Ed H. v. Ashley C.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 24, 2017
DocketD070346
StatusPublished

This text of Ed H. v. Ashley C. (Ed H. v. Ashley C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ed H. v. Ashley C., (Cal. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Filed 8/24/17 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

ED H. et al., D070346

Appellants,

v. (Super. Ct. No. ED91396)

ASHLEY C.,

Respondent.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Robert O.

Amador, Judge. Affirmed.

Law Office of Patrick McCrary and Patrick L. McCrary for Appellants.

Bruce W. Cozart for Respondent.

Ed and Yvonne H., paternal great-grandparents, appeal from an order denying

their request for joinder and petition to seek visitation with their great-grandchildren. Ed

and Yvonne's primary contention on appeal is that the court erred in finding they lacked

standing to join as parties seeking visitation. Specifically, they argue the court erred by

determining that Family Code1 sections 3103 and 3104, which allow a court to grant

1 Further statutory references are to the Family Code. visitation rights to grandparents if certain conditions are met, do not permit great-

grandparent visitation. Alternatively, Ed and Yvonne contend the court erred by not

considering that their grandson, the father of the great-grandchildren, consented to and

joined in their request for visitation, and by not considering whether they had standing as

psychological or de facto parents. We conclude that the Legislature did not intend

section 3104 of the grandparent visitation statutes to authorize great-grandparents to

petition for visitation, and thus the court did not err by concluding Ed and Yvonne lacked

legal standing to seek visitation. Accordingly, we affirm the order.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Ashley C. and Zachary H., whose marriage was dissolved in 2014, have two

children together: H.H. and J.H. (together, the great-grandchildren). Ashley and H.H.

lived with Ed and Yvonne for approximately three years, from about August 2009 to July

2013. Once J.H. was born in 2010, he also lived with Ed and Yvonne until July 2013.

During this time, Ed and Yvonne helped care for the great-grandchildren. After Ashley

and the great-grandchildren moved out of Ed and Yvonne's house, Ed and Yvonne would

periodically visit them.

In September 2013, Ashley petitioned for dissolution of her and Zachary's

marriage, and their marital status was terminated in March 2014. The dissolution

judgment awarded Ashley sole legal and physical custody of the great-grandchildren and

awarded Zachary reasonable visitation.

In March 2015, Ashley requested domestic violence restraining orders against

Zachary in response to an incident where Zachary threatened her. Later that month, the

2 court awarded Ashley a restraining order against Zachary including a child custody and

visitation order granting Ashley legal and physical custody of the great-grandchildren and

terminating Zachary's visitation. Ed and Yvonne's visits with the great-grandchildren

ended about this time.

In December 2015, Ed and Yvonne filed a request for an order modifying

visitation and a petition for independent great-grandparent visitation pursuant to sections

3100, 3102, 3103, and 3104. They asserted that despite numerous attempts to contact

Ashley, she had ignored their calls and messages, and that as a consequence, they had not

contacted their great-grandchildren since March 2015. Ed and Yvonne argued that

because of their long-standing and substantial relationship with the great-grandchildren,

visitation and continued family contact was in the great-grandchildren's best interest.

Zachary consented to and joined in Ed and Yvonne's visitation petition. At the same

time, Ed and Yvonne obtained an order shortening time to seek mandatory joinder as

indispensable parties.

Ashley opposed the motion and the request for joinder. She argued her ongoing

contact with Ed and Yvonne was hindered once Zachary moved into Ed and Yvonne's

home because of the restraining order against Zachary. However, she asserted she had

not deterred Ed and Yvonne from contacting the great-grandchildren, and except for one

instance, they had not attempted to visit them since April 2015. She argued that an order

joining Ed and Yvonne would be detrimental to the great-grandchildren's welfare because

they associate Ed and Yvonne with Zachary, who terrifies them, and therefore visitation

may cause the great-grandchildren fear and anxiety. She asserted that Ed and Yvonne

3 minimized Zachary's drug and behavioral problems, and thus she could not trust them to

protect the great-grandchildren from him. Ashley also asserted that Ed and Yvonne

lacked standing to be joined because they were not grandparents, and the court had no

subject matter jurisdiction to entertain their request.

In reply, Ed and Yvonne argued they had standing to seek visitation under

California law providing for nonparent visitation. They additionally contended the court

had discretion under section 3100 to grant visitation to nonparents who have an interest in

the child's welfare; they had standing to seek visitation under California Rules of Court,

rule 5.24(c)(1),(2) and (e)(1)(A),(B) given Zachary's consent to their visitation request;

and they could seek visitation as de facto parents.

In March 2016, the court heard Ed and Yvonne's requests for joinder and

visitation. During the hearing, the court observed that "[j]oinder is statutory" and while it

had exhaustively reviewed case authority, it found no authority for joinder of great-

grandparents. The court further noted that although there are grandparent, stepparent,

and sibling joinders, "[t]here are not, by statute, great-grandparent joinders, and once an

objection is lodged, the court cannot join because there is no statutory right to join."

After hearing argument, the court denied Ed and Yvonne's joinder motion: "The court

finds that this is a statutory scheme, and the great-grandparents do not have standing and

will not be joined." Its written order provides: "The Court summarily denies the request

of proposed Claimants, Ed and Yvonne [H.], to join as parties to this case for grandparent

visitation based upon lack of subject matter jurisdiction because of lack of standing by

the great-grandparents."

4 This appeal followed.

DISCUSSION

I. Standards of Review

We generally review custody and visitation orders for abuse of discretion.

(Montenegro v. Diaz (2001) 26 Cal.4th 249, 255; In re Marriage of Burgess (1996) 13

Cal.4th 25, 32.) "Under this test, we must uphold the trial court 'ruling if it is correct on

any basis, regardless of whether such basis was actually invoked.' " (Diaz, at p. 255.)

Generally, reversal is only warranted "if there is no reasonable basis upon which the trial

court could conclude that its decision advanced the best interests of the child." (In re

Marriage of Melville (2004) 122 Cal.App.4th 601, 610; Burgess, at p. 32.) " ' "Broad

deference must be shown to the trial judge. The reviewing court should interfere only

' "if [it] find[s] that under all the evidence, viewed most favorably in support of the trial

court's action, no judge could reasonably have made the order that he did." . . . ' " ' "

(Rich v. Thatcher (2011) 200 Cal.App.4th 1176, 1182.)

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