B.F. v. D.M.

15 P.3d 258, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 1
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 2001
DocketNos. S-9308
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 15 P.3d 258 (B.F. v. D.M.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
B.F. v. D.M., 15 P.3d 258, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 1 (Ala. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

The superior court allowed David Muntz to adopt his wife's daughter, A.F.M., without the consent of A.F.M.'s biological father, Bruce Farley. In granting the adoption, the court relied on AS 25.23.180, which authorized it to dispense with Farley's consent if [261]*261A.F.M.'s conception resulted from a sexual assault. We affirm this ruling, concluding: (1) substantial evidence supports the finding that A.F.M.'s conception resulted from a sexual assault by Farley; (2) AS 25.28.180 did not require a conviction of sexual assault as a prerequisite to waiving Farley's consent; (8) terminating Farley's paternal rights in the adoption proceeding did not trigger the constitutional guarantees that attach to a criminal prosecution; and (4) collateral estoppel did not bar the court from deciding whether AFM. was conceived as a result of Farley's sexual assault, since that issue had not been properly raised or litigated before.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

The underlying facts are largely undisputed and can be summarized briefly.1 Laura and David Muntz2 married in 1966 and divoreed in 1990. After divorcing, Laura became involved in a brief relationship with Bruce Farley and became pregnant. She gave birth to a daughter, A.F.M., in Washington in November 1992. In a 1998 paternity action, a Washington court found Farley to be A.F.M.'s father, ordered him to pay child support, and granted limited visitation.3

Meanwhile, Laura had reunited with David; she remarried him in December 1994 and moved to Alaska with A.E.M. in 1995. The following year David petitioned for adoption of A.F.M. in the superior court in Anchorage. In support of his petition, David contended that Farley's consent to the adoption was unnecessary for two reasons: because Farley had failed to pay child support for more than a year and because A.F.M.'s conception had resulted from a sexual assault by Farley. Relying on David's allegation of non-support, the superior court waived Farley's consent and granted the adoption. Farley appealed. We reversed the superior court's decision, concluding that the court had miscalculated the period of Farley's nonsupport.4

On remand, David advanced his alternative ground for waiving Farley's consent to adoption: his claim that A.F.M.'s conception resulted from a sexual assault by Farley. In response, Farley claimed that David was collaterally estopped from raising this issue by the Washington court's express finding, during the prior paternity action, that Farley had not sexually assaulted Laura. The superior court rejected Farley's claim of estoppel, however, reasoning that the question of whether A.F.M. had been conceived as a result of sexual assault was not necessary to the Washington court's decision. After hearing Farley's live testimony and Laura's video-taped deposition,5 the superior court found that A.F.M. was conceived by sexual assault; on that basis, the court terminated Farley's parental rights, waived his consent, and granted David's petition to adopt A.F.M.

Farley appeals.

III, DISCUSSION

A. Standard of Review

We will overturn a "trial court's resolution of child custody issues 'only if there has been an abuse of discretion or if the controlling findings of fact are clearly erroneous." 6 We review issues of statutory and constitutional interpretation de novo,7 and likewise apply our independent judgment to determine if collateral estoppel applies to a particular set of facts.8

[262]*262B. The Superior Court Did Not Err as a Matter of Fact or Law in Dispensing with Farley's Consent to Adoption.

Under Alaska law, a parent must ordinarily consent to adoption.9 But consent is not required if the parent's relationship with the child has been terminated by court order in an adoption or child in need of aid proceeding.10 Alaska Statute 25.23.180(c)(8) expressly authorizes a court to terminate a biological father's parental rights in an adoption proceeding if it finds that his child's conception resulted from an act of sexual assault and that termination is in the child's best interests:

(c) The relationship of parent and child may be terminated by a court order issued in connection with a[n] [adoption] proceeding under this chapter or a [child in need of aid] proceeding under AS 47.10 on the grounds
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(3) that the parent committed an act constituting sexual assault or sexual abuse of a minor under the laws of this state or a comparable offense under the laws of the state where the act occurred that resulted in conception of the child and that termination of the parental rights of the biological parent is in the best interests of the child.

A finding under this provision must be made by clear and convincing evidence 11 and, when made, allows the court to dispense with the father's consent to adoption.12

In the present case, Farley contends that the superior court erred as a matter of fact and law in relying on this provision as a basis for allowing A.F.M. to be adopted without his consent.

1. The court did not err as a matter of fact in finding sufficient evidence to establish that A.F.M.'s conception resulted from a sexual assault by Farley.

Farley contends that there was insufficient evidence for the court to conclude that AFM. was conceived as a result of a sexual assault by Farley. He insists that evidence of sexual assault was "shaky" and that, even if a sexual assault occurred, there was insufficient basis to find that it resulted in A.F.M.'s conception.

But these arguments are unpersuasive. - When we review a trial court's factual findings, we consider only whether the findings were clearly erroneous.13 Moreover, we give particular deference to those findings when, as here, "most of the trial evidence consists of oral testimony"; 14 for we recognize that in such eases, "(ilt is the function of the trial court, not of this court, to judge witnesses' credibility and to weigh conflicting evidence."15

Because A.F.M. was conceived in the State of Washington, AS 25.28 .180(c)(8) required the superior court to determine whether an act of sexual assault occurred under Washington law-"the state where the act occurred." 16 Under Washington law, rape in [263]*263the third degree occurs when a person engages in sexual intercourse with another person who is not a spouse and who has clearly expressed the lack of consent.17 Here, the evidence supports a finding that A.F.M.'s conception resulted from Farley's commission of third-degree rape.

The evidence presented to the superior court on this issue included a transcript of testimony in the January 1994 Washington custody proceedings, a December 1995 affidavit that Laura submitted in support of David's adoption petition, and testimony that she gave in a May 1996 video deposition.

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Related

LeClair v. Reed ex rel. Reed
2007 VT 89 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2007)
In Re Adoption of AFM
15 P.3d 258 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2001)

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Bluebook (online)
15 P.3d 258, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bf-v-dm-alaska-2001.