Harper v. Landers

348 S.E.2d 698, 180 Ga. App. 154, 1986 Ga. App. LEXIS 2098
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 2, 1986
Docket72568
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 348 S.E.2d 698 (Harper v. Landers) 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
Harper v. Landers, 348 S.E.2d 698, 180 Ga. App. 154, 1986 Ga. App. LEXIS 2098 (Ga. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinions

Deen, Presiding Judge.

The two minor children who are the subjects of this petition for custody are the offspring of appellee Landers and his former wife, the now-deceased daughter of petitioner Harper. For some time prior to the 1980 divorce, as well as afterwards, Mrs. Landers and the children resided in the home of her parents. During that entire period Landers provided no financial support. Mrs. Landers had a serious heart condition which prevented her holding regular, full-time employment; consequently, she was compelled to seek assistance from the county Department of Family and Children’s Services (DFCS) in order to provide necessaries for the children beyond the shelter and food which her parents (themselves persons of limited means) were voluntarily providing. The DFCS subsequently filed petitions against Landers to force him to reimburse the funds expended by the Department for the children’s support, but with little success, as Landers, after signing consent orders, nevertheless did not pay. Prior to initiation of the action below, he was some $17,000 in arrears in child support and had been cited for contempt for failing to reimburse DFCS. At some time prior to the mother’s death, he moved from Georgia to Florida.

There was evidence that Landers had been an abuser of alcohol and controlled substances and had served a prison term for an unspecified offense, and that at the time the action was filed, he had pending against him in Georgia a DUI charge. Mrs. Landers, the children’s mother, died in September 1984 at the age of 32, and the children continued thereafter to reside in the Paulding County home of the maternal grandparents, as they had done for six years previously. The children became entitled to certain social security benefits after their mother’s death. There was evidence that Landers, who had hardly seen the children since before the divorce, visited them at least once after their mother’s death but made no offer to contribute to their support. In May 1985 he went to the Paulding County school where the children were enrolled and took them to Brevard County, Florida, where they have been ever since.

In July 1985 the grandmother, Mrs. Harper, filed a petition in the Juvenile Court of Paulding County seeking termination of Land[155]*155ers’ parental rights, with temporary custody of the children in the DFCS and permanent custody in her; and alleging abandonment, deprivation, and subjection of the children to an unhealthy physical, emotional, and moral environment. Landers answered, denying Georgia courts’ jurisdiction over either himself or the children. He alleged that by operation of law he became the children’s legal custodian upon their mother’s death, and that they were therefore legal residents of Florida, the domicile of their custodial parent. See OCGA § 19-9-2; Matthews v. Matthews, 238 Ga. 201 (232 SE2d 76) (1977); Spires v. Lance, 167 Ga. App. 331 (306 SE2d 317) (1983).

The trial court granted Landers’ motion to dismiss on jurisdictional grounds. In his order, entered December 19, 1985, the court directed the Paulding County DFCS to request the corresponding agency in Florida to investigate the charges of abuse and neglect brought against respondent by appellant. Mrs. Harper applied to this court for a discretionary appeal, which we granted in order to consider whether the trial court erred in granting appellee’s motion to dismiss on jurisdictional grounds. Appellant enumerates as error the trial court’s failure to find that appellee’s parental rights were adversely affected by his acceptance of monies from the DFCS and refusal to repay it when ordered to do so; and (in two separate enumerations) the court’s granting his motion to dismiss on jurisdictional grounds. Held:

Given appellee’s history not only of failure to honor his biological and statutory obligation of support, OCGA §§ 19-6-13 et seq.; 19-7-1, but also of his affirmative and obstinate refusal to pay even when under a court order to do so, it is difficult to resist the conclusion urged by appellant: that the father’s interest in his two young children, long on the wane, has now waxed in direct proportion to the potential for pecuniary profit presented by the prospect of gaining control of the children’s social security benefits, derived (ironically enough) from their deceased mother.

The law gives parents a prima facie right to custody and control of their offspring as against third parties, except when by clear, strong, and convincing evidence it is shown that the parent (or parents, as the case may be) has lost his or her right to custody and control on one of the grounds set forth in OCGA § 19-7-1, or through demonstrated unfitness. See Blackburn v. Blackburn, 249 Ga. 689 (292 SE2d 821) (1982); Miele v. Gregory, 248 Ga. 93 (281 SE2d 565) (1981). Appellant grandmother contends that Landers’ conduct produced a de facto forfeiture of parental rights and that OCGA § 19-9-2, whereby custody inures to the surviving parent, is negated by the forfeiture. Porter v. Johnson, 242 Ga. 188 (249 SE2d 608) (1978); Peck v. Shierling, 222 Ga. 60 (148 SE2d 491) (1966).

The record sub judice shows that Landers had both negligently [156]*156and wilfully failed to fulfill his statutory duty to provide “the necessaries” for his minor children. OCGA § 19-7-1 (b) (3). Well before the death of the children’s mother, he had demonstrated his indifference to their welfare by failing to make any effort to provide for them, even when the mother’s failing health left her without income and forced her to seek financial assistance from the state. When ordered by the latter authority on two separate occasions to honor his financial obligation on pain of contempt, he failed and refused to do so. In the meanwhile, he apparently had sufficient funds not only to provide his own “necessaries,” but also to support a lifestyle which included indulgence in substance abuse. It was only when, some eight months after the mother’s death, he apparently became aware that a reliable (albeit modest) source of regular income in the form of social security checks would be available to him if he had possession of the children, that he evinced his interest in them by “snatching” them from their Georgia school and removing them to Florida. The record makes it plain that Landers’ acts and omissions to act before the mother’s death, and for seven months afterwards, denote a total indifference to his children’s welfare (whether physical, intellectual, or emotional) of such nature and magnitude as likely to justify a finding of unfitness or abandonment, which in the eyes of the law might well lead to a loss of parental rights. See OCGA §§ 19-10-1; 19-10-2. See also Chambers v. Lee, 215 Ga. 629 (112 SE2d 614) (1960).

In the fact situation sub judice, however, no proceeding to establish abandonment, unfitness, or forfeiture of rights was instituted prior to the mother’s death.

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Harper v. Landers
348 S.E.2d 698 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1986)

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Bluebook (online)
348 S.E.2d 698, 180 Ga. App. 154, 1986 Ga. App. LEXIS 2098, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harper-v-landers-gactapp-1986.