Grant v. Grant

173 A.3d 1051
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedNovember 7, 2017
Docket80, 2017
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 173 A.3d 1051 (Grant v. Grant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grant v. Grant, 173 A.3d 1051 (Del. 2017).

Opinion

VALIHURA, Justice:

The Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution contains “a substantive due process component” that protects “certain fundamental rights and liberty interests.” 1 One of these fundamental liberty interests is the liberty interest of parents to make decisions concerning the care, custody, and control of their children. 2 The United States Supreme Court has stated that this interest “is perhaps the oldest of the fundamental liberty interests recognized” by the Court. 3 However, this interest is not absolute. Under certain state statutes, third parties may petition the court for visitation rights. But to protect parents’ constitutional liberty interest, courts must grant “special weight” to parents’ views on visitation and their children’s best interests. 4 Although the Supreme Court has not defined “special weight,” precedent “make[s] it. clear that ‘special weight’ is a very strong term signifying extreme deference.” 5

Accordingly, under Delaware’s Third Party Visitation statute, 13 Del. C. § 2412 (“Section 2412”), when a parent objects, to a third party’s request for visitation, “the parent’s determination of the child’s best interest will prevail unless the nonparent seeking visitation proves that: (1) visitation is in the' child’s best interest; (2) the parent’s objections are unreasonable by clear and convincing evidence; and (3) visitation will not substantially interfere with the parent-child relationship by a preponderance of the evidence.” 6

Here, in the case before us, grandparents petitioned for third-party visitation rights, and the parents objected. The Family Court essentially found the parents’ objections were not unreasonable. The grandparents had attacked the parents on social media, disparaged their parenting abilities, demoralized their son (the father), and sought to meddle in the parents’ relationships with their children. Nonetheless, the court awarded the grandparents the right to visitation in- a “supervised, therapeutic setting.” 7 The court believed that visitation in such a controlled environment, and under .the supervision of a trained professional, would minimize the parents’ concerns and render their objections “clearly unreasonable.” 8

However, the record provides no basis for supporting the conclusion that supervised, therapeutic visitation ■ would adequately address the reasonable objections of the parents. Further, the grandparents here presented no evidence to support a finding that supervised, therapeutic visitation .would not substantially interfere with the parent-child relationship.

Thus, for the reasons set forth below, we, hold that the- Family Court abused its discretion in awarding visitation to the grandparents and accordingly, REVERSE.

I. Factual Background

Before giving birth to her children, the relationship between Mary Grant (“Mother”) with her in-laws “wasn’t the warmest,” but still amicable. 9 However, while pregnant with her first son, Mother grew concerned about her in-laws’ seeming desire to interfere with her role as a parent. For example, Raymond and Mindy Grant (“Grandfather” and “Grandmother” individually, and “Grandparents” collectively) told parents, their son Ralph (“Father”) and Mother (collectively, “Parents”), that they intended to serve as their future grandchildrén’s confidants. They invoked the mantra of “whatever happens at [Grandparents’ house] stays [at Grandparents’ house]” and said that they would not tell Parents if the "children confided in them about drug and alcohol use. 10 After Parents mentioned that they envisioned their firstborn attending daycare, Grandmother insisted she would babysit him instead. Mother felt Grandmother was encroaching on her role as a parent.

Once their first son was born in 2008, Parents began the tradition of weekly family dinners with each set of grandparents. During such dinners, Grandparents ignored Parents and attempted to persuade their young grandchildren (“Children”) to push Parents for more time among Grandparents and Children. For example, Grandmother told Children, “Make sure you tell your mommy to bring you over as soon as possible.” 11

Grandparents were never satisfied with just weekly dinners, and Father recalled that they would yell whenever Parents rebuffed Grandparents’ requests to increase their frequency. Grandparents would “lay into” Father in person and by e-mails, text messages, and phone calls alleging that Parents were committing severe child and elder abuse. 12 Grandparents told Father that Mother was brainwashing him and blamed her for the state of family relations. Despite Grandparents’ behavior, Parents maintained their tradition of weekly dinners, but they became more difficult logistically after their third child was born in 2012.

The last straw came on May 20, 2013, when Mother had to take one son to the-hospital for x-rays, and Mother texted Grandmother that they would need to take a,“rain check” on dinner because that one son was sick. 13 Grandmother responded, “-We don’t deserve this.” 14 Though Parents had previously, contemplated ceasing contact between Children and Grandparents several times, they finally decided to end all visits.

. In the aftermath of Parents’ decision, Grandmother joined Facebook groups such as “Narcissist Parents Who Abuse Their Own Children,” 15 “Parents of Estranged or Alienated Adult Children,” 16 “Grandparents Without Rights,” 17 and “Prayers for Broken Families.” 18 She posted that she wanted to “slap” Mother, Father, and maternal grandparents; 19 that Mother is “narcissistic”; 20 and . that' Grandmother “sent a lot of daggers” towards Mother at one of the Children’s sports games. 21 She also wrote, “[S]ome days I want to[] kill' everyone. I do take meds for this rage I feel and it helps.” 22 Although Grandmother believed that these groups were private, she later learned that anyone could join them. Parents had joined'under a pseudonym to monitor Grandmothér’s posts to protect their family.

Sometimes Father received texts from Grandmother saying that she missed him.

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Bluebook (online)
173 A.3d 1051, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grant-v-grant-del-2017.