Hatton v. Lynch

2011 OK CIV APP 23, 249 P.3d 952, 2010 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 151, 2010 WL 5980200
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 10, 2010
Docket106,300. Released for Publication by Order of the Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, Division No. 4
StatusPublished

This text of 2011 OK CIV APP 23 (Hatton v. Lynch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hatton v. Lynch, 2011 OK CIV APP 23, 249 P.3d 952, 2010 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 151, 2010 WL 5980200 (Okla. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

JERRY L. GOODMAN, Judge.

T1 Kaylee Martin Smith Lynch (Mother) appeals the trial court's September 10, 2008, order granting Naney Hatton (Grandmother) visitation with N.B.M. (Child). Mother proposes that the trial court had no jurisdiction or, if it did, it incorrectly applied the law. Based on our review of the facts and applicable law, we affirm.

FACTS

T2 On April 25, 2006, Grandmother filed a petition to establish grandparental visitation with Child. She alleged her deceased son, who died in 2001, was Child's biological father. She alleged she had thereafter established a close relationship with Child and requested a visitation schedule be entered to continue that relationship.

T3 Mother filed an answer. She denied it was in Child's best interest to award Grandmother visitation and alleged there was no harm to Child in denying Grandmother visitation.

1 4 The parties agreed to mediation. This produced an agreement between the parties, dated October 27, 2006, in which a visitation schedule was established for Grandmother that included her visiting with Child during Spring Break from school.

T5 In March 2007, Mother and Child moved to Oregon the weekend before Spring Break. Grandmother sought an emergency *954 order to enforce the agreed visitation rights. The trial court granted this request in an order filed March 16, 2007.

T6 On April 2, 2007, Mother, now an Oregon resident, filed a motion in Oklahoma to dismiss Grandmother's petition for visitation for the reason that Child no longer resided in Oklahoma; therefore, an Oklahoma court no longer had jurisdiction to try the matter.

T7 There was no pending action filed in Oregon, except for a request to the Oregon court to confer with the Oklahoma court regarding jurisdiction. The two courts did confer. They agreed that Oklahoma retained jurisdiction and Oregon deferred to that jurisdiction.

1 8 The trial court held a hearing on January 18, 2008. Subsequently, the trial court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law in a minute order filed February 1, 2008. This was later memorialized in an appealable order filed September 10, 2008, in which the trial court granted Grandmother visitation. Mother now appeals.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

19 The trial court's construction and application of statutes presents a question of law subject to de movo review on appeal. Stump v. Cheek, 2007 OK 97, ¶ 9, 179 P.3d 606, 609. "The primary goal of statutory construction is to ascertain and follow the intent of the legislature." Id. "The words of a statute will be given their plain and ordinary meaning unless it is contrary to the purpose and intent of the statute when considered as a whole." Id.

ISSUES

Jurisdiction

¶ 10 Mother first contends the Garfield County District Court lost jurisdiction over the matter when Mother and Child moved to Oregon. Mother concedes that when Grandmother filed her petition, and when Mother filed her answer, Oklahoma was Child's home state and the matter was properly before the Oklahoma court. Mother counters, however, that when she and Child moved to Oregon, Oklahoma lost jurisdiction and the trial court's subsequent order of visitation was void for lack of jurisdiction.

T11 It is safe to say, without detailed analysis, that because Oklahoma was the home state when the matter was initiated, and the Oregon court had the opportunity to assume jurisdiction, but instead chose to defer jurisdiction to Oklahoma to resolve the pending matter, the Oklahoma Court had jurisdiction to dispose of the visitation issue before it.

Grandparental Visitation Statute

112 Mother next contends the trial court misapplied 10 0.$.2001 and Supp.2008, § 5 (Grandparental Rights to Visitation with Unmarried Minor Act (Act)). At the time of filing, Grandmother sought rights pursuant to 10 0.S$.2001 and Supp.2008, § 5, (Now renumbered as 48 0.8. Supp.2009, § 109.4 by Laws 2009, HB 2028, c. 233, § 197, emerg. eff. May 21, 2009.) We will refer to the statute in effect (§ 5) at the time of the trial court's order, which provides the specific elements which must be proved in order to obtain visitation rights. Murrell v. Cox, 2009 OK 93, 226 P.3d 692.

13 In the case before us, the trial court made the following relevant findings of fact:

3. Daniel Marcus Hatton II, was the natural father of said minor child and the son of Petitioner and he passed away on September 30, 2001.
4. The Respondent and Daniel Marcus Hatton II were never married.
5. Prior to the death of Daniel Mareus Hatton II there was no relationship between Petitioner and the minor child.
6. Shortly after the death of Daniel Marcus Hatton II, Petitioner began visitations with the minor child with the approval and cooperation of the Respondent.
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The trial court's order reflects the following conclusions of law:

The Court has jurisdiction to hear the Petition and enter orders in this case.... The Oregon Court has deferred jurisdiction to this Court to complete this case. *955 The Petitioner's Petition "qualifies" for consideration by the Court pursuant to the provisions of 10 0.8. § 5 A.1.C.(7).
Reasonable visitation by Petitioner with the child is deemed to be in the best interest of the child pursuant to the Court's findings herein under 10 0.8. § 5 D. 1 , 2

14 As previously noted, Mother asserted the trial court erred because of lack of jurisdiction. As we pointed out the trial court had jurisdiction to conclude the pending action. Thus the trial court's first conclusion of law was correct.

T15 Mother's second proposition of error is that the trial court misapplied § 5, citing both defective factual and legal findings. In this connection, to obtain relief under § 5, Grandmother must prove the elements of that section, which state, in relevant part:

A. (1) Pursuant to the provisions of this section, any grandparent of an unmarried minor child may seek and be grant- ' ed reasonable visitation rights to the child which visitation rights may be independent of either parent of the child if:
a. the district court deems it to be in the best interest of the child ..., and
b. there is a showing of parental unfitness, or the grandparent has rebutted, by clear and convincing evidence, the presumption that the fit parent is acting in the best interests of the child by showing that the child would suffer harm or potential harm without the granting of visitation rights to the grandparent of the child, and
c. the intact nuclear family has been disrupted in that one or more of the following conditions has occurred:
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Related

Cave Springs Public School District I-30 v. Blair
1980 OK 103 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1980)
State Ex Rel. Rucker v. Tapp
1963 OK 37 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1963)
Benham v. Keller
673 P.2d 152 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1983)
Russell v. Flanagan
1975 OK 173 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1975)
McNeill v. City of Tulsa
1998 OK 2 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1998)
Abbott v. BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF OSCAR ROSE, ETC.
1978 OK 129 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1978)
Murrell v. Cox
2009 OK 93 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2009)
Stump v. Cheek
2007 OK 97 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2007)

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Bluebook (online)
2011 OK CIV APP 23, 249 P.3d 952, 2010 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 151, 2010 WL 5980200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hatton-v-lynch-oklacivapp-2010.