In Re CRC

148 P.3d 458, 2006 WL 2975472
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 19, 2006
Docket05CA2468
StatusPublished

This text of 148 P.3d 458 (In Re CRC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re CRC, 148 P.3d 458, 2006 WL 2975472 (Colo. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

148 P.3d 458 (2006)

In the Interest of C.R.C., a Child,
Upon the Petition of Yardeshia Wilford, Petitioner-Appellant, and
Concerning Sydney Coleman, Respondent, and
Michael Coleman, Appellee.

No. 05CA2468.

Colorado Court of Appeals, Div. III.

October 19, 2006.

*459 Jana Purdy, Lakewood, Colorado, for Petitioner-Appellant.

Holden Law Office, PLLC, Leta R. Holden, Denver, Colorado, for Appellee.

Opinion by Judge GRAHAM.

In this allocation of parental responsibilities proceeding, Yardeshia Wilford (mother) appeals from the permanent orders allocating parental responsibilities between her and Michael Coleman (great-uncle). We reverse and remand with directions to enter a new order allocating parental responsibilities entirely to mother.

Mother and Sydney Coleman, also known as Devarow Drake or Sydney Drake (father), are the parents of one child, born in April 2000. Until July 2002, mother and the child lived "off and on" with father. When they were not living with him, they lived with mother's mother (grandmother) in Houston, Texas.

When the child was approximately one year old, father was incarcerated. When he went to jail, his uncle (the child's great-uncle) and a female companion came to Texas at father's request and returned to Denver with mother and the child. Mother remained with them for a month or two. When father was released, she and the child returned to Texas with him.

In July 2002, mother entered the Job Corps program to obtain her G.E.D. and acquire job skills. She was stationed in a location which is four or five hours from Houston. Because she could not afford to travel to Houston for vacation or holiday leave, she was able to remain in contact with her family only by telephone. During her absence, the child was left in the care of father and grandmother. When father stopped taking the child to grandmother's home for care, mother believed that father had taken the child to Minneapolis to visit a daughter who lived there.

However, father had been given a twenty-year prison sentence for a drug offense, and in December 2002 he was taken into custody and advised to call someone to care for the child to avoid involving Child Protective Services. Father called a girlfriend to take the child, and then called great-uncle to ask him to come to Texas to get the child from the girlfriend. Great-uncle did not notify either mother or grandmother that he was taking the child to Denver. He testified that he did not know where to find either of them.

Great-uncle also testified that he and the child's parents had agreed before mother entered the Job Corps program that he *460 would care for the child while mother completed the program. Mother denied this. She testified that any such agreement had been an agreement between father and great-uncle alone, and that they had entered into it without her consent.

In January 2003, mother learned that the child had been taken by father's girlfriend. She left the Job Corps, called the police, and went to the girlfriend's home to retrieve him. However, the child had already been removed by great-uncle.

After removing the child to Colorado, father and great-uncle took steps to legitimize great-uncle's possession of him. In January 2003, father signed a power of attorney naming great-uncle and another relative as his representatives with respect to the child. In February 2003, great-uncle filed a petition in Denver District Court requesting appointment as the child's guardian. In the petition, he stated that both of the child's parents were unwilling or unable to exercise their parental rights.

Mother testified that she did not discover where the child was until March 2003, when great-uncle left a telephone message telling her to come to Denver to get her son. She stated that when she came to Denver, she was allowed to see the child for thirty minutes, but great-uncle then "ran off" with him so that she could not take him back to Texas. Great-uncle denied that he had told mother to come and get the child. He admitted removing the child from the home during mother's visit, but denied any intent to keep the child from mother. He testified that mother did not have the means to take the child back to Texas with her, having come to Denver with only $30.

On March 18, a hearing was held on great-uncle's petition for guardianship. Mother returned to Denver for the hearing and submitted a letter to the court, asking that the guardianship be denied and stating that she was willing to care for the child and wanted to return with him to Texas. The petition for guardianship was denied because of mother's refusal to consent to it.

Mother then called the police and went to great-uncle's home to retrieve the child. However, great-uncle showed the police "some paper," and mother was told that great-uncle could not be compelled to turn the child over to her. Great-uncle testified that he had shown the police a copy of the petition for guardianship. He stated that he refused to turn the child over to mother because he believed that he had been granted legal guardianship of the child and he believed that he had the right to keep him.

Mother returned to Texas and continued her efforts to retrieve the child. She contacted Texas police, and they in turn contacted Denver police, who made a second visit to great-uncle's home and again were persuaded that great-uncle had a right to keep the child.

Mother was told that she should find a Colorado attorney to help her. She attempted to obtain legal help both in Texas and in Colorado, but for nearly two years, she was unsuccessful because she had no money to pay an attorney. Finally, in late 2004 or early 2005, grandmother located a Denver attorney who was willing to represent mother on a pro bono basis.

In April 2005, great-uncle filed a petition requesting that mother's parental rights be terminated. He testified that this was done because he wanted to do the right thing, that his purpose was not to keep the child away from mother, and that he did not know that it would mean that she would not be the child's mother anymore. However, he also stated that he had filed a petition for adoption of the child.

Mother, now represented by an attorney, moved to strike the petition to terminate her parental rights. The Denver Juvenile Court found that the adoption was contested and ordered the parties to set the matter for a hearing. Mother then petitioned the Denver District Court for an order granting her sole decision-making responsibility for the child and designating her as the child's primary residential parent. Neither father nor great-uncle filed a response to mother's petition.

In July 2005, a special advocate was appointed for the child. In his initial report, filed in September, the special advocate reported that, based upon correspondence that *461 he had reviewed, it was apparent that father and great-uncle had "conspired together in 2002 to remove the minor child and alienate him from his mother." He noted that in one letter, father offered great-uncle $6100 to pick up the child in Texas and keep him from mother. The special advocate also noted that although no formal charges of child abuse had been filed against great-uncle, some of his relatives did not believe that the child was safe with him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 P.3d 458, 2006 WL 2975472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-crc-coloctapp-2006.