In Re Arkl
This text of 726 S.E.2d 77 (In Re Arkl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In the Interest of A.R.K.L., a child.
Court of Appeals of Georgia.
*78 James R. Newton, for appellant.
Clark & Williams, Jason R. Clark, Frances W. Dyal, Brunswick, for appellee.
PHIPPS, Presiding Judge.
The mother of A.R.K.L. filed a petition in juvenile court to terminate the parental rights of the child's father. The juvenile court granted the petition, and the father appeals. He contends that (1) the juvenile court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to rule on the petition because the petition was actually a disguised custody matter; (2) the juvenile court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to rule on the petition because the petition was actually a disguised adoption matter; and (3) the juvenile court erred in denying his motion for a continuance. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
The record reveals that the parents married in September 2002. A.R.K.L. was born on March 28, 2004. And in April 2007, the parents divorced. Pursuant to the divorce decree, the mother was granted sole physical custody of A.R.K.L. and the parents were granted joint legal custody. The father was ordered to pay child support in the amount of $650 per month. The divorce decree gave the father visitation rights. But on January 18, 2011, the mother filed a petition to terminate the father's parental rights, citing the father's inability to provide support for A.R.K.L. and his failure to have any contact with the child.
The father had failed to visit A.R.K.L. for nearly two years before the filing of the termination petition and had also failed to pay child support for nearly a year and a half. The father asserted in his appellate brief that he had not visited the child because he agreed to have no contact with the child, the mother, and the stepfather in exchange for the dismissal of criminal charges. At the termination hearing, however, the father testified that he had not sought visitation with the child for fear of violating the conditions of his probation on account of false accusations.
In the termination petition, the mother alleged that the father's actions indicated that he had abandoned the child and was an unfit parent. The mother's petition to terminate the father's parental rights was filed pursuant to OCGA § 15-11-94.[1] Following a *79 hearing on March 24, 2011, the juvenile court granted the mother's petition to terminate the father's parental rights.
1. The father contends that the juvenile court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to rule on the termination petition filed by the mother because the petition was actually a disguised custody matter that could only be properly heard in superior court. We disagree.
"Jurisdiction is a question of law to which we apply a de novo standard of review."[2] Except where a termination petition is filed in connection with adoption proceedings, the juvenile court has exclusive original jurisdiction over actions involving termination of parental rights.[3] It is true that not every deprivation petition or petition for the termination of parental rights brought by one parent against another can be heard in a juvenile court.[4]
Under the long-established rule that pleadings are to be construed according to their substance and function and not merely as to their nomenclature, being always mindful to construe such documents in a manner compatible with the best interest of justice, each deprivation petition must be judged on its own merits. If it appears from an analysis of the pleading that it is actually a disguised custody matter, then it is outside the subject matter jurisdiction of the juvenile courts.[5]
The Supreme Court of Georgia has held that "juvenile courts should not entertain deprivation proceedings brought by a non-custodial parent to obtain custody from a custodial parent."[6]
The father argues that the superior court had jurisdiction over the issue of terminating his parental rights because the superior court presided over his divorce from the child's mother and over a later modification matter in which the court issued a temporary order suspending his rights to visitation and custody because he was incarcerated. The temporary order provided that should the father resolve his incarceration, he may petition the court to address visitation in an accelerated manner. But the father never petitioned the superior court to address visitation in that case, which he filed. And he has failed to show how permission granted to him by the superior court to petition for visitation in a superior court case could override the express statutory provision which gives the juvenile court exclusive jurisdiction *80 over termination of parental rights actions that are not in connection with adoption proceedings.[7]
Here the petition was filed, not by the noncustodial parent, but by the parent who already had been awarded sole physical custody of the child. Moreover, the termination petition dealt specifically with factors relating to the father's inability to provide proper care and support for A.R.K.L. such that his parental rights should be terminated, and the juvenile court considered as much.[8] The juvenile court properly exercised jurisdiction over the termination proceedings.[9]
2. The father contends that the juvenile court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to rule on the termination petition because the petition was actually a disguised adoption matter that could be properly heard only in superior court. We disagree.
As previously stated, except where a termination petition is filed in connection with adoption proceedings, the juvenile court has exclusive original jurisdiction over actions involving termination of parental rights. In H.C.S. v. Grebel,[10] the Supreme Court of Georgia held that we erred in holding that where a petition for termination of the rights of a putative father of an illegitimate child specifically stated that it was in pursuance of the petitioners' prospective adoption of the child, the petition was not "in connection with adoption proceedings" within the meaning of OCGA § 15-11-5(a)(2)(C).[11] In In the Interest of B.G.D.,[12] we found that the juvenile court lacked jurisdiction to consider a petition for termination of a putative father's parental rights because the termination was sought "in connection with" an adoption proceeding.[13] There, the evidence showed that a mother gave up her newborn daughter for adoption to a couple who attended the child's birth, and a termination petition was filed in juvenile court by a child placement agency.[14]
In his brief, the father states that he "believes the real reason the Petition was filed in juvenile court is because [the mother] wants her new husband to adopt [the] child." He argues that because the evidence showed that the stepfather desires to adopt A.R.K.L., the petition was filed in pursuance of an adoption. However, the stepfather's mere expressed desire to adopt A.R.K.L.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
726 S.E.2d 77, 314 Ga. App. 847, 2012 Fulton County D. Rep. 867, 2012 Ga. App. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-arkl-gactapp-2012.