Hinton v. Byerly

483 S.W.2d 138, 1972 Ky. LEXIS 177
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 17, 1972
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 483 S.W.2d 138 (Hinton v. Byerly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hinton v. Byerly, 483 S.W.2d 138, 1972 Ky. LEXIS 177 (Ky. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinions

PALMORE, Judge.

This appeal presents a procedural jumble of unbelievable proportions involving the custody of Kaneta Ann Hinton, a small child who will be four years old on April 24, 1972. The appellants, Robert and Barbara Hinton, are her natural parents. The appellees, John W. and Barbara Byerly, who have physical custody of the child, are not related to her by blood or marriage. To avoid confusion, since they have the same first name, we shall refer to Barbara Hinton as Barbara and to Barbara Byerly as Mrs. Byerly.

[139]*139The tug-of-war began with a habeas corpus proceeding (#9807C) initiated in the Hardin Circuit Court by Barbara Hinton against the Byerlys. With respect to this appeal, it culminated in a judgment dismissing Mrs. Hinton’s habeas corpus action but retaining on the docket for future disposition an adoption proceeding (#9648A) filed by the Byerlys, which had been consolidated with #9807C and another habeas corpus proceeding (#9908C) brought by the Byerlys against Brooklawn Children’s Home and its director, Donald A. Buch-hold. The Hintons and Brooklawn Children’s Home appealed, but the Brooklawn appeal was not pursued and has not been perfected.

No one questions whether this judgment disposing of only one among several consolidated actions is final and appealable under CR 52.01, but in view of its habeas corpus nature we shall treat it as such despite the trial court’s omission to make it so in the manner provided by CR 54.02.

Except for two depositions the evidence considered by the trial court was not recorded and transcribed, and there is a dispute as to whether the two depositions were properly considered. The parties were unable to agree on a narrative statement as authorized by CR 75.13, so the trial judge prepared one from his own notes and recollections. This narrative obviously includes information which either was not supplied through testimony under oath or, if so, was incompetent, together with other observations and contributions of a nontestimonial character. As might be expected, a bystanders’ bill was filed (CR 75.14), and despite technical objections to it the trial court made various corrections. In considering the narrative statement we have disregarded those portions which apparently do not reflect competent evidence and proceedings in the presence of the trial court.

Barbara and,,Robert Hinton have five children, of whom the youngest, Kaneta Ann, was born in 1968. Another child died on December 3, 1969, at the age of about two months. Barbara, the mother, was then 24 or 25 years old. Her husband, Robert, was in the penitentiary serving a term for storehouse breaking. (He was released during the pendency of the instant welter of litigation.) Barbara was living in Louisville, and in the early part of 1970 she made a change in residence and farmed her children out as follows: two boys to Brooklawn Children’s Home in Louisville; another boy (Mark) to a family named Basham in Hardin County; a girl (Angela) to a family named Trumbo in Hardin County; and Kaneta Ann to Barbara’s sister Peggy Van Pelt, in Versailles. Mark had previously lived with the Trumbos as a foster child under the auspices of the Baptist Children’s Home at Glendale. During the course of the proceedings here in dispute the Bashams and Trumbos filed actions to adopt Mark and Angela, but without Barbara’s consent.

Whether Barbara ever actually intended for any of the children to be legally adopted by anyone else is doubtful. She vigorously says not. Nevertheless, in February of 1970, when Peggy Van Pelt took charge of Kaneta Ann, Barbara signed an entry of appearance and consent to adoption in anticipation of Peggy’s filing an adoption proceeding in the Woodford Circuit Court. At about the same time an order was entered by the Woodford County Court finding that Kaneta Ann was a dependent child and placing her in Peggy’s custody. Peggy and her husband later decided against adopting Kaneta Ann and the contemplated adoption suit was never filed.

When the Van Pelts decided not to adopt Kaneta Ann, Peggy discussed the matter with her aunt, who knew the Trum-bos. The aunt called Mrs. Trumbo to see if she could take Kaneta Ann in addition to Mark. Mrs. Trumbo was not able to do so, but through her and Mrs. Basham Peggy got in touch with the Byerlys. Mrs. Byerly had two children by a previous marriage, but she and Mr. Byerly had not been able to have a child together and [140]*140were interested in adopting one. Peggy made a trip or two to Hardin County to get acquainted with the Byerlys, following which, on April 6, 1970, she delivered Ka-neta Ann to them. The evidence indicates that Barbara accompanied Peggy and Ka-neta Ann to the Byerlys’ home, though she denies it. In any event, she was aware of and acquiesced in the transfer of custody to the Byerlys.

Mrs. Byerly had received the impression from Peggy that the child was available for adoption, and it is possible that in the beginning Barbara did not make any effort to disabuse her of that notion, but as far as Barbara was concerned the arrangement was not permanent, and according to the narrative statement of evidence Mrs. Byerly concedes that Barbara “never did consent to this adoption or tell her to proceed with it.”

Somewhere along the line after April 6, 1970, Barbara became apprehensive that if the Byerlys kept Kaneta Ann for more than 90 days they could adopt her, willy nilly, and these fears led her to seek counsel and fire the opening gun of the legal battle, which proceeded as follows:

(1) June 18, 1970 — Petition for habeas corpus (#9807C), Hardin Circuit Court, Barbara Hinton against John W. and Barbara Byerly, demanding production of Ka-neta Ann. (Meanwhile on June 16, 1970, the Department of Child Welfare had received from the Byerlys an application for permission to receive Kaneta Ann, per KRS 199.473.)

(2) June 19, 1970 — Writ issued, returnable June 22, 1970. (Not served.)

(3) June 23, 1970 — Second writ issued, returnable June 26, 1970. (Not served. The Byerlys were away on a vacation.)

(4) June 26, 1970 — Barbara Hinton applied to Brooklawn Children’s Home, in Louisville, for admission of Kaneta Ann.

(5) July 6, 1970 — Barbara Hinton went to the Byerly home with two brothers and an uncle and retook possession of Kaneta Ann following some sort of an altercation with the Byerlys.

(6) July 7, 1970 — Third writ issued, returnable July 16, 1970.

(7) July 7, 1970 — Complaint for adoption (#9846A), Hardin Circuit Court, John W. and Barbara Byerly v. Kaneta Ann Hinton et al.

(8) July 9, 1970 — Petition filed in Jefferson County Court, Juvenile Division, by Commonwealth ex rel. Barbara Hinton against Kaneta Ann Hinton to have her declared to be within the purview of KRS 208.020.

(9) July 16, 1970 — Response filed by Byerlys in #9807C alleging [incorrectly, as it develops] that Barbara Hinton’s parental rights had been judicially terminated and that Kaneta Ann’s “guardian” had given her custody to the Byerlys for the purpose of adoption.

(10) July 23, 1970

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Florence Baker v. Rachel Kuffner
Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 2022
Griffith v. Schultz
609 S.W.2d 125 (Kentucky Supreme Court, 1980)
Eviston v. Eviston
507 S.W.2d 153 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1974)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
483 S.W.2d 138, 1972 Ky. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hinton-v-byerly-kyctapp-1972.