Drakeford v. Ward, No. Fa97-0623106 (Nov. 7, 2001)

2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 15865
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedNovember 7, 2001
DocketNo. FA97-0623106
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 15865 (Drakeford v. Ward, No. Fa97-0623106 (Nov. 7, 2001)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drakeford v. Ward, No. Fa97-0623106 (Nov. 7, 2001), 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 15865 (Colo. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
Paternity was adjudicated in 1997 in this court for Tyrisse Rae'Kwon Ward, born July 13, 1996, the child of the parties hereto and the subject of the pending motions (hereinafter "Tyrisse"). The plaintiff mother has moved to open the paternity judgment. The State of Connecticut and the attorney for the minor child have filed motions for support. There have been numerous motion and evidential hearings over a period of two years in addition to proceedings before the Probate Court.

This action commenced in March 1997 when the State of Connecticut initiated a paternity petition pursuant to General Statutes § 46b-162. The petition and accompanying verified statement alleged that the named plaintiff, Tahare Drakeford was Tyrisse's mother and the named defendant, Joseph Ward (hereinafter "Joseph") as her father1. The petition was served in hand on Joseph at the Hartford Correctional Center on April 7, 1997.

On the assigned trial date, both Tahare Drakeford and Joseph were present before the court and filed pro se appearances. However, apparently Ms. Drakeford left before the hearing actually commenced. Transcript (hereinafter "T") 5/27/97, 1. The State then introduced a photocopy of an affirmation of paternity signed under oath by Ms. Drakeford several months earlier naming Joseph Ward as the father of Tyrisse. The court,Sosnoff, F.S.M., thoroughly canvassed Joseph who thereafter admitted paternity. The court then adjudged Joseph to be the father of Tyrisse. Joseph was then incarcerated apparently pending trial and for that reason the court "left open" the issue of support. T, 5/27/97, 3-6.

Problems arose regarding the care of Tyrisse resulting in the intervention of the Department of Children and Families. The child was removed from the home where he had resided with Ms. Drakeford and her mother. He was placed at various times in the residence of Ms. Drakeford's father, her aunt, and Joseph's parents. Eventually, on October 9, 1998, the Probate Court in Manchester appointed Joseph's parents, Annie Ward (hereinafter "Annie") and Joseph Ward, Sr. (hereinafter, "Joseph, Sr.") as guardians of Tyrisse. On August 3, 2000 on motion of Tyrisse's attorney, Annie and Joseph, Sr. were impleaded into the present case and have subsequently remained active participants herein.

On August 3, 1999 Tahare Drakeford filed a pro se motion to open the paternity judgment (#126.00). The stated the following basis: "Paternity CT Page 15867 was taken at Probate Court and the court will not give my son back to me until (sic) the files here at this court are changed." This motion was apparently never served because the Correction Department had moved Joseph to a facility in Cheshire while the sheriff had attempted service in Suffield. Ms. Drakeford refiled her motion to open (#127.00) this time effecting in hand service upon Joseph on September 15, 1999. In this motion, Ms. Drakeford states her reasons for opening the judgment as follows: "I'm reopening to change the paternity of my son. Joseph Ward was excluded from paternity DNA testing at the Probate Court. But the files here at this court has him as the father."

Although she failed to serve the Attorney General, the attorney for Tyrisse, and Annie and Joseph, Sr. the parties agreed to waive service and proceed on the merits. Ms. Drakeford has been represented by appearing counsel since October 2000. Joseph, Annie, and Joseph, Sr. continue to represent themselves pro se. All the other parties Joseph, the guardian ad litem for Tyrisse, Annie, Joseph, Sr. and the State of Connecticut all oppose opening of the paternity judgment.

I
FACTS
Tahare Drakeford was fifteen years old when she became pregnant with Tyrisse. She was engaged in an ongoing sexual relationship with Joseph Ward who was then twenty-three. She does not recall signing the sworn affirmation of paternity that was submitted at the original trial, but does not deny that the signature is hers.

Ms. Drakeford claims that from the outset she told Joseph that he was not Tyrisse's father. She claims that the real biological father is a Jason Lewis, who at the time was a classmate at Weaver High School. Yet she admits that she never told Jason Lewis that he was the father of her child. She dropped out of high school in February 1996 and thereafter has had no contact with Mr. Lewis. T, 2/1/2001, 9-11.

Ms. Drakeford does not recall signing the affirmation of paternity, but admits that it bears her signature. T, 2/1/2001, 15-16. As to the paternity trial, she claims that the court took luncheon recess before her case was reached. When she returned for the afternoon session, a sheriff outside the courtroom told her that "court was over with" and "Joseph Ward, Jr. established paternity." T, 2/1/2001, 16-17, 24-28. She did not make any attempt to open the paternity judgment until 1999.

Ms. Drakeford's contacts with the Department of Children and Families predate Tyrisse's birth and dates back to her own childhood, to 1993. In CT Page 15868 July 1997, Tyrisse was removed from his mother's home on a 96-hour hold. Subsequently, Tyrisse lived with Ms. Drakeford's father and with her aunt. Ms. Drakeford was not in the same home. In March 1998 Tyrisse was removed a second time. T, 2/1/2001, 65-69. Thereafter, the Department recommended that the child's paternal grandparents, Annie and Joseph, Sr. be made guardians. The caseworker, Clyde Mitchell, stated that the conduct of Ms. Drakeford herself caused influenced his recommendation: "[E]very time that it seemed DCF was getting — was gathering information against the mother to try to take her to court, she would go take the child to the Wards." T, 2/1/2001, 72. In Mitchell's view, the Wards provided Tyrisse a "more stable environment" than did the maternal grandfather or great aunt.

Indeed, Annie Ward's testimony conflicts somewhat with that of Ms. Drakeford. According to her, Tyrisse "has lived with me most of his life." T, 3/29/2001, 40. She claims that from birth there had been an agreement between Ms. Drakeford and her that they would share parenting of Tyrisse until Joseph was released from prison. She says Tyrisse lived mostly with her without a formal court order until October 1996, when "Tahare called the cops on me to take [Tyrisse] away." T, 3/29/2001, 37. She states that Tyrisse was with her most weekdays. On weekends, Ms. Drakeford would have the child, but that shortly either Ms. Drakeford's mother would call to have Annie pick up Tyrisse or Ms. Drakeford would drop him back at the Ward home. In August 1997, Tyrisse and his mother lived with her father in Manchester. This arrangement broke down in less than a month when the senior Drakeford "kicked her out". However, Tyrisse remained with the maternal grandfather and was cared for by him and Tahare's Aunt Michelle.

Ultimately, the Manchester Probate Court agreed with Mitchell's recommendation and issued a decree removing both Drakeford and Joseph as guardians and placing that responsibility on Annie and Joseph, Sr. In response to Ms. Drakeford's claims that Joseph was not the biological father Judge Cooney also ordered DNA tests of Joseph and Tyrisse. The test results became available in March 1999 and indicate that Joseph is not the biological father of Tyrisse.

The child has resided with the senior Wards since the decree was issued in October 1998.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 15865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drakeford-v-ward-no-fa97-0623106-nov-7-2001-connsuperct-2001.