In Re adoption/guardianship No. 10935, Circuit Court for Montgomery County

679 A.2d 530, 342 Md. 615, 1996 Md. LEXIS 67, 1996 WL 414169
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 25, 1996
Docket48, Sept. Term, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 679 A.2d 530 (In Re adoption/guardianship No. 10935, Circuit Court for Montgomery County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re adoption/guardianship No. 10935, Circuit Court for Montgomery County, 679 A.2d 530, 342 Md. 615, 1996 Md. LEXIS 67, 1996 WL 414169 (Md. 1996).

Opinion

ELDRIDGE, Judge.

This case involves a petition to resign as co-guardian of the persons of three minors. The issue before us concerns the standard which a court should apply in considering a petition to resign as guardian of the person of a minor.

*618 I.

Carl and Mavis Bauer were married on August 21,1979. At the time, Mavis had three children from a previous marriage, and Carl had one. Steven Fountain is Mavis’s son from her prior marriage. Steven married Annie Marie in 1979 in North Carolina, and their first child, James Ellis Fountain, was born in December 1979.

In 1981, Steven, Annie Marie, and James Ellis Fountain moved to Maryland. Steven and Annie Marie divorced in early 1982, and Annie Marie married John Keith Geiger. Later in 1982, Annie Marie and John Keith Geiger had a son who was initially named Charles Keith Geiger and subsequently named Charles Keith Fountain. 1 Sometime later, Annie Marie and John Keith Geiger apparently separated, and Annie Marie and Steven apparently resumed co-habitation. On March 12, 1984, Annie Marie and Steven had their second child together, Daniel Carl Fountain. Shortly thereafter, Annie Marie moved back to North Carolina, leaving all three boys in Steven’s custody.

On November 19, 1985, Steven filed in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County a complaint for custody of his two sons, James and Daniel, as well as for custody of Charles Keith Geiger. Both Annie Marie, who lived in North Carolina, and Charles’s natural father, John Keith Geiger, who still resided in Maryland, signed documents consenting to the appointment of Steven “as guardian and legal custodian” of the boys. The circuit court ordered that Steven be granted custody of all three boys.

About three years later, in early 1989, Carl and Mavis filed three virtually identical petitions in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County requesting that the circuit court name them guardians of the persons of the three children, James, Charles and Daniel. Each of the petitions stated that Carl and Mavis sought “the appointment of a guardian of the *619 person of the minor so that the minor can be covered under Petitioners’ health insurance policy, provide schooling for the child and perform all other acts necessary to the raising of the child.” The petitions indicated that the three boys had resided with Mavis and Carl for most of the time since 1984. Each petition also stated that Carl and Mavis “are fully able to support the minor child. In addition, Steven Anthony Fountain has agreed to pay the Petitioners the sum of One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) per month as child support.” Steven, John Keith Geiger who had moved to Pennsylvania, and Annie Marie who continued to reside in North Carolina and had apparently remarried, all signed documents consenting to the appointment of Carl and Mavis as guardians for the boys. On June 16, 1989, the Circuit Court for Montgomery County appointed Carl Bauer and Mavis Bauer as guardians of the person for all three boys.

According to Mavis, Carl moved out of the family home on May 9,1994. Mavis filed in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, on July 19, 1994, a complaint which, as amended, sought a limited divorce from Carl on the ground of abandonment, alimony, and child support. That action is presently pending in the circuit court.

On October 5, 1994, Carl instituted the present action by filing in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County a petition to resign as co-guardian of James, Charles and Daniel. Carl submitted his petition to resign pursuant to Maryland Code (1974, 1991 Repl.Vol.), §§ 13-220 and 221 of the Estates and Trusts Article and Maryland Rule V81. In his petition, Carl advised the circuit court that his resignation as co-guardian would not terminate the guardianship; instead, it would leave Mavis as the sole guardian. Mavis filed an opposition to Carl’s petition to resign, and thereafter both sides filed memoranda, affidavits, and answers to interrogatories.

In opposing Carl’s petition, Mavis pointed out that the statutes invoked by Carl, §§ 13-220 and 221 of the Estates and Trusts Article, related to guardians of property, and that *620 § 13-702 of the Estates and Trust Article was the statute relating to guardians of the person of minors. Mavis further asserted that it was not in the best interests of the minor children to allow Carl Bauer to resign as co-guardian. She specifically contended that “Carl asked for, and was granted, full parental authority and responsibility for all three children [and the] Court cannot allow him to simply walk away from his responsibilities and obligations,” that “by agreement of the natural parents, all three children have spent the majority of their lives with, and have been raised and supported by, Mavis and Carl,” that Carl “desired that he and Mavis become guardians of the children in order to provide them with the support, stability and security they needed,” that Carl had agreed in the guardianship petition “to provide schooling for the children and perform all other acts necessary to the raising of the children,” that Carl “promised” that he and Mavis were “fully able to support” the children, that the children considered Carl as their father, that Carl had been acting as their father, taking them to “father-son prayer breakfasts,” attending parent-teacher conferences, etc., and that Carl “often reassured [the children] that he would always ‘be there’ for them.”

Mavis argued that, in light of all of the circumstances, Carl had a duty to support the three boys based on “equitable estoppel and contract.” Mavis stated that Carl had induced the children, their natural parents, and Mavis to rely upon his “representations that he would provide for their support and would ‘always be there for the children.’ ” Mavis’s position was that “Carl Bauer must not be allowed to breach his agreement to support the children” by being permitted to resign as co-guardian.

In reply, Carl disputed several of Mavis’s factual assertions, and denied that he had agreed to or assumed the role of father to the three boys. Carl asserted that Steven had lived with Carl, Mavis and the children during a majority of the time, and that Steven had performed the role of parent to the *621 children until he became incarcerated in 1993. 2 Carl claimed that the “cumulative stress of Mavis’s persistent pressure and efforts to support her adult children and grandchildren,” and the “stress” brought on by “Steven’s murder of his girlfriend of five years,” have left Carl with “severe depression” for which he was receiving psychiatric treatment and which “has resulted in [Carl’s] inability to function as a guardian.” Carl also pointed out that he no longer resided in the family home with the children, that he has “been forced to avoid the ... house because of Mavis’s aggressive behavior and emotional abuse,” and that he lived alone in an apartment. Finally, Carl denied that he had contractually undertaken to support the children or that he had a duty to support them under principles of equitable estoppel.

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Bluebook (online)
679 A.2d 530, 342 Md. 615, 1996 Md. LEXIS 67, 1996 WL 414169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-adoptionguardianship-no-10935-circuit-court-for-montgomery-county-md-1996.