In re Adoption of K.R.D.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedFebruary 26, 2016
Docket114251
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re Adoption of K.R.D. (In re Adoption of K.R.D.) 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 K.R.D., (kanctapp 2016).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 114,251

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

In the Matter of the Adoption of K.R.D.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Labette District Court; JEFFRY L. JACK, judge. Opinion filed February 26, 2016. Reversed.

Cole A. Hoffmeister, of Emert, Chubb & Gettler, LLC, of Independence, for appellant.

Richard G. Tucker, of Tucker and Markham Attorneys at Law, LLC, of Parsons, for appellee.

Before STANDRIDGE, P.J., LEBEN and POWELL, JJ.

LEBEN, J.: The case before us involves a 5-year-old girl, K.R.D., the parental rights of her natural father, who is in prison, and the desire of K.R.D.'s stepfather to adopt her. The stepfather can't adopt K.R.D. without either the father's consent (which has been denied) or a court order that the father failed to fulfil his duties as a parent for the 2-year period before the stepfather filed his adoption petition.

After an evidentiary hearing, the district court granted the stepfather's petition, concluding that the father's consent wasn't required because he hadn't fulfilled his parental duties for the 2-year period. Granting the stepfather's adoption petition also serves to terminate the father's parental rights. The father has appealed, and we must now determine whether the district court's ruling was properly supported by the evidence. Let's start by reviewing the factual background, as it was presented in evidence to the district court. The key players are K.R.D.'s father ("Father"), K.R.D.'s mother ("Mother"), and K.R.D.'s stepfather ("Stepfather"). Father's parents ("Grandfather" and "Grandmother") also play important roles.

Mother and Father married in Texas in 2007. At the time, Father was on probation for possession of child pornography; Mother testified that she had been aware of the conviction but that Father had told her it involved video of him as a high school senior having sex with his girlfriend.

K.R.D. was born in October 2009. Mother and Father had been living with Grandfather and Grandmother, but Father moved out (to a nearby residence) shortly before K.R.D.'s birth because his probation restrictions prevented him from living with anyone under the age of 18. Things apparently proceeded in a normal fashion—or as normal as they could with Father living separately—until January 2010. That's when Father was arrested on federal charges for attempted possession of child pornography. Father has been incarcerated since then—both for violation of his Texas probation and ultimately for the federal conviction. Father is set to be released in June 2023; K.R.D. will then be 13. We should note that Father's federal conviction is based on his actions from 2008, well before K.R.D.'s birth.

When Father was initially arrested, he was held in a county jail; Mother regularly brought K.R.D. to visit him. In 2011, Mother lost her teaching job and moved with K.R.D. to Joplin, Missouri, to be closer to her family. The next year, in 2012, Father was transferred to a federal prison in Petersburg, Virginia.

These moves further impacted Father's contact with K.R.D. Until March or April 2013, however, Mother let K.R.D. have monthly extended visits with Grandmother and Grandfather. During those visits, his parents would arrange for Father to call K.R.D., and

2 they would talk for up to 15 minutes. In addition, Mother let the grandparents take K.R.D. to visit Father in prison in July 2012, August 2012, and March 2013. (Mother accompanied K.R.D. on the August 2012 visit.) Each visit covered a 2-day period, with contact from about 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. each day.

Mother had divorce papers served on Father in January 2012, and the trial court in Jasper County, Missouri, granted the divorce that June. The divorce decree gave Mother sole legal and physical custody of K.R.D.; Father received supervised visitation rights. Given his incarceration, the court didn't order that he pay any child support until he was released from prison; at that time, Father is to pay $252 a month.

While in prison, the parties agree that Father earns $25 to $27 a month for prison work; he spends $20 of that to have telephone and email privileges. Father did not provide any financial support to Mother in the 2-year period before April 24, 2014, when Stepfather filed the adoption petition.

Mother began dating Stepfather about 1 year before that, in March 2013. They moved to Altamont, Kansas, in July 2013 and married in October 2013. In August 2014, they moved to Cherryvale, Kansas.

At some point, Father was transferred to a low-security federal prison in Beaumont, Texas. Mother has not allowed K.R.D. to visit him there, although Father and his parents have asked her to do so. The grandparents testified that whenever they tried to arrange visits for K.R.D., Mother would say she had plans and that K.R.D. couldn't go. In December 2013, she told the grandparents that she wasn't comfortable with K.R.D. being around other sexual offenders at the prison.

Mother eventually changed her phone number and blocked calls from Father. She said she had cut off communication with him because he had focused on her personal life

3 and hadn't inquired about K.R.D. She said she would have let him continue to call had he stuck to talking only about K.R.D.

Father testified that he had called to speak with K.R.D. two to four times a week until Mother changed her telephone number, which happened in March 2013. After that, Father often asked his parents to relay messages to Mother, asking that she allow K.R.D. to speak with or visit him.

After Mother's move to Kansas, Mother provided her address to Grandmother and Grandfather. She testified that she had also sent a letter to Father notifying him of the move but then told the court that she had had an agreement with the grandparents not to share her address with Father without her permission:

"Q: . . . . So unless he had your permission, [Grandfather] or [Grandmother] could not provide your contact information with [Father], correct? "A: Right."

Father testified that he hadn't received a letter from Mother and that his parents had never given him her address: "The only thing that they would tell me was that she had moved to Kansas," he said. The grandparents testified that they hadn't given that information to Father because Mother hadn't given them permission to and because they hadn't wanted Mother to be angry with them. But the district court concluded that Mother "never withheld permission . . . to share her address or phone number" with Father.

Father sent email requests to Mother to allow contact from him through a prison email system. (In most prison email systems, messages may be sent only to people who have agreed to receive them.) According to Father, a month or two before Stepfather filed his adoption petition, Mother agreed to accept email from him through the prison system, and he sent her two email messages but got no reply.

4 The parties agree that K.R.D. knows Father as her "daddy." They also agree that Father hasn't sent any cards, letters, or gifts to K.R.D. while he has been incarcerated.

With this background, let's move on to the legal issues that we must address. Our starting point is the special statute addressing stepparent adoptions, K.S.A. 2015 Supp. 59-2136(d).

Under that statute, a stepparent adoption may proceed in two situations: (1) if both of the child's natural parents consent to the stepparent adoption or (2) if a court determines that consent is not required from any nonconsenting parent.

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In re Adoption of K.R.D., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-adoption-of-krd-kanctapp-2016.