Harrington v. Daum

18 P.3d 456, 172 Or. App. 188, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 74
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJanuary 31, 2001
Docket97-3456; CA A108204
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 18 P.3d 456 (Harrington v. Daum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrington v. Daum, 18 P.3d 456, 172 Or. App. 188, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 74 (Or. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

*190 EDMONDS, P. J.

Randi Daum (father) appeals from a judgment that awarded Bruce Harrington (petitioner) visitation rights with father’s two sons, who were 7 and 8 years old at the time of trial. ORS 109.119. Father argues that the statute, construed in light of his constitutional right to make decisions concerning his children, does not permit the trial court to award visitation to petitioner over father’s objection under the facts of this case. On de novo review, ORS 19.415(3), we agree and therefore reverse.

There is little dispute over the facts; we state them as we find them on de novo review. The marriage between father and the children’s mother was dissolved in November 1995. The dissolution judgment awarded custody of the children to mother and gave father substantial visitation rights. About a month after the dissolution became final, petitioner met mother, and they began dating. By February 1996, petitioner and mother were seeing each other several times a week, with the children often included. From the summer of 1996 until mother’s death in August 1997, mother and petitioner had dinner together most evenings, and mother spent the weekends at petitioner’s apartment. The children were included, except when they were with father. Petitioner established a play area in one part of his living room for the children, furnishing it with appropriate toys and stuffed animals. Because he got off work before mother, petitioner usually picked up the children from day care. The children liked petitioner and enjoyed being with him.

In late August 1997, petitioner took the children on an overnight church outing that was limited to men and boys. That weekend, mother died in an automobile accident. After a short dispute with mother’s parents, father took custody of the children and moved back into mother’s house, which had been the marital home before the dissolution and had remained the children’s home thereafter. Petitioner wanted to remain active in the children’s life, and father allowed him to see the children several times. Father became concerned, however, over several events that, he thought, indicated that petitioner was undermining his role as the children’s parent. *191 Those events included petitioner’s showing the children a videotape that petitioner took at Christmas 1996 of them with mother; father believed that petitioner should have asked him before doing so and that the videotape interfered with the children’s ability to resolve the issues that arose from mother’s death. Also, petitioner allowed a photographer’s assistant to believe that he was the children’s stepfather when he picked up their soccer pictures. Petitioner attended the childrens’ swimming lessons when father was unable to do so because his work shift ended later, and he did not correct the children when they called him “dad.” 1

Father believed that all of petitioner’s actions were intended to undermine his position as the childrens’ father and that petitioner was trying to insert himself into a parental role with them. As a result of his concerns, father both limited petitioner’s contact with the children and insisted that it occur at his house while he was present. Petitioner was dissatisfied with those limitations and filed this action, in which he seeks a judicial declaration of visitation rights with the children. After three days of testimony, the trial court ruled that both a parent-child relationship and an ongoing personal relationship existed between petitioner and the children. It then ordered visitation, established a schedule, and imposed conditions designed to avoid the problems that father had described.

The trial court acted under ORS 109.119, which establishes a procedure for persons other than parents to seek custody or visitation with a child. Under ORS 109.119(1), any person “who has established emotional ties creating a child-parent relationship or an ongoing personal relationship with a child” may petition for relief under ORS 109.119(3). That statute provides:

“(a) If the court determines that a child-parent relationship exists and if the court determines by a preponderance of the evidence that custody, guardianship, right of visitation, or other generally recognized right of a parent or person in loco parentis, is appropriate in the case, the court shall grant such custody, guardianship, right of visitation *192 or other right to the person, if to do so is in the best interest of the child. * * *
“(b) If the court determines that an ongoing personal relationship exists and if the court determines by clear and convincing evidence that visitation or contact rights are appropriate in the case, the court shall grant visitation or contact rights to the person having the ongoing personal relationship if to do so is in the best interest of the child. The court may order temporary visitation rights under this paragraph pending a final order.”

We first consider whether the trial court correctly found that there was a “child-parent” relationship between petitioner and the children. ORS 109.119(6)(a) defines such a relationship as

“a relationship that exists or did exist, in whole or in part, within the six months preceding the filing of an action under this section, and in which relationship a person having physical custody of a child or residing in the same household as the child supplied, or otherwise made available to the child, food, clothing, shelter and incidental necessaries and provided the child with necessary care, education and discipline, and which relationship continued on a day-to-day basis, through interaction, companionship, interplay and mutuality, that fulfilled the child’s psychological needs for a parent as well as the child’s physical needs.”

Under that definition, the trial court erred in finding that there was a child-parent relationship. Although petitioner was close to the children before mother’s death, and although he, mother and the children spent a significant amount of time at each other’s residences, petitioner and mother maintained separate households. Petitioner was never part of the same household as the children. That fact in itself prevents the finding of a child-parent relationship under the statutory definition. We therefore do not need to decide the extent to which the other criteria in the definition might point towards such a relationship. 2

*193

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 P.3d 456, 172 Or. App. 188, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrington-v-daum-orctapp-2001.