MATHIAS, Judge.
This appeal involves a jurisdictional issue arising from the Lake County Courts. The minor children at issue are wards of the Department of Child Services ("DCS") and proceedings are pending in Lake County Juvenile Court for the involuntary termination of parental rights regarding the children. N.E., the children's former foster parent, attempted to intervene in those proceedings, but her petition was denied. Thereafter, N.E. filed a petition to adopt the children in Lake County Superior Court. DCS sought to intervene in the adoption proceedings, or in the alternative, requested that N.E.'s petition to adopt be transferred to the Juvenile Court. The Lake County Superior Court denied the DCS's motions. The DCS appeals and argues that the Lake County Superior Court was required to transfer N.E.'s adoption petition to the Juvenile Court pursuant to the Lake County Case Allocation Plan.
However, pursuant to statute, the Civil Division of the Lake County Court System, which includes the Lake Superior Court, has exclusive jurisdiction to adjudicate adoption petitions and therefore, we affirm, concluding that the Lake Superior Court properly denied DCS's motion to transfer.
DCS removed J.T.D., born on March 21, 2011, and J.S., born on September 1, 2012, from their biological Mother at birth because they were born drug positive. The Lake County Juvenile Court determined that the children were Children In Need of Services ("CHINS"). Biological Mother's and Father's parental rights to J.T.D. were terminated on November 8, 2012. And on or about April 26, 2013, the DCS filed a petition to terminate Mother's parental
J.T.D. and J.S. were placed in foster care with N.E., their Mother's cousin, and N.E. desired to adopt the children. However, on March 25, 2013, the DCS filed in the Juvenile Court a request for change of placement because N.E. had created a website, which contained a picture of one of the two children and disclosed confidential information concerning the children. The purpose of the website was to assist N.E. in raising funds to supplement her income because there were periods of time she could not work due to one child's medical needs. The Juvenile Court granted the DCS's request for change of placement and the children were removed from N.E.'s care.
On April 25, 2013, N.E. filed in the Juvenile Court a motion to intervene, which stated that she intended to pursue adoption of the children. After a hearing was held, N.E.'s motion to intervene was denied.
Shortly thereafter, on June 3, 2013, N.E. filed in Lake Superior Court petitions to adopt J.T.D. and J.S. On June 12, 2013, in the Juvenile Court, N.E. filed a motion to reconsider the denial of her motion to intervene in the CHINS proceedings. The Juvenile Court denied the motion to reconsider and specifically found that the issue had already been addressed and the motion was not made in good faith because N.E. had filed petitions to adopt the children in Lake Superior Court.
On June 20, 2013, the DCS filed in Lake Superior Court motions to intervene in the adoption proceedings and motions to transfer the adoption proceedings to the Juvenile Court. The Court Appointed Special Advocate ("CASA") also filed similar motions. Both the DCS and the CASA argued that pursuant to the Lake County Caseload Allocation Plan approved by the Indiana Supreme Court, all adoptions of minors must be filed in the Juvenile Court. The DCS and the CASA also argued that N.E.'s petitions to adopt the children were an improper collateral attack on the Juvenile Court's decision that it was not in the children's best interests to be placed in N.E.'s care.
A hearing was held on the motions on July 11, 2013. At the hearing, N.E. argued that pursuant to statute, the Lake Superior Court has probate jurisdiction, which includes exclusive jurisdiction to adjudicate adoption petitions, and the local rule does not supersede the statute. The Superior Court agreed with N.E. and denied the DCS's and the CASA's motions to intervene and transfer. The court then certified its ruling for interlocutory appeal, and our court accepted interlocutory jurisdiction.
In this case, the DCS is challenging the Lake Superior Court's jurisdiction over these adoption proceedings. "Subject matter jurisdiction is the power to hear and determine cases of the general class to which any particular proceeding belongs." K.S. v. State, 849 N.E.2d 538, 540 (Ind. 2006). "A tribunal receives subject matter jurisdiction over a class of cases only from the constitution or from statutes." Georgetown Bd. of Zoning Appeals v. Keele, 743 N.E.2d 301, 303 (Ind.Ct.App. 2001). "Subject matter jurisdiction is an issue of law to which we apply a de novo standard of review." Lombardi v. Van Deusen, 938 N.E.2d 219, 223 (Ind.Ct.App. 2010).
Our court has previously examined the nature of CHINS, termination of parental rights, and adoption proceedings,
In re Infant Girl W., 845 N.E.2d 229, 239-40 (Ind.Ct.App.2006) (internal citations omitted) (also stating that CHINS, termination of parental rights, and adoption proceedings "have divergent subject matter and remedies"), trans. denied (emphasis added).
Indiana Code chapter 31-19-2 establishes the procedures required for adoption of a minor child, and section 31-19-2-2 provides:
(Emphasis added). Consistent with this statute, Indiana Code section 31-19-1-2 provides that the "probate court has exclusive jurisdiction in all adoption matters."
Our court has also discussed the probate court's jurisdiction to adjudicate an adoption petition over a child who is also the subject of CHINS or termination of parental rights proceeding:
In re Infant Girl W., 845 N.E.2d at 240 (internal citations omitted).
Lake County does not have a separate probate court, but probate jurisdiction is vested in the County's Civil Division. Specifically, organization of the Lake County Court system is described in Indiana Code section 33-33-45-21:
See also Matter of Adoption of T.B., 622 N.E.2d 921, 924 (Ind.1993) (observing that the Lake Circuit and Superior Courts "have concurrent jurisdiction over probate matters" and the "juvenile division does not have jurisdiction in probate matters").
In Matter of Adoption of T.B., our supreme court expressly stated that the Lake County "juvenile division does not have jurisdiction in probate matters and, thus, cannot assert jurisdiction in an adoption proceeding." Id. The DCS attempts to circumvent this holding by relying on the Lake County Caseload Allocation Plan, which the Lake County Courts adopted approximately seven years after T.B. was decided. Specifically, the DCS argues that the Lake Superior Court was required to transfer this adoption proceeding to the Juvenile Court pursuant to the Caseload Allocation Plan.
Pursuant to Indiana Code section 33-33-45-8, the Lake County Courts have the authority to "make and adopt rules and regulations for conducting the business of the court[.]" However, "[w]hile trial courts may establish local rules for their own governance, those local rules may not conflict with the rules established by this Court or by statute." State ex rel. Commons v. Pera, 987 N.E.2d 1074, 1078 (Ind. 2013) (citing Gill v. Evansville Sheet Metal Works, Inc., 970 N.E.2d 633, 645-46 (Ind. 2012) (citing Ind.Code § 34-8-1-4))).
In Pera, the Judges of the Lake Circuit and Superior Courts reassigned a Judge from the Superior Court's County Division to its Juvenile Division to fill a vacancy created by the resignation of the presiding Judge of the Juvenile Division. The Judges' decision to reassign Judge Schiralli
Id. at 1077; see also Appellant's App. p. 25.
However, this local rule conflicted with Indiana Code section 33-33-45-21(e), which establishes that a judge, who was not appointed to the Lake Superior Court under the merit-selection process described in Indiana Code section 33-33-45-38, "is not eligible to be reassigned, rotated, or transferred to other divisions of the court." Because Judge Schiralli was not appointed to the Lake Superior Court under that merit-selection process, the relators, who were all Lake County Magistrates, argued that Indiana Code section 33-33-45-21(e) prohibited his transfer from the County Division to the Juvenile Division. Pera, 987 N.E.2d at 1077.
Our Supreme Court disagreed with the Judges' argument that section 33-33-45-2(e) could not be enforced because it conflicted with the Lake County Court's local transfer rule. Specifically, the court declared:
Id. at 1078-79 (internal and record citations omitted).
Here, we are presented with exactly the same issue the Pera Court addressed: whether Lake County's local rule, i.e. the Caseload Allocation Plan, trumps a statute, i.e. Indiana Code section 31-19-1-2, which provides that probate courts have exclusive jurisdiction over adoption matters. The DCS places undue emphasis on the fact that our supreme court approved the Caseload Allocation Plan. See Appellant's Br. at 17. The Pera Court rejected this same argument and observed that the Caseload Allocation Plan is not a rule promulgated
The DCS also claims that the Caseload Allocation Plan "should be read harmoniously" with the statutes declaring that probate courts have exclusive jurisdiction over adoption proceedings. Appellant's Reply Br. at 4. But the Caseload Allocation Plan removes adoption proceedings from the Civil Division, which has probate jurisdiction, and transfers adoption cases to the Juvenile Division. Therefore, the statutes conferring exclusive jurisdiction over adoption proceedings to probate courts and Indiana Code section 33-33-45-21, which vests the Lake County Civil Division with probate jurisdiction, cannot be harmonized with the Caseload Allocation Plan.
"A tribunal receives subject matter jurisdiction over a class of cases only from the constitution or from statutes." Georgetown Bd. of Zoning Appeals v. Keele, 743 N.E.2d 301, 303 (Ind.Ct.App. 2001). Our General Assembly has statutorily conferred jurisdiction of adoption proceedings exclusively to probate courts. In Lake County, the Civil Division has probate jurisdiction, and therefore, exclusive subject matter jurisdiction over adoption proceedings. DCS may not rely on local court rule, i.e. the Caseload Allocation Plan, to circumvent the Lake County Civil Division's exclusive subject matter jurisdiction over adoption proceedings.
Affirmed.
BRADFORD, J., and PYLE, J., concur.