In re Custody of B.M.H.

CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 2013
Docket86895-6
StatusPublished

This text of In re Custody of B.M.H. (In re Custody of B.M.H.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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 Custody of B.M.H., (Wash. 2013).

Opinion

FILE IN CLE:FlKS OFFICE SUPREME COURT, STATE OF WASHINGTON DATE !~OV 2 'l 2013

?Xackn. c CHIEF JUSTICE f IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

) In the Matter of the Custody of B .M.H. ) No. 86895-6-' ) MICHAELHOLT, ) ) Respondent, ) ) EnBanc v. ) ) LAURIE HOLT, ) ) Filed Nil\/ 2 7 1'0!:-i Petitioner. )

GONZALEZ, J.-B.M.H.'s natural father died six months before he was born.

His mother's former boyfriend, Michael Holt, was present at B.M.H.'s birth and,

shortly afterward, married his mother, Laurie Holt. Mr. Holt has petitioned for third

party custody under chapter 26.10 RCW or, alternatively, an adjudication of de facto

parentage. The primary question for review is whether, under In re Parentage of MF.,

168 Wn.2d 528, 228 P.3d 1270 (2010), no former stepparent may bring a de facto

parentage petition. We are also asked to decide whether there was adequate cause to

support Mr. Holt's nonparental custody petition. In re Custody ofB.MH, No. 86895-6

We find Mr. Holt has not met the high burden imposed on those seeking third

party custody. However, we find he is entitled to maintain his de facto parentage

action. The Court of Appeals correctly concluded that our holding in MF. does not

bar Mr. Holt from petitioning for de facto parentage The legislature inevitably did not

contemplate every conceivable family constellation, and drawing an arbitrary

categorical bar based on an individual's status as a stepparent or a former stepparent

would preclude legitimate parent-child relationships from being adjudicated. Unlike

the specific factual scenario in MF., the circumstances claimed by Mr. Holt have not

been contemplated by the legislature and addressed in Washington's statutory scheme.

Mr. Holt alleges that Ms. Holt, B.M.H. 's only other parent, consented to and fostered

his parent-child relationship with B.M.H., and we have already held that by requiring

consent to be proved, the de facto parentage test adequately protects parents'

fundamental rights. See In re Parentage ofL.B., 155 Wn.2d 679,701,712, 122 P.3d

161 (2005). We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand to the trial court for further

proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Ms. Holt and Mr. Holt began a romantic relationship in 1993 and had a son,

C.H., in 1995. The couple separated in 1998, without having married, and Ms. Holt

soon became engaged to another man. Unfortunately, her fiance died in an industrial

accident in 1999 while she was three months pregnant with his biological child,

B.M.H.

2 In re Custody of B.MH, No. 86895-6

Mr. Holt provided significant emotional support to Ms. Holt during the

pregnancy, was present at B.M.H.'s birth, and even cut B.M.H.'s umbilical cord. Mr.

Holt and Ms. Holt married shortly after B.M.H.'s birth but divorced in 2001. The

resulting parenting plan designated Ms. Holt as C.H.'s primary residential parent and

gave Mr. Holt residential time every other weekend. The parenting plan did not

include provisions for B.M.H., but the parties do not dispute that B.M.H. essentially

followed the same visitation schedule as C.H.

Mr. Holt was actively involved in B.M.H.'s life. In 2002, Ms. Holt changed

B.M.H.'s last name from the biological father's last name to Mr. Holt's last name.

Ms. Holt and Mr. Holt discussed Mr. Holt's adopting B.M.H. in 2007, but according

to the guardian ad litem (GAL), adoption was not pursued because of the effect it

might have on the survivor benefits that B.M.H. receives by virtue of his biological

father's death.

Ms. Holt married another man in 2007 but divorced in 2008. During that

relationship, Mr. Holt claims that Ms. Holt started to separate B.M.H. from Mr. Holt's

visitations with C.H. In the summer of2009, C.H. moved in with Mr. Holt. The

parties dispute the reason for the move.

In late 2009 or early 2010, Mr. Holt learned that Ms. Holt planned to move

with B.M.H. from Vancouver, Washington, to her new boyfriend's home in Castle

Rock, about 50 miles away. On February 23, 2010, Mr. Holt filed a nonparental

custody petition, alleging that Ms. Holt was not a suitable custodian for B.M.H. He

3 In re Custody of B.MH, No. 86895-6

explained that Ms. Holt "is threatening to move [B.M.H.] out of the area and thus

disrupt the close relationship that [he] and [B.M.H.] have together." Clerk's Papers

(CP) at 4. Mr. Holt also asked the court to find that he was B.M.H. 's de facto parent.

Mr. Holt alleged that "[Ms. Holt] held [him] out as the child's father in all respects";

that he and B.M.H. are "extremely bonded"; and that "[B.M.H.] refers to [him] as his

father." CP at 4.

Mr. Holt submitted a declaration with his petition. Mr. Holt's declaration

recounted his visitation history with B.M.H. after he and Ms. Holt divorced:

Since the time of our divorce when Laurie does not have a boyfriend or husband in her life we communicate fabulously and we don't have issues with regard to our residential time with the children. However, Laurie also has a disturbing pattern of getting into multiple and very short-term relationships with other men and frequently during those times she has on occasion tried to limit my involvement with our son, [B.M.H.].

CP at 20. Mr. Holt's declaration stated that during Ms. Holt's first subsequent

marriage she "made some minimal efforts to reduce my time with B.M.H." !d. Mr.

Holt described an occasion when Ms. Holt told him that he could no longer see

B.M.H. because he had given B.M.H. a birthday card from B.M.H.'s maternal

grandparents against her wishes. Mr. Holt stated that in August 2007, when Ms. Holt

started to date the man she married in December 2007, "she began to pull [B .M.H.]

away from seeing me. For the first time in [B.M.H.]'s 8 year life[, she] began

splitting [B.M.H.] and [C.H.] up during visitation." Id. Ms. Holt divorced that

husband in 2008, and according to Mr. Holt, "Laurie has had a number of

4 In re Custody of B.MH ~No. 86895-6

relationships since her divorce in 2008 .... However~ fortunately until now Laurie

has not allowed these relationships [to] interfere[] with my relationship with

[B.M.H.]" CP at 21. He further stated that after Ms. Holt's 2008 divorce, she has

"started relationships and moved several different men in and out of her home in

Vancouver. These relationships have been confusing and disruptive to [B.M.H.]." CP

at 22.

Along with his declaration, Mr. Holt submitted copies of a photograph album

that Ms. Holt made him for Father's Day, which contained handwritten captions such

as, "The first time you met your son, [B.M.H.]" and "There was no doubt he is your

son," as well as a photograph of the order changing B.M.H. 's last name to Mr. Holt's

last name. CP at 49-52.

Mr. Holt also submitted declarations from a co-worker and from his wife

before Ms. Holt, describing him as a dedicated father. Mr. Holt's former wife stated:

Over the 10 years I have known [B.M.H.], Michael has never treated him any differently than any of his other children. [B.M.H.] is as loved and as nurtured as his brother [C.H.] ....

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