Opinion
Docket No. 95903.
Decided January 19, 1988. Leave to appeal applied for.
William D. Bond, Prosecuting Attorney, and Jo Ellen O'Connor, Chief Assistant Prosecutor, for petitioner.
Brian R. Schrope, for respondent.
Respondent father appeals by leave granted from the order of the probate court which terminated his parental rights to four of his children, all minors. We affirm.
The juvenile court's involvement with the children began in April of 1979 when a petition was filed by petitioner which alleged that respondent had had sexual contact with three of his children. Respondent pled no contest to the allegation and the children were made temporary wards of the court. Ultimately, the court entered a dispositional order placing the children in the custody of their mother, Josephine Emmons (now Rivard); respondent and his wife were subsequently divorced. In 1981, the minor children were discharged as wards of the court.
In February of 1986, the instant petition was filed which alleged that respondent had sexually molested one of his children and that the remaining minor children suffered from emotional deprivation. The oldest child was not included in this petition since she had reached the age of majority by the time the petition had been filed.
At the adjudicative hearing, respondent testified that he had previously pled guilty to second-degree criminal sexual conduct arising from a November, 1985, incident involving one of his children. Respondent did not make any specific statements concerning the molestation of that child as he invoked his Fifth Amendment rights pursuant to advice of counsel. Respondent was sentenced on the CSC conviction to serve forty months to fifteen years in prison. A copy of the judgment of sentence, along with the information charging respondent with first-, second-, and third-degree criminal sexual conduct, was admitted into evidence without objection. Based upon the testamentary and documentary evidence, the juvenile court judge found that respondent had sexually molested the child as alleged in the petition and that there was a pattern of conduct by respondent of sexually molesting the other children and that that pattern sufficiently established that respondent had sexually abused and emotionally deprived the entire family. Following a dispositional hearing in July of 1986, the trial court terminated respondent's parental rights to all four of the minor children. The parental rights of respondent mother were not terminated and the children were placed in her custody. Accordingly, she is not involved in this appeal.
Respondent's sole issue on appeal is that the probate court improperly assumed jurisdiction over the minor children. We disagree.
We begin our review of this case by considering a conflict in this Court over the propriety of reviewing a question arising from an adjudicative hearing in an appeal to this Court. This Court in the cases of In re Adrianson, 105 Mich. App. 300; 306 N.W.2d 487 (1981), and In re Dupras, 140 Mich. App. 171; 363 N.W.2d 26 (1984), held that, other than challenges to the petition itself, issues arising from the adjudicative hearing could only be appealed by way of direct appeal to the circuit court immediately following the adjudicative hearing. See MCL 600.863; MSA 27A.863. In the case of In re Ferris, 151 Mich. App. 736; 391 N.W.2d 468 (1986), a panel of this Court concluded that, since questions arising from the adjudicative hearing involve subject-matter jurisdiction, such issues may always be raised, even on collateral attack. Accordingly, the Ferris Court concluded that issues arising from the adjudicative hearing could be raised in an appeal to the Court of Appeals. We believe that the Ferris decision presents the better reasoned view.
I acknowledge that in a previous case, I joined with the majority in an unpublished opinion per curiam which followed Dupras and Adrianson. See In re Shong, decided May 26, 1987 (Docket No. 93225). However, upon further review of the issue I am now of the opinion that Ferris represents the correct view of the issue and I no longer subscribe to the position taken in Shong with regard to the Adrianson-Dupras versus Ferris conflict.
Accordingly, we must inquire whether or not any error alleged by respondent to have occurred at the adjudicative hearing was "of such magnitude that, but for the error, there would have been an insufficient basis for the juvenile court to assume jurisdiction." Ferris, supra at 744. We conclude that no such error occurred. Respondent argues that his admission to pleading guilty to second-degree criminal sexual conduct, as well as his sentence on that charge, was not properly admissible since his right against self-incrimination would be violated by such admission. We disagree. By admitting his plea of guilty and the sentence he received, respondent was not incriminating himself. Rather, he was merely reciting a nonincriminating factual event, namely his conviction and sentence for a crime. Moreover, the same evidence was provided to the probate court by introduction of the judgment of sentence on the crime.
Respondent argues that the evidence of his prior conviction could not properly be considered by the probate court. We disagree. A parent's sexual assault of his children is relevant, competent, and material evidence in a termination proceeding. See In re Sprite, 155 Mich. App. 531; 400 N.W.2d 320 (1986). Accordingly, we believe that the probate court properly considered defendant's guilty plea and that that guilty plea provided a basis to assume jurisdiction over the children. See also In re Smeback, 160 Mich. App. 122; 408 N.W.2d 117 (1987) (evidence of how a parent treats one child is probative as to the parent's treatment of other children).
Respondent also objects to the admission into evidence of the certified copies of the information and judgment of sentence. However, there was no objection at trial. Even if the issue is properly preserved, we believe that the certified copies were admissible since, as concluded above, such evidence was relevant, competent, and material.
For the reasons stated above, we conclude that in the adjudicative hearing there was no error of significant magnitude to have deprived the probate court of jurisdiction over the children had any such error not occurred. Ferris, supra.
Affirmed.