Guardianship of Estelle

875 N.E.2d 515, 70 Mass. App. Ct. 575, 2007 Mass. App. LEXIS 1150
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedOctober 29, 2007
DocketNo. 06-P-1612
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 875 N.E.2d 515 (Guardianship of Estelle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guardianship of Estelle, 875 N.E.2d 515, 70 Mass. App. Ct. 575, 2007 Mass. App. LEXIS 1150 (Mass. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Cowin, J.

The biological father of the minor child, Estelle, appeals from a judgment of the Probate and Family Court granting a guardianship of the child to the child’s maternal uncle and aunt, with the father appointed as coguardian. The father asserts that, given the judge’s finding that he is not an unfit parent, he is entitled to outright custody of the child without the limitations inherent in the vesting of guardianship authority in others. In support of the judgment, the uncle and aunt argue that they had parented the child for seven years by the time of trial; she [576]*576is happy, well adjusted and developing normally; she visits regularly with her father; and a precipitous transfer of custody would be harmful to her.

We credit the judge with a sensitive attempt to sort out the complexities of the case and arrive at a compromise that was in the child’s best interests. His solution, however, cannot stand as a matter of law because the father is correct that, absent a finding of unfitness on his part, the judge is without authority to require that he share parenting decisions with others. We remand for further findings in accordance with the discussion below.

1. Background. The facts and prior proceedings are not disputed. The child was born to the mother and father in December, 1997. By that time, the relationship between the mother and father had ended. The mother died in April, 1998. The mother’s brother and his wife immediately assumed care of the child and, on May 6, 1998, were appointed the child’s temporary guardians. Since that time, the uncle and aunt have provided the child’s primary physical care, and the child has developed a close relationship with the uncle and aunt and their two biological children. The uncle and aunt have performed all of the normal parental functions, including providing health insurance for the child; seeing to her religious education; participating in her academic and extracurricular activities; and taking her on family vacations. The child refers to the uncle and aunt as “Dad” and “Mom,” although she knows that they are not her biological parents. She has thrived in the course of their parenting.

The father had, at the time of trial, played a far less significant role in the child’s life. The child did visit with the father on a regular basis and refers to him as “Daddy Sam.”2 Despite a recommendation by a guardian ad litem that he attend parenting classes, the father did not do so. On March 9, 1999, a probate judge ordered that the father pay $50 weekly to the uncle and aunt in child support. The father’s first five support checks were returned for insufficient funds, and it was not until he was found in contempt that he began to comply with the support orders. The judge found that the father “has not made the effort [577]*577necessary to be the Child’s primary parent” and that he has “failed to take an active enough role in the Child’s life.”

While the father was apparently perfectly willing to have the child raised in large part by the uncle and aunt, he was not content that they be vested with legal authority in the matter, and on July 24,1998, he filed a motion to terminate the guardianship. On March 9, 1999, a guardian ad litem was appointed. This ushered in an inexplicable period of an additional six and one-half years during which the case was “investigated.”3 The case was finally tried on September 19 and 20, 2005. The judge found “that totally separating the Child from [the uncle’s and aunt’s] home would be damaging,” and that a “continued role of all the adults in her life would be in the child’s best interest until she was older and better able to cope with more significant change.” At the same time, he concluded that there was “insufficient evidence to establish that the [father] was completely unfit as a parent in order to prevent him from having continuing contact with the Child.”

In accordance with these findings and rulings, the judge created a coguardianship and relieved the father of the obligation to make child support payments. He provided in the judgment for a specific schedule with respect to the sharing of the child by the coguardians and ordered the father to perform all of the recommendations of the guardian ad litem. He concluded the judgment by stating: “In balancing the best interests] of this child and the fitness of the Father, the Court finds that complete termination of this guardianship would have severe and drastic effects on this child who all agree is presently very well adjusted and happy sharing both homes.”

2. Fitness of the father. The judge attempted to maintain the conditions in which the child had thrived from the time of her infancy, while still permitting the child’s surviving biological parent both to have a present role in her life and to expand the [578]*578scope of that role if appropriate. While that may well have been a desirable objective, his findings did not permit its adoption.

Custody of a child belongs to a parent unless that parent is unfit. See Bezio v. Patenaude, 381 Mass. 563, 576 (1980); Care & Protection of Zelda, 26 Mass. App. Ct. 869, 871 (1989); Guardianship of Yushiko, 50 Mass. App. Ct. 157,159-160 (2000); Care & Protection of Lillith, 61 Mass. App. Ct. 132, 143 (2004). Here, the relationship of the judge’s subsidiary findings regarding the father’s fitness and his ultimate finding on that subject are ambiguous. The subsidiary findings are generally negative with respect to the father’s parenting. Thus, following the child’s birth, the child and her mother lived with the child’s maternal grandmother until the death of the mother, after which the child was cared for by her maternal uncle and his wife. A contempt finding was required before the father paid child support. Neither the father nor members of the father’s family had called the child at her residence. The father had not involved himself in the child’s school life or extracurricular activities. He had never taken the child on a vacation. He had failed to attend recommended parenting classes. Despite the uncle’s and aunt’s practice of never denying him visits with the child, the father had, in the judge’s words, “failed to take an active enough role in the Child’s life.”

The negative subsidiary findings are not offset by any findings that are positive in character. They leave an over-all impression that the father, while not abusive or neglectful when the child was with him, was indifferent regarding his role as a parent and, as noted supra, had been perfectly willing to have the uncle and aunt shoulder the greater share of the child’s upbringing. That there was some uncertainty in the judge’s mind is reflected in his apparently carefully worded ultimate conclusion that there was “insufficient evidence to establish that the [father] was completely unfit as a parent in order to prevent him from having contact with the Child.”

As suggested above, the judge attempted to steer to a middle ground between fitness and lack of fitness on the part of the father, to the end that he could maintain some degree of control of the situation without jeopardizing the father’s ability to develop a relationship with the child. The problem with that approach is [579]*579that our law only recognizes two possibilities: in given circumstances, a parent is either fit or unfit. While the judgment may be on occasion difficult to make, it must be made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
875 N.E.2d 515, 70 Mass. App. Ct. 575, 2007 Mass. App. LEXIS 1150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guardianship-of-estelle-massappct-2007.