Guardianship of B.V.G.

52 N.E.3d 988, 474 Mass. 315
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 23, 2016
DocketSJC 11925
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 52 N.E.3d 988 (Guardianship of B.V.G.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guardianship of B.V.G., 52 N.E.3d 988, 474 Mass. 315 (Mass. 2016).

Opinion

Duffly, J.

The maternal grandfather of B.V.G., a young woman with intellectual disabilities, sought to intervene in permanent guardianship proceedings pending in the Probate and Family Court on the petition of B.V.G.’s father, who had been appointed B.V.G.’s temporary guardian when she was eighteen years old. 1 The grandfather asserted that his relationship with B.V.G. has *316 been restricted by her father in his capacity as temporary guardian; that B.V.G. has indicated expressly her desire to communicate with him and has sought contact with him via social media; and that such a relationship is in B.V.G.’s best interests. The grandfather filed a motion to intervene, pursuant to Mass. R. Civ. R 24, 365 Mass. 769 (1974), 2 in the guardianship proceedings, seeking to limit the father’s ability to restrict B.V.G.’s access to the grandfather.

Concluding that the grandfather lacked standing to intervene because he was not an “interested person” within the meaning of G. L. c. 190B, § 5-306 (c), a Probate and Family Court judge denied the motion. The grandfather appealed, and the Appeals Court affirmed the denial, on grounds other than those relied upon by the motion judge. See Guardianship of B.V.G., 87 Mass. App. Ct. 250 (2015). We allowed the grandfather’s petition for further appellate review. 3

General Laws c. 190B, § 5-306 (c), provides that the Probate and Family Court may, “on its own motion or on appropriate petition or motion of the incapacitated person or other interested person,. . . limit the powers of a guardian .. . and thereby create a limited guardianship.” Based on our review of the record and the judge’s findings, we conclude that the facts relevant to the grandfather’s standing to bring the petition are not disputed, and that those facts support the conclusion that the grandfather is an “interested person” within the meaning of G. L. c. 190B, § 5-306 (c). As such, the grandfather is entitled to intervene as of right in the pending proceeding for permanent guardianship. 4

In that proceeding, the grandfather may pursue his claim that *317 the guardianship should be limited because it is in the best interests of B.V.G. that she be permitted to communicate with him if she continues to express a wish to do so. We therefore reverse the order denying the grandfather’s motion to intervene and remand the matter to the Probate and Family Court for further proceedings in the pending petition for permanent guardianship, consistent with this opinion. 5

1. Background and prior proceedings. In considering the grandfather’s standing to intervene, 6 the motion judge conducted a nonevidentiary hearing at which B.V.G.’s appointed counsel, 7 the father’s counsel, the grandfather’s counsel, and the mother, appearing pro se, were each permitted to make representations and submit documentary material. We summarize the uncontested facts based on the judge’s decision, supplemented by uncontested statements and documents presented at the hearing. See Board of Registration in Med. v. Doe, 457 Mass. 738, 745 (2010) (party’s concessions and exhibits attached to party’s pleadings sufficient to establish facts despite lack of evidentiary hearing).

B.V.G. was bom in February, 1993. She has an intellectual disability as well as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and Tourette’s syndrome. B.V.G.’s parents, who separated when she was quite young, were divorced following a lengthy and acrimonious custody dispute over B.V.G. The father was awarded sole *318 legal and physical custody of B.V.G. in 2005, when she was twelve years old. Although B.V.G. had enjoyed contact with the grandfather until 2005, thereafter, the father precluded contact between B.V.G. and her maternal relatives, including the grandfather. According to B.V.G.’s mother, B.V.G. had had a “strong relationship” with her grandfather, which B.V.G. wished to maintain while the father had tried to “cut off’ this relationship.

In February, 2011, when B.V.G. reached the age of eighteen, the father filed a petition in the Probate and Family Court seeking to be appointed her legal guardian on the basis of her intellectual disability. The father was appointed B.V.G.’s temporary legal guardian in December, 2011. 8 See G. L. c. 190B, §§ 5-303, 5-308. The order establishing the temporary guardianship authorized B.V.G. to determine with whom she socialized, except for her mother; the order allowed limited supervised visitation between B.V.G. and her mother. 9

In January, 2013, the father filed a petition seeking permanent guardianship. At that time, the father’s temporary guardianship was extended through April, 2013, pending a hearing on his petition for permanent guardianship. A stipulation by the father, the mother, and an attorney appointed to represent B.V.G. was incorporated in the extended guardianship, authorizing slightly increased visitation between B.V.G. and her mother. 10 The order for temporary guardianship also was amended to authorize certain limited contact between B.V.G. and her grandfather. 11 Under the *319 terms of that stipulation, the grandfather was permitted to send B.V.G. one electronic mail message per day, and to receive no more than one electronic mail message from her. This stipulation, however, did not result in increased contact between B.V.G. and the grandfather. B.V.G. did not have access to electronic mail at the residential treatment program where she lived during the week, and the grandfather contends that, on the weekends, when B.V.G. lived with her father, the father did not permit her to receive electronic mail messages from the grandfather.

Arguing that the father was not furthering B.V.G.’s best interests by restricting her relationship with him, the grandfather filed a motion to intervene, seeking to limit the pending permanent guardianship pursuant to G. L. c. 190B, § 5-306 (c). In support of his motion that he was an “interested person,” the grandfather submitted printouts of his electronic communications with B.V.G. through a social media Web site as evidence of his caring for B.V.G., and of her wish to have contact with him. The grandfather’s assertion that it was B.V.G. who initiated the electronic contact is supported by these documents. 12

The father does not suggest that there is any reason that B.V.G. should not be allowed to maintain a relationship with her grandfather, and no longer contests that the grandfather has an interest in B.V.G.’s welfare. The father also does not dispute that he has restricted B.V.G.’s relationship with the grandfather.

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Bluebook (online)
52 N.E.3d 988, 474 Mass. 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guardianship-of-bvg-mass-2016.