PER CURIAM.
A father appeals
Kendra G.,
Although Remy has been able to maintain sobriety in a highly controlled environment, such as a correctional facility, he has repeatedly relapsed, including a few months before the termination trial. At the time of trial, Remy had not completed the recommended long-term substance abuse treatment or addressed the behavioral health issues that cause him to relapse.
OCS petitioned to terminate Vera's and Remy's parental rights to Kendra. A termination trial took place over four days in Bethel before Senior Superior Court Judge Beverly Cutler in July 2014.
OCS also presented evidence of Kendra's special needs
Remy attended most of the trial. On the third day of trial, a Wednesday, Remy's attorney asked the court if Remy could be absent from trial on the following day, Thursday, to attend an integrated mental health and substance abuse assessment. Remy's counsel clarified that Remy was not requesting a continuance, and the trial court responded that Remy did not have to be present because the case was civil, not criminal. At the end of Wednesday's trial day, counsel and the court discussed the order of testimony for the next day. Counsel for OCS told the court that its last witness was not available until 11:30 a.m. Thursday. The trial court asked if the parents were "willing to indicate whether they believe they have any non-party witnesses they're going to be calling." Remy's counsel said, "I don't have any," and Vera's counsel said, "just my client." In an effort to avoid wasting the morning hours before the last OCS witness scheduled for 11:30 a.m., the trial court suggested that Thursday morning might be a good time for the parents to testify, if they intended to do so. The court explained:
Trial was scheduled to resume at 9:00 a.m. but Remy was not present. His attorney explained to the trial court the possibility that she (the attorney) "could have scared [Remy] about testifying" when she "tried to... give him some tips and give him some examples of the kind of questions he would get." The trial court told the parents' counsel that if their clients wished to testify, they would need to do so that day, but the court assured the attorneys that it would not hold it against either parent if the parent chose not to testify. The trial court affirmed that OCS "still has the same burden."
Both parents eventually arrived for trial, and once they both entered the courtroom, Vera took the witness stand. But Vera's testimony was interrupted so that OCS could present its final scheduled witness at 11:30 a.m. After OCS rested its case, Remy left the proceedings to attend the mental health and substance abuse assessment. In Remy's absence, his attorney told the trial court that Remy might be gone up to three hours but that she did not intend to call him as a witness. Remy's attorney again attempted to explain to the court that Remy was not testifying because he was anxious, but the court interrupted and said it would not accept counsel's representations of Remy's feelings.
Vera completed her testimony in Remy's absence. The trial court offered Remy's counsel an opportunity to find and consult with her client again about testifying or about closing argument strategy. Remy's counsel reiterated that Remy "[did not] want to testify" because "[h]e had a lot of anxiety about it." Again, the trial court cautioned that it would not consider a hearsay report of Remy's motivations.
At the close of trial, the court provided the parties with an hour and a half to prepare for closing arguments and to consult. The court said to Remy's counsel, "[I]f you wish to consult with your client ... if he wants to come back for final argument, if you just want to consult with him about what — how he wants his case presented, you have an hour and a half to locate him." Remy's attorney responded, "I talked to him about
The trial court then proceeded to make oral findings, "beyond a reasonable doubt," that Kendra was in need of aid, and that even though Remy wanted to be a good father, he had been unable to follow through with any changes in his life to become an adequate parent for her in the near future. The court found it "hugely problematic" that Remy had not attained long-term sobriety and had no resources to provide for his daughter. The court addressed Kendra's best interests and found, through expert testimony and beyond a reasonable doubt, that returning Kendra to either parent would likely cause her serious emotional or physical damage. The trial court also noted that both parents had "extraordinarily able and devoted lawyers."
Two months passed before the trial court issued written findings, in September 2014, again finding that Kendra was a child in need of aid pursuant to AS 47.10.011(6) (physical harm),
Remy does not appeal the substance of the trial court's decision. Instead he argues that the trial court violated his right to due process because it failed to advise him that he had a right to testify and because it permitted his attorney to waive that right in his absence. Remy argues in the alternative that even if he was not denied due process, "this court should remand the case for development of the record in support of an ineffective assistance of counsel claim."
The parties dispute whether Remy's failure to raise the argument he now raises on appeal constitutes a waiver of that issue. Because Remy did not raise the issue to the trial court, we review it for plain error.
Remy argues that his right to testify could not be waived by his attorney. Relying on LaVigne v. State,
In LaVigne a defendant in a criminal case told his attorney that he wanted to testify on his own behalf. But his attorney unilaterally decided that LaVigne should not testify, without informing LaVigne that he had a right to insist on testifying in spite of his counsel's advice.
We also pointed out that trial courts could avoid similar problems in the future if they "[took] steps to insure that a criminal defendant's failure to take the stand in his or her own defense was the result of a knowing and voluntary decision made by the defendant."
Remy argues that he has a due process right to a LaVigne warning. But our direction in LaVigne that the trial court "make an on-the-record inquiry after the close of the defendant's case" should not be conflated with a substantive due process right.
There is nothing in the record — not in the courtroom, not in pleadings, not during oral argument, and not even in this appeal — to indicate that Remy wanted to testify. In fact, it appears from his attorney's repeated statements to the trial court on the record that Remy made the decision not to testify, despite ample opportunity to do so. On three occasions, Remy's attorney informed the trial court that Remy did not wish testify, repeatedly attempting to explain that Remy was anxious after hearing "examples of the kind of questions he would get." And Remy chose to leave the courtroom in the middle of trial, knowing that the trial might end before he returned.
If Remy wanted to testify, he had ample time to express his wishes after the presentation of evidence concluded, including the extra time the trial court provided before closing argument and the two months between the end of trial and the trial court's issuance of written findings. And even after the final termination order, Remy never filed anything to alert the trial court of his wish to testify. Therefore, even if Remy had the same right as a criminal defendant to make the final decision whether to testify, he has not established any violation of that right.
When we review an ineffectiveness claim after a parental rights termination trial, we apply a two-pronged test. The test requires the litigant to show first that his attorney's performance was below a level that any reasonably competent attorney would provide and second that counsel's improved performance would have affected the outcome of the case.
For the reasons set forth above, we AFFIRM the decision of the trial court.