Damon v. York

680 S.E.2d 354, 54 Va. App. 544, 2009 Va. App. LEXIS 355
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedAugust 11, 2009
Docket1930081
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 680 S.E.2d 354 (Damon v. York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Damon v. York, 680 S.E.2d 354, 54 Va. App. 544, 2009 Va. App. LEXIS 355 (Va. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

D. ARTHUR KELSEY, Judge.

Against the wishes of the child and both her biological parents, the appellant—a former live-in girlfriend of the child’s mother—sought court-ordered visitation with the child. After conducting an evidentiary hearing, the circuit court held the appellant was not a “person with a legitimate interest” under Code § 20-124.1 for purposes of obtaining court-ordered visitation. The appellant arg-ues the circuit court erred because the evidence established, as a matter of law, a statutory right for her to seek visitation. We disagree and affirm.

I.

When reviewing a circuit court’s decision on appeal, “we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the prevailing party, granting it the benefit of any reasonable inferences.” Congdon v. Congdon, 40 Va.App. 255, 258, 578 S.E.2d 833, 835 (2003). “That principle requires us to discard the evidence of the appellant which conflicts, either directly or inferentially, with the evidence presented by the appellee at trial.” Brandau v. Brandau, 52 Va.App. 632, 635, 666 S.E.2d 532, 534 (2008) (citation omitted).

During their marriage, Mitchell J. Parker, Jr. and Heather York had a baby girl in 1996. They divorced in 2000. The child lived with her mother and had visitation with her father. In October 2002, the mother allowed her girlfriend, Hope Kathleen Damon, to regularly stay overnight. Less than a year later, Damon and the mother briefly traveled to Canada and got married under a Canadian law authorizing same-sex marriage. The child stayed with her mother and the mother’s girlfriend for about a year and nine months. During this period, the maternal grandparents claimed Damon alienated the mother from her family, alienated the child from her father and both sets of grandparents, and falsely reported that *548 the child had a bipolar disorder. The child’s behavior and performance in school began to suffer.

In 2003, the Department of Social Services learned that the child (then seven years old) was frequently home alone after school unsupervised. DSS initiated an investigation and discovered various conditions suggesting neglect, including a founded complaint that the child was self-medicating. The extended family became aware of DSS’s investigative findings and decided to intervene.

In 2004, the child’s maternal grandmother filed a petition for custody in the Virginia Beach Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court. After hearing evidence, the juvenile court ordered that the child be placed in the shared custody of her father and maternal grandmother. In 2004, the juvenile court ordered the parties involved in the custody dispute (the mother, father, and maternal grandmother) not to permit the child to have any “contact whatsoever” with Damon.

The relationship between Damon and the child’s mother ended in 2005. In July 2006, Damon filed a petition with the juvenile court seeking court-ordered visitation with the child. The child’s mother, father, and maternal grandmother objected to Damon’s request. To represent the child’s best interests, the juvenile court appointed the same guardian ad litem who had represented the child since 2004, spent over 78 hours investigating various allegations, and filed a 28-page report detailing her recommendations.

Upon hearing the evidence, the juvenile court held Damon was not a “person with a legitimate interest” under Code § 20-124.1 for purposes of obtaining court-ordered visitation over the objections of the child’s parents and custodians. Given the sensitivity of the matters discussed in its earlier 2004 custody hearing, the juvenile court sealed the transcripts of the 2004 proceedings and ordered the parties to return all transcript copies to the court.

Damon appealed the juvenile court’s order seeking a de novo review in the circuit court. She served discovery requests on the child’s father, the child’s mother, and the child’s *549 maternal grandmother. The circuit court entered a protective order finding many of the requests overly broad. The court ordered the mother, however, to answer several discovery requests that arguably related to the question whether Damon was a “person with a legitimate interest” to have standing under Code § 20-124.1. The court declined Damon’s request for an order compelling discovery responses from the maternal grandmother. 1

The circuit court observed that standing under Code § 20-124.1 presented a “threshold issue” that must be decided before reaching the ultimate issue of visitation. The court received into evidence the guardian ad litem’s report to the juvenile court 2 and accepted the guardian ad litem’s proffer that the child desired to have no contact with Damon. The court also heard testimony from the child’s mother opposing Damon’s bid for standing and from Damon in support of it.

The child’s mother testified there had been no contact between the child and Damon since the 2004 juvenile court order. 3 Prior to that, she continued, Damon was merely “an adult presence” in the child’s life during the brief relationship between herself and Damon. Damon was “my girlfriend at *550 the time and lived with us during that time,” the mother explained. The child “has as close a relationship with many of my friends at this moment,” the mother pointed out, as she previously had with Damon. “I don’t see it as being any different than that,” she concluded.

When asked if “any unique bond” developed between the child and Damon, the mother said they “were friendly together. Nothing particularly unique.” The mother stated that except during “several months” in which Damon helped get the child ready for school in the morning, Damon usually worked late and slept late. The mother picked the child up from child-care after school, prepared her dinner, assisted with her homework, and put her to bed.

Damon took the stand and presented a very different rendition of her brief relationship with the child. Aided by her supporting witnesses, Damon claimed she became a “stepparent” of the child after the marriage ceremony. Her relationship with the child, Damon argued, could not be described as a mere adult presence lacking any unique parental bond. She admitted she had had no contact with the child since 2004 but explained she made no earlier effort to seek visitation because of the juvenile court’s no-contact order.

The circuit court rejected Damon’s argument and found that she failed to prove she was a “person with a legitimate interest” under Code § 20-124.1. The court acknowledged the evidence showing Damon lived for a brief period with the child’s mother in a “familial-type relationship” but noted that the “evidence is in conflict as to the nature and extent during that period of time of Miss Damon’s role in that familial relationship and whether or not it rose to the level of functional equivalent of a stepparent or not.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
680 S.E.2d 354, 54 Va. App. 544, 2009 Va. App. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/damon-v-york-vactapp-2009.