Granato v. Occhipinti
This text of 602 P.2d 442 (Granato v. Occhipinti) 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.
Opinions
OPINION
This appeal is taken from a judgment declaring that the superior court has the authority to order the Alaska Department of Health and Social Services, Division of Social Services, against its will, to conduct a home-study in a private custody dispute. We reverse.
The facts are not in dispute. Judge Oc-chipinti signed an order directing the Divi[443]*443sion of Social Services1 to investigate the suitability of placing the parties’ minor children with their mother in Anchorage. The order also directed the division to request that the appropriate Arkansas agency conduct a similar study of the father’s parents’ home in Arkansas. The state was not a party to the custody proceeding and received no prior notice that the foregoing order was contemplated. The Attorney General’s office informed the court that it had directed the Division of Social Services not to comply with the order, and then moved to quash it. A hearing to show cause and to argue the motion to quash was scheduled, but before it could be held the divorcing parties reconciled and the lawsuit was dismissed. Because the dispute surrounding the validity of the court’s order was a continuing one, and likely to recur frequently in the future, the motion to quash was treated, by stipulation of the parties, as a complaint for a declaratory judgment.2
The single issue properly before us is whether the superior court could constitutionally require the state to perform a home-study.3 The Division of Social Services is a specialized unit within the Department of Health and Social Services, which department has been designated by AS 44.-15.010 as a “principal” department in the state government.4 Article III, section 22, of the Alaska Constitution,5 declares that the “functions, powers, and duties” of such a “principal” department shall be allocated “by law”, a term that article XII, section 11, explicitly defines as meaning “by the legislature.” 6 In addition, article III, section 23, permits the governor to “make changes ... in the assignment of functions among . [the] units [of the executive branch] which he considers necessary for efficient administration.”7 The legislature may disapprove the governor’s reallocation of functions. Id. The constitution vests no power in the judiciary [444]*444to define the specific functions of these agencies, and in the absence of express authorization or an overriding constitutional imperative, the judiciary may not bequeath such a power to itself.8
By the mandate of article III, section 22, the state legislature is without doubt empowered to direct the Department of Health and Social Services to assist a trial court in gathering information necessary to the court’s intelligent fulfillment of its duties. Thus the legislature has commanded the department to investigate a child’s background and the suitability of his or her prospective home, when the department is appointed to do so by a court presiding over an adoption proceeding;9 has commanded the Commissioner of Health and Social Services to “make available to the superior court, where necessary, qualified probation officers and assistants;”10 and, with respect to delinquent minors, has commanded the department to “submit a predisposition report with a recommended plan of treatment to aid the court in its selection of a disposition, and any further information which the court may request.” 11 The foregoing statutes address the department directly and by name.12
By contrast, the sole legislative directive relevant to the order given in the instant case states only that in a private custody dispute the court may order that “services be provided for the protection of the child.” AS 09.65.130(a) and (c).13 There is no implied grant of power to compel the performance of these “other services” by a state agency not wishing to perform them. Moreover, by providing that the costs of such services will be assessed [445]*445against the parties, and that the court may advance such costs to parties temporarily without funds, AS 09.65.130(b) suggests that it is contemplated that such services typically are to be performed by a private agency. Since in other statutes the legislature has seen fit to exercise its article III, section 22 authority over the department expressly, an implied exercise of that power will not easily be found in language that is directed only to the judiciary and uses no term even vaguely indicating an intent to make the department’s resources available to the courts.
The appellee maintains that AS 47.-10.020(a) authorizes a court to order the department to conduct a home-study investigation in a public custody proceeding, without referring to the department directly, and argues that a similar construction should be placed on AS 09.65.130(a) and (c). The pertinent language in AS 47.10.020(a) provides:
Whenever a person informs the court of the facts which bring a minor within this chapter, the court shall appoint a competent person or agency to make a preliminary inquiry and report for the information of the court to determine whether the interests of the public or of the minor require that further action be taken.
There is no analogy between this section and AS 09.65.130. Unlike the language of AS 09.65.130, the phrase “competent agency” is at least suggestive of the legislature’s intent to include the department in the statute’s scope. Chapter 10 of Title 47 is concerned with two distinct categories of children: delinquent minors, and children in need of aid, and in each case the state is directly concerned as a party to the litigation.14 Thus while the paramount concern in both private and public custody proceedings is the best interest of the children involved,15 the department is integrally a part of the latter proceedings and a likely agency for the legislature to regard as subject to appointment to conduct a home-study. The department has no role in a private custody proceeding unless information surfaces there triggering the state’s involvement pursuant to AS 47.10.010. Finally, as noted supra, AS 47.10.081(a) directs the department to conduct predisposition hearing reports regarding delinquent minors. Since the reports to be done pursuant to AS 47.10.010(a) include reports pertaining to delinquent children, the specific designation of the department in subsection .081(a) is highly probative of the meaning of “competent agency” in subsection .020(a). In conclusion, AS 47.10.020(a) does not support the inference that the vague directive of AS 09.65.130 empowers a court to command the aid of the Department of Health and Social Services in a private custody dispute.
Finally, the appellee argues that since the judiciary’s obligation to provide for the best interests of the children whose custody it must decide exists independent of statute,16 the means utilized by a court to fulfill that obligation are not limited to those specifically authorized by statute.17
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
602 P.2d 442, 1979 Alas. LEXIS 583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/granato-v-occhipinti-alaska-1979.