Guardianship of Abigail Doe

2016 ME 29
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedFebruary 11, 2016
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2016 ME 29 (Guardianship of Abigail Doe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guardianship of Abigail Doe, 2016 ME 29 (Me. 2016).

Opinion

MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT Reporter of Decisions Decision: 2016 ME 29 Docket: Wal-15-135 Argued: September 18, 2015 Decided: February 11, 2016

Panel: SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, MEAD, GORMAN, JABAR, HJELM, and HUMPHREY, JJ.

GUARDIANSHIP OF ABIGAIL DOE et al.

GORMAN, J.

[¶1] The father of Abigail Doe and Bethany Doe1 appeals from a judgment

of the Waldo County Probate Court (Longley, J.) appointing the girls’ maternal

grandmother as limited guardian of the girls. The father argues that the court erred

by granting the grandmother guardianship based on both her status as the

children’s de facto guardian and the temporarily intolerable living situation created

by the father. We affirm that portion of the Probate Court’s judgment that awards

the grandmother a limited guardianship, but remand to the court to comply with

18-A M.R.S. § 5-105 (2015).

I. BACKGROUND

[¶2] The court made the following findings of fact, which are supported by

competent evidence in the record. Abigail and Bethany are fourteen and nine years

old, respectively. When the father and the girls’ mother were divorced in 2010, the

1 Pseudonyms are used herein to respect the privacy of the children. 2

District Court (Belfast, Worth, J.) awarded the father and the mother shared

parental rights and responsibilities, and awarded the mother the right to provide the

children’s primary residence. The father, who has served in the United States

Navy for about seventeen years, was deployed at sea during the years following the

divorce, and the girls lived with their mother in Maine.

[¶3] When concerns about the mother’s substance abuse, mental health, and

ability to care for the girls arose in the summer of 2011, the father moved to

modify the District Court’s order. At the time of the father’s motion, he was

stationed aboard a ship and the girls were living with the grandmother. In his

motion, the father asked the court to “[a]ward residential care of the minor children

to [the grandmother].”

[¶4] In December of 2011, before hearing the father’s motion, the District

Court (Tucker, J.) entered an ex parte order awarding the grandmother temporary

custody of the children based upon a finding that the children were in jeopardy in

the care of their mother. See 19-A M.R.S. § 1653(2)(C) (2015);

see also 22 M.R.S. § 4002(6) (2015). Soon thereafter, the court granted the

grandmother’s request for intervenor status in the District Court action. See M.R.

Civ. P. 24, 111(c).

[¶5] After conducting a hearing in April of 2012 on the father’s motion to

modify, the District Court (Sparaco, J.) awarded the father sole parental rights and 3

responsibilities, see 19-A M.R.S. § 1657(1)(A) (2015), but also noted that the

father intended for the children to continue to reside with the grandmother; the

court encouraged the father to make guardianship arrangements with the

grandmother:

[The father] intends to and can make independent guardianship arrangement for the children while he is away through the Navy’s Family Care Plan. [The father] has a good relationship with [the grandmother]. If awarded sole parental rights and responsibilities, [the father] intends to provide for the children to remain residing with [the grandmother] while he is away.

[¶6] This order, dated April 19, 2012, was the last order concerning these

children issued by the District Court. Notwithstanding the District Court’s advice,

the father never created a guardianship arrangement through the Navy’s Family

Care Plan, nor did he petition the Probate Court to make the grandmother the

guardian of his children. Instead, the father allowed the children to remain in the

grandmother’s care in the absence of any legal guardianship.

[¶7] Although the father’s deployment ended in June of 2012, the girls did

not see their father until after their mother died in December of 2012. Soon after

returning to Florida after the funeral, the father informed the grandmother that he

did not want any information about his children because it was “too hard for him to

hear what was going on in the children’s lives.” The court found that as a result of

these decisions, by the summer of 2014, “[b]ased on minimal participation, and 4

long absences, [the father] ‘barely knew’ his children anymore.” The father also

decreased his child support contribution from $700 to $400 per month—an amount

insufficient to cover the cost of the children’s care.2

[¶8] On September 4, 2014, the grandmother filed two multi-page

petitions—one for each child—in the Waldo County Probate Court seeking

guardianship of the children pursuant to 18-A M.R.S. § 5-204 (2015). Each

petition was accompanied by five separate documents comprising ten pages—the

three-page petition, a single-page acceptance, a two-page guardianship plan, a

three-page child custody affidavit, and a single-page public assistance affidavit.

The grandmother incorrectly answered “no” to the question on each of the child

custody affidavits that asked her if she had participated in “any other proceeding

concerning the custody of or visitation with the child.” By doing so, she failed to

alert the Probate Court that an outstanding parental rights order governing these

children existed in the District Court.

[¶9] By the time the grandmother filed these initial petitions, the girls had

lived with the grandmother in Belfast for over three years. The grandmother

alleged as a basis for her petition that she was a “de facto guardian” of the children

and that the father had “demonstrated a lack of consistent participation with the

2 The Probate Court found that the father began sending less in child support when he learned that the grandmother was receiving $1,000 per month from the children’s Social Security survivor benefits. 5

minor[s].” See 18-A M.R.S. §§ 5-101(1-B), (1-C), 5-204(d) (2015). She alleged

that the children wished to continue living with her in Maine, that the father

refused to financially support the children, and that he had made no attempt to visit

them in over a year.3

[¶10] After receiving notice of the guardianship petitions, the father did not

immediately file a response alerting the Probate Court about the District Court’s

order awarding him sole parental rights and responsibilities. Instead, he arrived

without warning at the children’s schools on Friday, September 19, 2014,

accompanied by his attorney and a deputy sheriff, and announced that he was

taking them back to Florida with him. The next morning, the girls were so upset

that airport security officers refused to allow them to board the plane to Florida.

The father ultimately drove the children to Florida in a rental car. According to the

father, he opted to remove his children from the person who had been their primary

caretaker for over three years, without notice to them or her, in order to avoid the

“hassle” of working with the grandmother.

[¶11] Within weeks after the father moved the children to Florida, the

grandmother filed petitions in the Probate Court seeking to be appointed the

3 The court found that from December of 2012 to September of 2014, the father saw his children only three times. 6

temporary guardian of the children pursuant to 18-A M.R.S. § 5-207(c) (2015)

(providing that temporary guardianships “may not last longer than 6 months”).4

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2016 ME 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guardianship-of-abigail-doe-me-2016.