Guardianship of Norman

670 N.E.2d 414, 41 Mass. App. Ct. 402, 1996 Mass. App. LEXIS 815
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedOctober 2, 1996
DocketNo. 95-P-1931
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 670 N.E.2d 414 (Guardianship of Norman) 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 Norman, 670 N.E.2d 414, 41 Mass. App. Ct. 402, 1996 Mass. App. LEXIS 815 (Mass. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

Ireland, J.

The appellant is the coguardian and the maternal grandmother of three minor children1 whose mother was murdered in 1991 by the children’s father. The father is incarcerated after pleading guilty to second degree murder. The children’s paternal grandparents were, at first, appointed coguardians with the maternal grandmother, and they were to share physical custody of the children with her, but they were removed as coguardians after a judge found them both unsuitable to act in that capacity. They were, however, given extensive visitation rights.

The maternal grandmother appeals from that part of a judgment granting the paternal grandparents visitation rights with their three grandchildren. Those rights, we note, exceed [403]*403the rights granted to the paternal grandparents under the original guardianship decree.2 The judge did not give any reason or make written findings of fact as to why the expansive visitation she ordered is in the children’s best interests. Therefore, we vacate that portion of the judgment that granted visitation rights to the paternal grandparents and remand the matter for further proceedings on that issue.

Factual background. On April 19, 1991, when the three children (all boys) were ages seven, three, and one, their father murdered their mother. As noted, the father pleaded guilty to second degree murder and is presently incarcerated. Upon learning of their daughter-in-law’s murder, the paternal grandparents picked up the three children, drove them to a park, and told them that their mother was dead and had gone to heaven.

Three days after the murder, the maternal grandmother was granted temporary guardianship of the three children. Later the same day, the paternal grandparents filed a petition, also asking for temporary guardianship of the three children. On October 28, 1991, the paternal grandparents and the maternal grandmother agreed to act as coguardians, and a judgment incorporating the parties’ stipulations — including one for shared physical custody of the children according to an agreed-upon schedule, see note 2, supra — was entered by the Probate Court.

In May, 1992, the maternal grandmother filed a complaint for modification of the guardianship judgment. She requested an order prohibiting further contact between the children and their father, which she alleged had previously occurred without her knowledge while the children were under the paternal grandparents’ care. She later amended her complaint to ask for sole guardianship of the children as well. The paternal grandparents filed a cross petition seeking to remove the maternal grandmother as coguardian and to restrict her [404]*404visits with the children. In addition, the father filed a motion to intervene, and the children’s paternal great aunt filed a separate petition for sole guardianship.

On June 9, 1992, a Probate Court judge issued temporary orders prohibiting further telephone or face-to-face contact between the three children and their father without order of the court and further instructing that a “structured visitation plan” with the father was to be developed under the guidance of a designated mental health professional. Five months later, the maternal grandmother filed a complaint for contempt, alleging that, contrary to the judge’s temporary order, the paternal grandparents were continuing to allow unsupervised contacts between the children and their father. Subsequently, the judge appointed a guardian ad litem for the children, who prepared a report on the situation. All matters (including the maternal grandmother’s original complaint for modification, her complaint for contempt, the paternal grandparents’ cross petition, the father’s motion to intervene in the proceedings, and the children’s paternal great aunt’s separate petition for sole guardianship) were consolidated for trial. The trial consumed five days of testimony.

After the trial, a judgment captioned “Removal of Fiduciary and Appointment of Successor Decree” was entered removing the paternal grandparents as coguardians of the children and appointing in their place the maternal grandmother’s daughter.3 See note 1, supra. The judgment also included the orders here under appeal establishing the paternal grandparents’ visitation rights with the children. Those orders included the visitation rights contained in the original decree, plus additional visitation rights for every other Easter, Thanksgiving, Christmas, Thanksgiving school vacation, Christmas school vacation, February school vacation, April school vacation, and for every summer school vacation. Finally, the decree ordered visitation between the children and their father once every six months “in the presence of a mental health professional.”4

One month after entry of the judgment, on July 8, 1994, the judge issued a memorandum containing extensive findings [405]*405of fact and rulings of law. The judge’s findings focus in large part upon the paternal grandparents’ and the maternal grandmother’s conduct as coguardians and not at all upon the subject of visitation with the paternal grandparents or whether such visitation would be in the children’s best interests. The judge found that the maternal grandmother and the paternal grandparents had not been able to communicate effectively with each other concerning the children, nor had they acted in concert to further the children’s best interests. More strikingly, the judge found that the paternal grandparents had acted “unilaterally [i.e., without seeking the advice of the maternal grandmother, the therapists who were counseling the children, or the court] against the best interests of the [children].” Specifically, the judge found that the paternal grandmother had “facilitated” telephone, mail, and face-to-face contacts at the prison between the children and their father without prior discussion or consultation with the maternal grandmother, who she knew would disapprove, or with either therapist then working with the children.

The judge found the paternal grandfather unable or unwilling to control his wife’s “inexplicable behavior” and, therefore, ruled that he, too, was unsuitable to act as a co-guardian. The paternal grandmother’s actions, according to the judge, were done “with complete disregard to the [children’s] emotional health” and furthered her son’s best interests at the expense of the children’s. The judge also found as a fact that the paternal grandparents had violated the temporary order barring further contact with the father by allowing unmonitored telephone conversations to occur between him and one or more of the children while the children were visiting at the paternal grandparents’ home.5 The judge ruled that the paternal grandparents had not come to terms with the circumstances of their daughter-in-law’s death and had been less than truthful with the children about the matter, preferring to tell them that the father had killed the [406]*406children’s mother by accident or that her death had been “a mistake.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
670 N.E.2d 414, 41 Mass. App. Ct. 402, 1996 Mass. App. LEXIS 815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guardianship-of-norman-massappct-1996.