The court concluded that the maternal relatives had a reasonable excuse for the delay in seeking placement of the child, and thus, the familial placement preference under NRS 432B.550
The foster parents and DFS both filed petitions for a writ of mandamus in this court. We consolidated the two cases and entered a stay of the placement decision.
A petition for a writ of mandamus is the appropriate means to challenge a placement order entered in a proceeding under NRS Chapter 432B because the order is not appealable. See Clark Cty. Dist. Att'y v. Eighth Judicial Dist. Court ex rel. County of Clark, 123 Nev. 337, 342, 167 P.3d 922, 925 (2007). A writ of mandamus may be granted "to compel the performance of an act that the law requires or to control an arbitrary or capricious exercise of discretion." Id.; see also NRS 34.160. Questions of law including statutory interpretation are reviewed de novo. See Int'l Game Tech., Inc. v. Second Judicial Dist. Court ex rel. County of Washoe, 124 Nev. 193, 198, 179 P.3d 556, 559 (2008).
The district court applied the familial placement preference under NRS 432B.550(5), which governs placement of a child who is found in need of protection and is not permitted to remain with the parents. It provides that when determining the child's placement:
NRS 432B.550(5). The foster parents and DFS contend that the familial placement preference under NRS 432B.550(5) no longer applies once parental rights are terminated. The maternal relatives and the child argue that the familial preference remains intact after termination of parental rights and does not end until the time of adoption.
We conclude that although the placement decision was initially governed by NRS 432B.550(5) when the child was removed from Nellie's care and remained in protective custody during the period of reunification services, once parental rights were terminated, a different placement preference provision under NRS Chapter 128 applied. When the district court enters an order terminating parental rights, NRS 128.110(2) provides:
Here, the order terminating Nellie's parental rights was entered before the placement hearing and gave custody and control of the child to DFS with the authority to place the child for adoption. Thus, we conclude that NRS 128.110(2) governed the placement decision in this case and the district court erred in applying the placement preference under NRS 432B.550(5).
The foster parents and DFS assert that Stephanie's 15-month delay in coming forward and requesting placement, without a reasonable excuse, rendered the familial placement preference inapplicable. We disagree. In Clark County District Attorney v. Eighth Judicial District Court, we discussed
Id. (emphasis added). Although our decision in Clark County was interpreting NRS 432B.550, which requires that any search for relatives "be completed within 1 year after the initial placement of the child outside" the home,
Here, the district court concluded that DFS should have located Stephanie earlier, and because she did not know the child was in protective custody, she had a reasonable excuse for the delay in seeking placement of the child. We conclude that the record supports the district court's decision in this regard. Therefore, the delay in seeking placement does not render the familial placement preference inapplicable.
DFS and the foster parents contend that the district court misapplied the legal standard by relying too heavily on the familial preference and not adequately considering the child's best interest. We agree. In Clark County, we held that the child's best interest necessarily is the main consideration in the placement decision. 123 Nev. at 346, 167 P.3d at 928. We explained that when a child is initially placed with a non-family member, and interested relatives later come forward and timely request custody of the child, the court should first determine whether a familial preference exists. Id. The familial preference determination includes whether the relatives are sufficiently related to the child and are "suitable and able to provide proper care and guidance for the child." Id. (quoting NRS 432B.550(5)(b)); accord NRS 128.110(2)(a).
In this case, the hearing master failed to give adequate weight to the child's best interest when he stated that "the courts and legislature have determined that when comparing bonding with biological, family connection, family connection is the overriding consideration and the family is where the child should be placed, despite the trauma that [the child] will experience with a fourth removal." After finding that both the foster parents and the maternal relatives were relatively equal in the home and life they could provide for the child, the master found the balance tipped in the maternal relatives' favor because of their biological connection and the likelihood one of the child's siblings would be placed with them. Absent from the master's recommendation are findings as to the child's best interest as required by Clark County, except for acknowledging that the removal will cause her trauma and ordering a trauma-minimization transition. And while the district court concluded in its written order that the hearing master had considered the child's best interest, the district court did not include written findings regarding the child's best interest.
Finally, because the district court applied NRS 432B.550(5)(b), the district court did not consider the agency's discretion to determine the child's placement under NRS 128.110(2). NRS 128.110(2)(a) states that the agency "[m]ay give preference to the placement of the child" with a family member whom "the agency finds suitable and able to provide proper care and guidance for the child," while NRS 432B.550(5)(b) states that "preference must be given" to placement of the child with a suitable family member. Compare State v. Am. Bankers Ins. Co., 106 Nev. 880, 882, 802 P.2d 1276, 1278 (1990) (stating that "may" is permissive unless the legislative intent indicates otherwise), with Washoe Cty. v. Otto, 128 Nev. 424, 432, 282 P.3d 719, 725 (2012) ("The word `must' generally imposes a mandatory requirement."). As for the sibling placement, NRS 128.110(2)(b) states that the agency "[s]hall, if practicable, give preference to the placement of the child together with his or her siblings," whereas NRS 432B.550(5)(a) provides that "[i]t must be presumed to be in the best interests of the child to be placed together with the siblings of the child." See Practicable, Black's Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014) (defining "practicable" as "reasonably capable of being accomplished").
By applying the wrong statute, the court erroneously failed to consider DFS's discretion to give a preference to placement of the child with a relative and whether it was practicable to place the child with a sibling. Additionally, since the younger sibling's placement was not clear at the time of the underlying proceeding, the practicability of placing the siblings together requires more factual development. Accordingly, we conclude that the district court should conduct a trial de novo and consider the placement decision under NRS 128.110(2), and give appropriate weight to DFS's discretion and the child's best interest in this case.
We conclude that the district court erred in applying the familial placement preference
We concur:
Parraguirre, J.
Stiglich, J.