In re Adoption of H.S.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedSeptember 30, 2022
Docket124583
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re Adoption of H.S. (In re Adoption of H.S.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Adoption of H.S., (kanctapp 2022).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 124,583

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

In the Matter of the Adoption of H.S., A Minor Child.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Sedgwick District Court; ROBB W. RUMSEY, judge. Opinion filed September 30, 2022. Affirmed.

Jordan E. Kieffer, of Jordan Kieffer, P.A., of Bel Aire, for appellant natural father.

Megan S. Monsour and Krystle M. S. Dalke, of Hinkle Law Firm LLC, of Wichita, for appellee adoptive stepfather.

Before WARNER, P.J., GREEN and HILL, JJ.

PER CURIAM: J.S. (Father) appeals the trial court's decision to terminate his parental rights and allow N.P. (Stepfather) to adopt H.S. (the child). Father argues that the trial court erred in concluding that he failed to assume the duties of a parent for two years immediately preceding the filing of the adoption petition. Also, Father contends that the trial court erred when it failed to address interference with visitation and contact by S.P. (Mother) and erred in its factual findings. Because clear and convincing evidence supports the trial court's findings, we affirm.

FACTS

The child was born in 2008. Mother and Father separated in 2008, when Mother was six months pregnant with the child, and divorced in 2011. In 2012, the parties lived

1 in California and a California court set child support at $591 per month. In 2014, Mother married Stepfather and moved to Kansas with the child.

Father opposed the move to Kansas in domestic court in California. The California court granted Mother's motion to relocate with the child in Kansas. The California court granted Father monthly parenting time, with Mother to pay Father's travel expenses. Mother generally did not follow the order to pay for Father's travel expenses. The one time that Mother did make arrangements, she chose a hotel that Father felt was unsafe for the child. Further, on several occasions, Mother told Father upon arrival that the child could not meet him because the child was sick.

Father proposed a change to child support. Father estimated travel expenses at $1,250 per visit. His proposal was that he would no longer pay $591 per month to Mother, and she would no longer have an obligation to spend $1,250 on his travel per month. According to Father, the parties' attorneys had a successful negotiation on this point, and he signed a stipulation. Father alleged that the California court modified his child support obligation so that he would pay his own travel rather than pay child support, but he provided no documents to support the claim. After being unable to produce such an order from California, Father requested the Kansas court to order that he pay his own travel expenses instead of child support. The Kansas trial court denied his request, stating: "'No basis for travel adjustments on child support because respondent has not traveled to see the child.'" Father has paid no child support since early 2015. As of July 2021, Father owed $68,716.03 in arrears in court-ordered child support.

Father claimed that he provided gifts directly to the child throughout this period, but no evidence supports this claim. The record corroborates only Father's claim of a one- time Christmas gift of roughly $600 in gift cards. Although the record is unclear whether there were any other gifts, no monies were paid as required by the child support orders and no in-kind help by way of food, clothing, medical payments, extracurricular

2 activities, or insurance occurred. Other than occasional small gifts given directly to the child, Father failed to pay anything toward the support of the child during the five years before Stepfather filed an action for adoption.

In 2016, the child started therapy to work through her parents' divorce and her anxiety. Disagreement between the parents continued regarding visitation, leading them to enter case management from 2017 to 2019. During case management, Father increasingly felt that Mother was conspiring to alienate the child from him, particularly by refusing visitation. Eventually, video calls over Skype, FaceTime, or Zoom dwindled to weekly audio calls, with Father receiving almost no updates regarding the child's well- being and daily activities, including medical appointments, school performance, and activities. When Father asked the child if she received gifts from him, she said that she was not getting them at all. Although Father asked Mother what he could provide for the child, Mother rarely responded.

Father has not had physical visitation with the child since June 2017. Father had the opportunity to speak to the child through scheduled phone calls but was often unavailable or only spoke with the child for two to three minutes. Sometimes Father's wife would answer the phone and the child would not get to speak with Father or only speak with him for two or three minutes. Father has not exercised his option for supervised visitation with the child since 2017.

Father's explanation for not attempting or arranging supervised visitation is Mother's alienation. His claim of alienation stemmed from Mother stopping the child from visiting Father in California around Thanksgiving of 2017. Mother canceled this Thanksgiving visit because she learned of pending criminal charges against Father, two felony counts of child abuse and one felony police evasion. Because of these charges, the case manager recommended supervised visitation only. The case manager also pushed Father to complete anger management therapy as contained in the court's order. Father

3 never completed the recommended therapy. The case manager testified at the hearing that it was "one hundred percent" Father's fault that he did not have visitation with the child and that he could have had visitation with the child in a "multitude of different ways."

In January 2020, Stepfather brought an action to terminate Father's parental rights and to adopt the child. Stepfather acknowledged that he had been married to Mother since June 2014. The suit asked the trial court to terminate Father's parental rights, alleging that Father abandoned or neglected the child; that Father was an unfit parent; that Father had not made reasonable efforts to financially support the child; and that Father had failed or refused to assume the duties of a parent for two consecutive years before the filing of the petition. Father objected pro se, arguing that Mother hindered his efforts to support, visit, and communicate with the child.

At the July 2021 evidentiary hearing on the adoption action, Stepfather testified first. He admitted that he did not notify Father when the child's residence changed. He claimed that he had concerns about safety but admitted that in the six years at the previous address there were no incidents.

Megan McKernan was the child's therapist from 2016 to 2017. McKernan testified that Father raised concerns that Mother was trying to alienate the child's behavior towards him. But McKernan never felt that Mother was alienating the child's feelings towards the Father.

Daniel Lampson was the appointed case manager from 2017 to 2019. He testified that Father had unsupervised visitation at first, but that changed when Mother discovered the pending criminal charges against Father. Lampson testified that Father participated in therapy and provided evidence of individual counseling, even though he did not do the anger management counseling that Lampson told him to do. Lampson also addressed Father's concerns that Mother was alienating the child, stating the following, "And the

4 fact was that he was being alienated, but I think that when [Mother] did what she did, she was justified in doing that.

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In Re Adoption of F.A.R.
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In Re the Adoption of G.L.V.
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In re Adoption of C.L.
427 P.3d 951 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2018)
In re Adoption of Baby Girl G.
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In re the Adoption of D.R.B.
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In re to Adopt J.M.D.
260 P.3d 1196 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2011)

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