Hepburn v. Brill

348 Conn. 827
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 16, 2024
DocketSC20832
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 348 Conn. 827 (Hepburn v. Brill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hepburn v. Brill, 348 Conn. 827 (Colo. 2024).

Opinion

LAURIE HEPBURN v. CHANDLER BRILL (SC 20832) Robinson, C. J., and McDonald, D’Auria, Mullins, Ecker, Alexander and Dannehy, Js.

Syllabus

The plaintiff sought visitation with L, the minor child of the defendant and the plaintiff’s deceased sister, pursuant to the third-party visitation statute (§ 46b-59). The plaintiff had lived with L and L’s mother since L was born in 2010, while the defendant lived elsewhere. After the death of L’s mother in 2021, L initially continued to live with the plaintiff, but the defendant eventually took L to live with him full-time. The defendant moved to dismiss the plaintiff’s visitation petition for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, claiming that the plaintiff lacked standing under § 46b-59 (b) because she failed to allege sufficient facts to establish that she had a parent-like relationship with L and that L would suffer real and significant harm if visitation were to be denied. The plaintiff then filed an amended petition for visitation with L, in which she alleged that, in a series of video calls that occurred while L was living with the defendant, L appeared very stressed, sad, and anxious. During those calls, L reported, inter alia, that she was miserable living with the defen- dant and devastated to be cut off from the plaintiff. L stated that she was crying herself to sleep and had lost weight. L also told the plaintiff that the defendant had mocked her for crying about the loss of her mother and had thrown her up against a car. The defendant objected to the amended petition, arguing that it would be improper for the court to consider the amended petition while the motion to dismiss the initial petition for lack of subject matter jurisdiction was pending. Following a hearing, the court granted the defendant’s motion to dismiss the initial petition, concluding, without elaboration, that it did not satisfy the requirements of § 46b-59. The court also dismissed, sua sponte, the amended petition, concluding that its allegations, if proven by clear Page 34 CONNECTICUT LAW JOURNAL April 16, 2024

828 APRIL, 2024 348 Conn. 827 Hepburn v. Brill and convincing evidence, would not establish the plaintiff’s parent-like relationship with L or establish that L would suffer real and significant harm if visitation were to be denied. Thereafter, the plaintiff appealed from the trial court’s judgment.

Held that the trial court improperly dismissed the plaintiff’s amended petition for visitation with L, the plaintiff having adequately alleged therein both the existence of a parent-like relationship and that the denial of visitation would cause L real and significant harm, and, accordingly, this court reversed the trial court’s judgment and remanded the case for further proceedings:

1. The trial court improperly treated the defendant’s motion to dismiss as implicating the court’s subject matter jurisdiction rather than its statu- tory authority to act pursuant to § 46b-59:

In Roth v. Weston (259 Conn. 202), this court applied a judicial gloss to a prior version of § 46b-59 to render the statute constitutional and, in doing so, concluded that the parent-like relationship and the real and significant harm requirements were matters of standing that implicated the court’s subject matter jurisdiction, but the legislature’s subsequent amendment (P.A. 12-137, § 1) to § 46b-59, in accordance with the gloss adopted in Roth, created a new statute that carried with it a strong presumption of constitutionality such that the statute no longer required a gloss to function within the bounds of the constitution.

The trial court has plenary and general subject matter jurisdiction over legal disputes in family relations matters pursuant to statute (§ 46b- 1), § 46b-1 (a) (12) defines family relations matters to include matters affecting or involving rights and remedies provided for in chapter 815j of the General Statutes, § 46b-59 falls within chapter 815j and expressly provides the court with the power to order visitation to any person who meets the statutory standard, and, accordingly, §§ 46b-1 and 46b- 59 together provided the trial court in the present case with subject matter jurisdiction over the plaintiff’s third-party visitation petitions.

Because the motion to dismiss implicated the trial court’s statutory authority to act pursuant to § 46b-59 rather than its subject matter juris- diction, this court treated that motion as raising the question of whether the plaintiff had sufficiently proffered specific and good faith allegations that both a parent-like relationship existed between her and L and that the denial of visitation would cause real and significant harm to L.

2. Because the trial court should have allowed the plaintiff to amend her initial petition for visitation, and because the trial court considered the plaintiff’s amended petition, it was permissible for this court to consider the allegations therein to determine whether the trial court properly had declined to exercise its statutory authority under § 46b-59: April 16, 2024 CONNECTICUT LAW JOURNAL Page 35

348 Conn. 827 APRIL, 2024 829 Hepburn v. Brill The defendant’s objection to the plaintiff’s amended petition was prem- ised on his claim that the plaintiff had failed to comply with the rule of practice (§ 10-60) governing amendments to pleadings in civil matters, but visitation is governed by the less restrictive rule of practice (§ 25- 7) pertaining to amendments to pleadings in family matters, and, because the trial court should have allowed the plaintiff to amend her initial petition under the more liberal provision of Practice Book § 25-7, and the trial court actually considered the amended petition, this court also considered the amended petition to determine whether the plaintiff pleaded sufficient facts to demonstrate that she had a parent-like relation- ship with L and that L would suffer real and significant harm if visitation were to be denied.

3. The trial court incorrectly concluded that the amended petition did not include the specific and good faith allegations necessary to demonstrate the existence of the plaintiff’s parent-like relationship with L and that L would suffer real and significant harm if visitation were to be denied:

With respect to the parent-like relationship requirement, the plaintiff alleged, inter alia, that she lived with L for more than ten years, was L’s primary caretaker, and was involved in every aspect of L’s day, including transporting L to school, assisting L with homework, enrolling L in extracurricular activities, and taking L to medical appointments, and that, after the death of L’s mother, she served as L’s primary provider of emotional support, comfort, and care, and those allegations establish- ing the duration, regularity, and magnitude of the care that the plaintiff provided to L were sufficient to plead a parent-like relationship pursuant to § 46b-59 (b) and (c).

This court emphasized that the parent-like relationship and real and significant harm requirements should be analyzed separately and that the severance of emotional ties between a nonparent who has developed a parent-like relationship and a child, without more, should not be the end of the analysis with respect to the harm requirement, but it also recognized that there may be circumstances, such as when a child is coping with the death of a parent in addition to the severance of substan- tial emotional ties with a nonparent, that the denial of visitation with the nonparent itself could cause serious and immediate harm to that child.

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348 Conn. 827, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hepburn-v-brill-conn-2024.