In Re Clausen

502 N.W.2d 649, 442 Mich. 648
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 8, 1993
DocketDocket Nos. 96366, 96441, 96531, 96532, (Calendar Nos. 1-2)
StatusPublished
Cited by79 cases

This text of 502 N.W.2d 649 (In Re Clausen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Clausen, 502 N.W.2d 649, 442 Mich. 648 (Mich. 1993).

Opinion

442 Mich. 648 (1993)
502 N.W.2d 649

In re CLAUSEN
(DeBOER
v.
SCHMIDT)
DeBOER
v.
DeBOER

Docket Nos. 96366, 96441, 96531, 96532, (Calendar Nos. 1-2).

Supreme Court of Michigan.

Argued June 3, 1993.
Decided July 2, 1993.
Dissenting opinion filed July 8, 1993.

Child Advocacy Law Clinic (by Suellyn Scarnecchia) for the petitioners-appellants Roberta and Jan DeBoer.

Victor, Robbins & Bassett (by Richard S. Victor and Scott Bassett) for Peter Darrow, next friend of plaintiff-appellee.

*653 Faupel & Associates (by Marian L. Faupel) for the respondent-appellee Daniel Schmidt.

Child Advocacy Law Clinic (by Suellyn Scarnecchia) for defendants-appellees Roberta and Jan DeBoer.

Faupel & Associates (by Marian L. Faupel) for defendants-appellants Cara and Daniel Schmidt.

Amici Curiae:

McGurn & Associates, Ltd. (by Michael McGurn), and Margaret M.S. Noe for Catholic Social Services of Lenawee County.

Tann H. Hunt and Todd W. Grant for appellants Roberta and Jan DeBoer.

Victor, Robbins & Bassett (by Richard S. Victor and Scott Bassett) for Grandparents Rights Organization.

Teressa L. Streng, Kenton W. Hambrick, and William B. Newman, Jr., for Catholic Charities of Southwestern Virginia, Inc.

Darnton, Rutzky & Dodge (by Thomas B. Darnton) for Yale University Child Study Center.

Schweitzer, Bentzen & Scherr (by Michael P. Bentzen, Robert N. Levin, Leslie Scherr, and Susan L. Biro), and Nancy Poster and Dale S. Adams for The National Council for Adoption.

Meyer, Capel, Hirschfeld, Muncy, Jahn & Aldeen, P.C. (by Glenna J. Weith), and Kessler & Geer (by Barbara L. Kessler), for American Academy of Adoption Attorneys.

*654 Nannette M. Bowler and Lewis Pitts and Gayle Korotkin, for Legal Action Project of the National Committee for the Rights of the Child, et al.

Anne L. Argiroff, Ann L. Routt and Michael R. Yales, Legal Services of Southeastern Michigan, Kenneth C. Penokie, Legal Services of Northern Michigan, John Forczak, Michigan Legal Services, and Karen Gullberg Cook for Daniel and Cara Schmidt.

Peter P. Darrow, Sally Rutzky, Veronique Lerner, and Joan Lowenstein, for guardians ad litem.

Dissenting opinion by LEVIN, J., filed July 8, 1993.

PER CURIAM:

These two related cases arise out of a child custody dispute involving the competing claims of the child's natural parents (Cara and Daniel Schmidt) and the third-party custodians with whom the child now lives (Roberta and Jan DeBoer).

While we will deal at length with the various arguments marshaled in support of their claims, we sum up our analysis of the competing arguments by reference to the words of the United States Supreme Court: "No one would seriously dispute that a deeply loving and interdependent relationship with an adult and a child in his or her care may exist even in the absence of blood relationship." Smith v Organization of Foster Families, 431 US 816, 843-844; 97 S Ct 2094; 53 L Ed 2d 14 (1977). But there are limits to such claims. In the context of foster care, the Court has said:

[T]here are also important distinctions between the foster family and the natural family. First, unlike the earlier cases recognizing a right to family privacy, the State here seeks to interfere, not with a relationship having its origins entirely apart from the power of the State, but rather with *655 a foster family which has its source in state law and contractual arrangements.... [T]he liberty interest in family privacy has its source, and its contours are ordinarily to be sought, not in state law, but in intrinsic human rights, as they have been understood in "this Nation's history and tradition." Here, however, whatever emotional ties may develop between foster parent and foster child have their origins in an arrangement in which the State has been a partner from the outset.

* * *

A second consideration related to this is that ordinarily procedural protection may be afforded to a liberty interest of one person without derogating from the substantive liberty of another.... It is one thing to say that individuals may acquire a liberty interest against arbitrary governmental interference in the family-like associations into which they have freely entered, even in the absence of biological connection or state-law recognition of the relationship. It is quite another to say that one may acquire such an interest in the face of another's constitutionally recognized liberty interest that derives from blood relationship, state-law sanction, and basic human right — an interest the foster parent has recognized by contract from the outset. [431 US 845-846.]

Likewise, the DeBoers acquired temporary custody of this child, with whom they had no prior relationship, through the power of the state and must be taken to have known that their right to continue custody was contingent on the completion of the Iowa adoption. Within nine days of assuming physical custody and less than one month after the child's birth, the DeBoers learned of Cara Schmidt's claim that the waiver of rights procured by the attorney acting on behalf of the DeBoers was unlawful because she had not been afforded the seventy-two hour waiting period required by *656 Iowa law.[1] Within two months of the child's birth, the DeBoers learned of Daniel Schmidt's claim of paternity when on March 27, 1991, he filed a petition to intervene in the DeBoers' adoption proceeding.

The State of Iowa has not arbitrarily interfered "in a family-like association freely entered." Rather, the Iowa courts have proceeded with the adoption action initiated by the DeBoers, and at the conclusion of that litigation ruled that there would be no adoption, preventing the creation of the family unit that was the objective of the adoption petition.

In Docket No. 96366,[2] we affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals for two independent reasons. First, the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Act[3] (UCCJA) and the federal Parental Kidnapping Prevention Act[4] (PKPA) deprive the Michigan courts of jurisdiction over this custody dispute and require the enforcement of the orders of the Iowa courts directing that the Schmidts have custody of the child. Second, the DeBoers lack standing to bring this custody action under our decision in Bowie v Arder, 441 Mich 23; 490 NW2d 568 (1992).

*657 In Docket Nos. 96441, 96531, and 96532[5] we vacate the orders of the Washtenaw Circuit Court and direct that the action be dismissed for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted. While a child has a constitutionally protected interest in family life, that interest is not independent of its parents' in the absence of a showing that the parents are unfit. In this case, in the Iowa litigation the DeBoers were unable to prove that the child's father would not be a fit parent, and no claim has been made that her mother is unfit.

I

The facts are set out at length in the opinion of the Court of Appeals. Briefly, on February 8, 1991, Cara Clausen gave birth to a baby girl in Iowa.

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Bluebook (online)
502 N.W.2d 649, 442 Mich. 648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-clausen-mich-1993.