TIMMER, Judge.
¶ 1 We are asked to decide whether the juvenile court violates a mentally impaired parent's due process rights when it fails to suspend a parental severance hearing until the parent can regain the ability to meaningfully participate in the proceedings and assist counsel. In deciding this issue, we must also determine a guardian ad litem's authority to act for a parent in severance proceedings. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
¶ 2 Three months after twenty-month-old A.G. was put in a voluntary foster-care placement, the Arizona Department of Economic Security ("ADES") petitioned for a dependency as to mother Cecilia A. ("Mother"), alleging neglect and continued inability to parent due to mental health issues.
¶ 3 Almost two years later, A.G.'s GAL moved for termination of Mother's parental rights pursuant to A.R.S. § 8-533(B)(8)(c), alleging A.G. had been in an out-of-home placement for more than fifteen months, Mother had been unable to remedy the circumstances causing the placement, and there was a substantial likelihood she would not be capable of parenting A.G. in the near future. As the date of the contested severance hearing
¶ 4 Mother's GAL filed a timely notice of appeal stating that Mother "may wish to appeal" the severance order, but relating Mother was unable to assist or direct counsel about whether she wished to appeal the termination. ADES moved to dismiss the appeal for failure to include an avowal by counsel as required by Arizona Rule of Procedure for the Juvenile Court ("Rule") 104(B), and this court suspended the appeal and directed the juvenile court to determine the sufficiency of the notice of appeal. The juvenile court conducted a hearing on the issue and, recognizing Mother's unusually limited understanding of the proceedings, denied ADES' motion to strike the notice of appeal and authorized Mother's GAL to file the appeal nunc pro tunc.
¶ 5 Mother does not challenge the court's finding that grounds for severance exist under A.R.S. § 8-533(B)(8)(c) or that severance is in A.G.'s best interests. Rather, she argues the juvenile court violated her right to due process by proceeding with the severance hearing despite recognizing she neither understood the nature of the proceedings nor could assist her counsel in opposing the severance.
¶ 6 Before addressing the merits of the appeal, we consider our jurisdiction to do so. In its answering brief, ADES renews its request to dismiss the appeal, arguing the juvenile court acted in contravention to Rule 104(B) by retroactively authorizing Mother's GAL to file the notice of appeal. Mother did not file a reply brief, so she has taken no position on this issue. Nevertheless, in light of Mother's opposition to the initial motion to dismiss and the rights at stake, we do not take her silence as a confession of error. See Pinal County, Juvenile Action No. S-389, 151 Ariz. 564, 565, 729 P.2d 918, 919 (App. 1986) (noting appellate court has discretion to treat lack of a response as a confession of error).
¶ 7 Rule 104(B) provides in relevant part as follows:
ADES first argues that under the plain meaning of this rule, because Mother was represented by counsel, the notice of appeal was defective as it did not contain the required avowal. But, as ADES acknowledges, Mother's attorney did not file the notice of appeal; Mother's GAL filed it. Consequently, just as Rule 104(B) is not triggered when a party files a notice on his or her own behalf, Rule 104(B) is not triggered by a GAL's filing. We reject ADES' contention that Rule 104(B) requires an avowal of counsel whenever the party is represented as the Rule clearly contemplates that an avowal is
¶ 8 ADES next argues Mother's GAL lacked authority to file a notice of appeal on her behalf, making the notice ineffective. It contends that only a guardian appointed in a probate matter for a person adjudicated incapacitated by clear and convincing evidence can decide on the parent's behalf to file a notice of appeal.
¶ 9 The GAL's role is "to protect the interest of ... an incompetent in a particular case before the court." A.R.S. § 8-531(7). Although ADES does not try to define the limits of this role, it contends a GAL lacks the power to make decisions for the parent. ADES relies on Maricopa County Juvenile Action No. JD-6982, 186 Ariz. 354, 359, 922 P.2d 319, 324 (App.1996), in which this court concluded that, absent a judicial finding the parent is actually incompetent, and to ensure due process before a parent's decision-making right is infringed, which the court presumed attached, "a GAL's role [of protecting the parent's interests] must be limited to investigating the best interests of the parent and communicating those interests to the court." See also Rule 40(C) (authorizing appointment of GAL to "conduct an investigation and report to the court" regarding parent's competency and need for protection). The court then held that the GAL's determinations of those best interests cannot trump the express wishes of the parent. No. JD-6982, 186 Ariz. at 359 & n. 5, 922 P.2d at 324 & n. 5. As in No. JD-6982, the court in this case did not take evidence regarding Mother's competency or expressly find her incapacitated or incompetent. Thus, we agree with ADES that the GAL's appointment did not authorize her to make Mother's decision for her whether to appeal by filing the notice of appeal.
¶ 10 Our analysis does not end there, however. Rule 40(c) also provides that "[t]he court shall conduct hearings and enter orders as determined to be necessary to protect the interests of the parent...." Upon direction by this court, the juvenile court conducted a hearing regarding various attempts to discern Mother's wishes regarding an appeal. Thereafter, the court exercised its Rule 40(c) power to authorize the GAL nunc pro tunc to file the notice of appeal. We disagree with ADES that the court lacked a meritorious reason for authorizing the GAL to file the notice of appeal. The court related its observations that because Mother seemed generally confused about the proceedings, as evidenced by her statement to the court that her children were in jail with her,
¶ 11 Mother argues that, because she "was not competent to stand trial," the court erred by proceeding with the severance hearing rather than staying the proceedings until she could be restored to competency. Mother waived this argument by failing to raise it to the juvenile court, and we therefore review only for fundamental error.
¶ 12 Mother relies on Kelly R. v. Ariz. Dep't of Econ. Sec., 213 Ariz. 17, 137 P.3d 973 (App.2006), to support her position. The mother in Kelly R. argued the juvenile court erred by failing to appoint a GAL for her pursuant to A.R.S. § 8-535(F). Id. at 18, ¶ 1, 137 P.3d at 974. In deciding this issue, the court applied the test for determining mental competency in criminal matters to assess the need for appointment of a GAL pursuant to § 8-535(F)—whether the parent is able to "understand the nature and object of the proceedings or assist in his or her defense." Id. at 22, ¶¶ 26-28, 137 P.3d at 978. The court noted that this interpretation of § 8-535(F) is consistent with A.R.S. § 13-4501(2), which defines a defendant's competency to stand trial in a criminal case. Kelly R., 213 Ariz. at 22, ¶ 28, 137 P.3d at 978. Mother seizes on this language and contends that because she was mentally incompetent at the time of the severance hearing, the juvenile court should have restored her to competency before conducting the hearing.
¶ 13 We reject Mother's contention for two reasons. First, the court never adjudicated her incompetent. Section 8-535(F) requires appointment of a GAL when reasonable grounds exist to believe a parent "is mentally incompetent or is otherwise in need of a[GAL]." A finding of incompetency is not necessary, and, as noted previously, the court in this case did not conduct a hearing on the issue of competency or make any findings regarding Mother's competency.
¶ 14 Second, even assuming Mother was mentally incompetent, she is wrong that the rights afforded a criminal defendant adjudicated incompetent must be afforded a mentally incompetent parent in a civil severance matter. Denise H. v. Ariz. Dep't of Econ. Sec., 193 Ariz. 257, 259, ¶ 6, 972 P.2d 241, 243 (App.1998) (concluding a severance proceeding is civil in nature). In a criminal proceeding, a mentally incompetent defendant cannot stand trial until restored to competency. A.R.S. §§ 13-4502, -4514(D). In contrast, Title 8, A.R.S., which governs termination of parental rights, does not require that a mentally incompetent parent be restored to competency before the court proceeds with a severance hearing. Indeed, the legislature evidenced an intention to proceed with a severance proceeding even when a parent is mentally incompetent by providing as a ground for severance that a parent is unable to discharge parental responsibilities because of a mental illness or mental deficiency that will continue for a prolonged, indefinite period. A.R.S. § 8-533(B)(3). If a parent is also mentally incompetent,
¶ 15 Mother nevertheless contends, without citation to any authority other than Kelly R. and criminal statutory provisions, that due process requires the juvenile court to refrain from conducting a severance hearing until the parent is restored to competency. We disagree.
¶ 16 The juvenile court cannot terminate a parent's fundamental liberty interest in the care, custody, and management of a child without affording the parent due process, which requires fundamentally fair procedures,
¶ 17 Although Arizona appellate courts have not addressed whether the juvenile court must stay a severance hearing until an incompetent parent is restored to competency, we are guided by decisions issued outside the state. In In re T.E.B., 24 P.3d 900 (Okla.Civ.App.2001), the Oklahoma Court of Appeals rejected a mother's argument that the district court erred by holding a severance proceeding while she was incompetent. The court reasoned that while requiring restoration to competency before standing trial in the criminal context protects and benefits the accused's liberty interest without interfering with others' interests, affording the same right to incompetent parents in severance proceedings would inject indefinite uncertainty into a child's life, which would be detrimental to that child's best interest. Id. at 903, ¶ 9. The court further noted that the process of appointing a GAL for a parent, which was done in that case, adequately assured the mother of her due process right to notice and an opportunity to be heard. Id. at 903-04, ¶ 10. Other courts have reached the same conclusions as the court in In re T.E.B.,
¶ 18 We are persuaded by the reasoning in In re T.E.B. and like cases that due process does not require the juvenile court to suspend a severance hearing until a mentally incompetent parent can be restored to competency, if ever. A severance proceeding adjudicates substantial rights of both a parent and child; a parent's rights to attend and meaningfully participate in a severance hearing cannot be afforded at the expense of a child's right to a stable parenting situation. Thus, we decide that these sometimes-competing interests are properly balanced by allowing the severance hearing to proceed while a parent is mentally incompetent but protecting that parent's interests by appointing a GAL and counsel to represent the parent's interests during the proceedings. That procedure occurred in this case. We therefore hold that the juvenile court did not violate Mother's due process rights by proceeding with the severance hearing, even assuming she was mentally incompetent.
¶ 19 For the foregoing reasons, we decide the juvenile court did not violate Mother's due process rights by proceeding with the severance hearing while she was unable to meaningfully participate in the hearing and assist counsel. Because Mother's GAL and counsel participated in the hearing, Mother's rights were adequately protected. We affirm.
CONCURRING: MAURICE PORTLEY, Presiding Judge and ANDREW W. GOULD, Judge.
Absent material revision after the date of the events at issue, we cite a statute's current version.