Dara v. Gish

404 P.3d 154
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 22, 2017
Docket7201 S-16414
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 404 P.3d 154 (Dara v. Gish) 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
Dara v. Gish, 404 P.3d 154 (Ala. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION

WINFREE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

The superior court granted joint legal and primary physical • custody of a child to his maternal grandmother and step-grandfather. The child’s mother — who retained joint legal custody and visitation rights — appeals, arguing that: she was entitled to court-appointed counsel during the proceedings; the order violates her Fourteenth Amendment right to direct the upbringing and education of her child; and the court erred in its custody determination. Because the mother provides no legal basis for her claim to court-appointed counsel, we affirm the court’s decision denying that request. Because the court applied the correct constitutional and legal standard for third-party custody, its factual findings were not clearly erroneous, and its exercise of discretion was not unreasonable, we affirm the court’s order awarding joint legal and primary physical custody of the child to the grandparents.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

Helena Dara’s son was bom in 2006. Dara’s mother and step-father, Helena and Howard Gish, have been a significant presence in the boy’s life. In March 2009, at Dara’s request, the Gishes took the boy into their home and became his primary care givers because his parents could not adequately provide for him. In September, with Dara’s consent, the Gishes were appointed his legal guardians. Through 2012 Dara had frequent contact with her son, including overnight visitation.

Dara’s son began receiving Individual Education Plans (IEPs) from the local school district in 2009. He received a variety of reading and language assessments around 2012; a neuropsychological evaluation from Dr. Kristi Fuller in 2018; and speech, language, and occupational therapy evaluations in January 2014. Around January 2014 the Gishes’ attorney requested that Dr. Alfred Collins., a licensed psychologist, provide an opinion whether Helena' Gish was the boy’s “psychological parent”; Dr. Collins returned an opinion the next month that she was. In that opinion Dr. Collins found that the boy was “developmentally very delayed” and that although the boy had “made some progress over the past five years, due in large part to the efforts of Helena Gish,” he nonetheless “still remains far behind.” Dr. Collins further noted that the “Gishes have consistently provided the high level of support that [the boy] has required (OT, speech therapy, evaluations, etc.).”

Later testing — performed by Dr. Fuller in 2016 when the boy was almost- ten years old — found “low-average general intellectual abilities,”, “global deficits, with- basic reading skills falling at an early first-grade level, and math, calculation skills at an early second-grade level,” and “the presence of dyslexia.” Given the severity of the boy’s dyslexia, Dr. Fuller recommended that he. continue working with a speech pathologist the Gishes had arranged.

B. Proceedings

In July 2012 Dara brought-an action, to terminate the guardianship, which the Gishes contested. Around the same time the Gishes also filed a petition to adopt Dara’s son. The adoption petition was denied in March 2013, and the guardianship was terminated in August 2014. In January 2014, after the adoption was denied but before the guardianship was terminated, the Gishes filed a separate complaint for custody and visitation, which underlies this appeal. The Gishes were represented by private counsel throughout the proceedings. Dara had private counsel until May 2015, when she notified, the firm that she no longer needed their services.

In , March 2015 the parties arrived at a settlement agreement under which Dara was granted primary physical and sole legal custody, and the Gishes received regular visitation. rights, The parties stipulated that “a strong., and heartfelt bond” had developed between the boy and the Gishes and that it was in his “best interest that he have regular and consistent visitation” with them, But less than two weeks after the parties reached the agreement, Dara left the state with her son without notifying the .Gishes. and cut off. all communication with them.. The Gishes, hired a private investigator and discovered that Dara and her son were in Tennessee; another family member subsequently informed them of Dara’s precise whereabouts. After- the Gishes informed the superior court that Dara had violated the settlement agreement’s visitation provisions and left the state with- the boy, the court issued an order granting them interim custody. In July 2015 the Gishes traveled to .Tennessee and, using the interim custody order, secured the assistance of local authorities in obtaining physical custody of the boy and bringing him back to Alaska.

The Gishes moved to set aside the settlement agreement and resumed' their custody action against Dara when they returned to Alaska.- Trial was scheduled for February 2016. At a November 2015 status hearing Dara informed the court she was no longer represented by counsel and was having some difficulty knowing what to file; she had requested appointed counsel at the legal aid center but had been denied. Dara again brought up the issue of appointed counsel at a January 2016 pretrial conference, this time requesting that the court appoint her counsel under AS 25.23.180(h), which provides a right to counsel in parental rights termination proceedings. The court informed Dara that the statute did not pertain to custody determinations, and that the court knew of no avenue under which it might be authorized to appoint counsel in a case such as hers.

In February 2016 the parties agreed to a temporary visitation schedule under which the boy would live with Dara and her new husband in Tennessee over 'the following sunimer. Trial was continued and a status and custody hearing was scheduled for July. In April the Gishes sent Dara a letter suggesting her son’s progress in overcoming his special needs might be jeopardized by the summer away from his doctors and therapists in Alaska and proposing an alternative visitation schedule. Dara declined to alter the agreed-upon schedule- and in May -filed a motion to enforce visitation. The court held a hearing and issued an order enforcing the original visitation agreement, The court noted Dara’s son might lose some progress he had made in therapy but was reassured by testimony from Dara and her new husband that they had enrolled the boy in a summer therapy program at the Sylvan Learning Center.

Dara’s son spent the summer in Tennessee with Dara and her husband, a "man she had known for only about a month before the marriage. Dara’s son did not attend the program in which Dara had testified to enrolling him. In late July the court held the scheduled status and custody hearing. Both Helena and Howard Gish attended in person; Dara and her husband .participated telephonically. The court took cai-e to review the third-party custody legal standard with Dara at the beginning of the- proceedings, and on numerous occasions the court explained hearing procedures. Helena and Howard Gish testified about the boy’s special needs, what actions they had taken to address those needs, their concerns about Dara’s capacity to care for the boy, and why they were seeking custody.

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404 P.3d 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dara-v-gish-alaska-2017.