ATB v. Department of Public Assistance & Social Services

795 P.2d 1212, 1990 Wyo. LEXIS 88, 1990 WL 118792
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 20, 1990
DocketC-90-1
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 795 P.2d 1212 (ATB v. Department of Public Assistance & Social Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ATB v. Department of Public Assistance & Social Services, 795 P.2d 1212, 1990 Wyo. LEXIS 88, 1990 WL 118792 (Wyo. 1990).

Opinion

URBIGKIT, Chief Justice.

In this appeal we address the question, posed by appellant, ATB (father), whether the district court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of appellee, Department of Public Assistance and Social Services (DPASS), upon its petition to terminate the father’s parental rights vis-a-vis his son, EB (child). DPASS premised its petition to terminate the father’s parental rights on allegations that the child had been left in the care of DPASS without provision for child support and without communication from the father for a period of at least one year. 1 We reverse because the evidence in the record does not support the district court’s entry of summary judgment.

Father states his issues thus:

I. The court erred in finding that there was no genuine issue of material fact on whether or not the minor child, [EB], had been left in the care of another person without provision for support and without communication from the absent parent for a period of one year, pursuant to Wyoming statute, Sec. 14-2-309(a)(i).
A. Did the appellant leave the minor child in the care of another person without provision for support and without communication from the appellant for a period of one year, as that standard is articulated in Wyoming statute, Sec. 14-2-309(a)(i)?
B. Did the court err in employing the standard for adoption without consent in a termination action against a non-custodial parent?

In response to these claims of error, DPASS asserts that occasional and trifling contributions to the support of a child do not create a genuine issue of material fact which precludes summary judgment. Further, DPASS asserts that the two telephone calls made from the father to the child’s mother during the course of two years does not create a genuine issue of material fact as to the contention that the father left his child without communication for a period of at least one year.

The record reveals the following: A petition for termination of parental rights was filed in the district court on September 1, 1989, alleging that the child was left in the care of DPASS 2 without provision for sup *1214 port of the child by the natural father and without communication from the natural father for a period of at least one year. On September 26, 1989, counsel was appointed to represent the father because he was indigent and incarcerated in the Hayes County Jail, San Marcos, Texas. On November 2, 1989, DPASS filed a motion for summary judgment. The motion asserted that the affidavit of the mother established there was no genuine issue of material fact. We quote the affidavit in its entirety:

I
That I reside at 314 South Linden # 2, Sheridan Wyoming.
II
That I have never received any child support from my ex-husband, [ATB]. [He] last saw our son, [EB], in October 1987. The only gift [ATB] has ever given [EB] is a sweatsuit for Christmas, 1987.
On June 16, 1989 I sent relinquishment forms by certified mail to [ATB] and requested that he voluntarily relinquish his parental rights. No answer has yet been received.

Further the Affiant saith [sic] not [sic]. The affidavit was signed on June 20, 1989.

In response to this affidavit, the father submitted his own affidavit which we shall summarize. The father was born on February 23, 1969. In October 1987, the mother left Texas with their child and went to Wyoming. The father did not become aware of the divorce decree, which required him to make child support payments, until November 1989. He claimed to have communicated with his wife about support of the child, but that on two occasions she told him not to send money and, that when he sent her $200 in February 1989, she returned the money to him. The father also claimed to have provided the child with a jacket and clothing, though no date for this contribution to the child’s support is included in the affidavit which was signed by the father on December 4, 1989. The father also claimed that the mother called his employer in Texas and made false accusations against him which resulted in him losing his job. The record also contains a social study done by DPASS, but that document contains only self-serving and likely inadmissable hearsay information received by DPASS from the mother, which has no value in testing the validity of the summary judgment. The evidence does not demonstrate the age of the child, but we are able to glean from the record that he was just eleven days short of being three years old when the petition was filed.

In determining the propriety of any summary judgment, this court examines the record in the light most favorable to the respondent, giving him or her the benefit of all inferences which can properly and reasonably be drawn from the evidence. Smith v. Ensley, 752 P.2d 1374, 1376 (Wyo.1988); Cordova v. Gosar, 719 P.2d 625, 640 (Wyo.1986). This case presents something of a mixed case under the Cordova, six-stage, summary judgment analysis. Id. at 634. However, our initial concern is with stage three and the substantive sufficiency of the mother’s affidavit which was the only evidence filed in support of the motion. That affidavit does not contain the sort of grist that the termination of parental rights mill requires. See Matter of SKJ, 673 P.2d 640, 642 (Wyo.1983). The affidavit says only that the mother never received any support from the father, but it does not say that none has ever been offered. It says that the father has not seen the child since October 1987, but it does not say that the father has refused and/or neglected to see his child despite knowing his whereabouts or that the father was able to visit his child and did not do so. In summary, when viewed most favorably to the father, the mother’s affidavit fails to establish any of the elements necessary for termination of a parent’s rights under W.S. 14-2-309(a)(i).

More importantly, under Cordova’s stage six analysis, the father’s affidavit raises a number of factual issues, the reso- *1215 Iution of which is necessary to the termination of parental rights. For instance, the father claims that he did not. see the divorce decree until November, 1989. He claims that the mother asked him not to send money for the support of the child and, when he did send money, she returned it to him. The social study suggests that the mother was informed that if she received any support it would have to be reported to DPASS and would reduce her public assistance benefits. It is possible that the mother asked the father not to send money since she may have viewed the contributions to support of the child as merely complicating her status with DPASS without adding any real benefit to her and her child’s life. Finally, there is no

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Bluebook (online)
795 P.2d 1212, 1990 Wyo. LEXIS 88, 1990 WL 118792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atb-v-department-of-public-assistance-social-services-wyo-1990.