Griffith v. Brooks

389 S.E.2d 246, 193 Ga. App. 762, 1989 Ga. App. LEXIS 1646
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 16, 1989
DocketA89A1049
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 389 S.E.2d 246 (Griffith v. Brooks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Griffith v. Brooks, 389 S.E.2d 246, 193 Ga. App. 762, 1989 Ga. App. LEXIS 1646 (Ga. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

Birdsong, Judge.

This is an appeal by the natural father of a 3-V2-year-old boy, from the order granting adoption of the child to the mother’s second husband. The father, Michael Griffith, Jr., is and was at the time of these proceedings serving time in Wayne County Correctional Institute for rape and aggravated sodomy. He previously had been convicted of burglary and assault involving several different incidents. He filed an answer to the petition for adoption and objected to the action.

The appeal centers entirely upon the refusal of the trial court to have Griffith transported to Gwinnett County to be present at the adoption hearing. It appears undisputed in the record that Griffith did not have the $546 which was established to be the cost of transporting him to defend the civil case which would terminate his parental rights. Much discussion was had amongst counsel and the trial court as to whether Griffith’s father, Mr. Griffith, Sr., could have afforded to pay the cost of his son’s transport; the trial court evidently concluded that while Mr. Griffith, Sr., clearly loved his grandson, his interest in the child was not sufficient to prompt him to pay for transport of his son to protect his parental rights in the suit filed against him, and that even though the evidence showed the grandfather, Mr. Griffith, Sr., had an income of only $675 from Social Security, he owned a house and a mobile home vehicle, and could have funded the transport of his son from prison to these adoption proceedings, or could have intervened in the matter if his interest in the boy had been sufficiently genuine.

In denying appellant’s request for funds to be transported to attend the hearing on the adoption of his son, the trial court ruled: “The court feels like [on] the better side of discretion, Mr. Griffith Senior had sufficient assets in order to have gotten [Griffith, Jr.] up here if he wanted to. And if the grandfather has all that many assets and is not willing to advance the $500 to get him up here, it’s pretty apparent to the court that he doesn’t have a lot of interest in whether or not his boy is here to represent himself and testify in this case. . . . [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: We would submit that the issue is not the indigency of a person of the father [sic] who is not a party to this action. . . . [THE COURT]: I agree that that is the rule. However, the court doesn’t sit in a vacuum, you know. Even the Supreme Court Justices invite some permanent person down there that’s unique in their field to discuss with them, they’ve had architects and Coach Dooley to keep up with what’s going on in the world. . . . Mr. Griffith Senior is here, and he also had visitation rights, and I just think that the assets are available to Mr. Griffith, Jr. to have been *763 here had they seen fit to do so. . . . He’s had sufficient notice of this, he’s been incarcerated by his own willful act, and . . . obviously, this trial judge would much, much, much prefer that your client be here. Nothing is harder in this world than to be a trial judge to try a case when one party is not here. But y’all have had ample time to get him here. And I just don’t think the evidence warrants the State carrying this expense. [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I understand the court’s ruling. I was just merely pointing out that it’s the indigency of the defendant in the case that we’re talking about, and obviously he is in prison and is not earning any money, does not have the assets to pay for transportation, and that’s why we requested that he be brought by the State. [THE COURT]: I agree. But the court’s finding is not that Mr. Griffith Senior had any legal right in which to do so, but if Mr. Griffith Senior had wanted to do so, there were funds available.”

The adoption hearing proceeded. The evidence showed without dispute that the child, now S-V2, had lived with his mother and Mr. Brooks (who the court ruled had at least a common law marriage) since the boy was five months old. Mr. Brooks, age 44, has a stable job earning approximately $40,000 annually. Mrs. Brooks, age 29, has worked for eight years as a bartender, and works three nights each week: on Wednesdays from 7:00 p.m. till 2:00 a.m.; on Fridays from 7:00 p.m. till 3:00 a.m. and on Saturdays from 7:00 p.m. till 2:45 a.m.

The boy’s natural father was ordered in April 1986 to pay $50 per week child support. As of January 1987, he was $1,150 in arrears, having evidently paid $650. He last paid support in December of 1986. The following month, in January of 1987, he was in incarceration on the above-described charge, and has remained so since that time. There was no evidence he earns money while in prison or has any assets. His father, Mr. Griffith, Sr., testified appellant had been in an automobile accident before he was imprisoned and was unable to, or did not, work full time.

The evidence of appellant’s relationship with his child came principally from Mr. Griffith, Sr., and was essentially undisputed by any competent evidence: he testified that, at least before appellant was in prison, appellant visited his son and played with him, whenever the boy visited the grandparents under their visitation privileges — every other weekend, a week at Christmas, and a week in the summer. Appellant had not visited the boy in the boy’s home because he was never allowed to do so. Neither was Mr. Griffith, Sr., allowed to visit. Appellant did speak to the child on the telephone from time to time, but appellant could not call the boy at his home because this would necessitate a collect call from prison. The child’s mother testified appellant had sent one Christmas card to the boy, but (perhaps because the child was less than three years old) most of it was addressed to her, although appellant signed it with “love” to his son. Mr. Griffith, *764 Sr., testified that the child could not be taken to prison to visit his father, but that when Mr. Griffith, Sr., visited or spoke to Griffith, Jr., appellant would ask about his son and ask to see pictures. The stepfather, Mr. Brooks, conceded that, from statements made by the child after visiting his paternal grandparents, evidently the child had spoken to his father on the telephone.

Mr. Griffith, Sr., testified that he loved his grandson and that appellant loved the boy; but, when questioned about the sincerity of his own interest in the child in view of that fact that he had not sought to intervene in the proceedings, he testified that he did not know he could intervene. (Following the grant of adoption to Brooks, the child’s grandfather did file a belated motion to intervene, contemporaneous with a motion for new trial.) Appellant’s attorney was asked by the court if, and how much, he was being paid to represent appellant’s interests, and the attorney responded that it was less than the cost of transporting appellant to the hearing would have been.

In his order of adoption, the trial court found that the hearing was originally set for May 1988, but was continued at appellant’s request so as to make arrangement to be present at the hearing; but the hearing was set again for September 20, 1988, and that appellant was not present; that his attorney requested another continuance but was denied. The trial court found as fact that the natural father “is incarcerated . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
389 S.E.2d 246, 193 Ga. App. 762, 1989 Ga. App. LEXIS 1646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffith-v-brooks-gactapp-1989.