In re D.C.N.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedNovember 21, 2025
Docket127540
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re D.C.N. (In re D.C.N.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re D.C.N., (kanctapp 2025).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 127,540

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

In the Interest of D.C.N., a Minor Child.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Sedgwick District Court; RICHARD MACIAS, judge. Submitted without oral argument. Opinion filed November 21, 2025. Reversed.

Anita Settle Kemp and Jordan E. Kieffer, of Wichita, for appellant natural father.

Amanda M. Marino, of Martin, Pringle, Oliver, Wallace & Bauer, L.L.P., of Wichita, for appellee.

Before HILL, P.J., MALONE and HURST, JJ.

HURST, J.: Father, an incarcerated single parent, appeals from the district court's determination that his child, D.C.N., was a child in need of care (CINC) and the subsequent termination of his parental rights. Although that might sound routine, this case presents atypical circumstances. Unlike most CINC adjudications, D.C.N. was being well cared for by a temporary guardian, "Dana," at the time and thus was not in need of care in the traditional sense. In a further twist, it is Dana—not the State—who sought the CINC adjudication, and Dana took this path only after Father refused to consent to her adoption efforts.

The district court's CINC adjudication hinges on Father's status as an incarcerated parent for D.C.N.'s entire life, but mere incarceration does not automatically result in a CINC adjudication as to the incarcerated parent. For the first part of D.C.N.'s life,

1 Father's romantic partner cared for D.C.N. as a mother and apparently facilitated Father's parental relationship. Unfortunately, she died when D.C.N. was just two years old. Thereafter, her mother Dana began caring for D.C.N. under a temporary guardianship that Father consented to with the understanding that Dana would continue facilitating his parental relationship.

However, after a couple of years, Dana ceased contact with Father because she believed it was not in D.C.N.'s best interests to know that his father was incarcerated. Dana's lack of contact and refusal to facilitate the parental relationship angered Father, and he engaged in a letter writing campaign that vacillated between begging for contact and threatening legal action. Father's actions, which the district court characterized as threatening the temporary guardianship, made Dana fearful she would lose custody, so she petitioned to adopt D.C.N. pursuant to K.S.A. 59-2129. D.C.N.'s biological mother consented to the adoption, but Father did not. Thereafter, instead of continuing with that action and seeking to terminate Father's parental rights through the adoption process, Dana filed an action to have D.C.N. adjudicated as a CINC and then to subsequently terminate Father's parental rights.

Under the unique circumstances here, this court is not persuaded that clear and convincing evidence supports the district court's finding that D.C.N. was without adequate parental care, control, and subsistence based on Father's incarceration to support a CINC finding in accordance with the applicable statutory guidelines. As a result, the CINC finding of the district court is reversed.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

D.C.N. was born in December 2015 to Mother and Father but immediately began being cared for by Father's romantic partner, L.W. According to Father, it was always the plan that L.W. and Father would parent and raise D.C.N. However, Father was arrested

2 on federal charges during Mother's pregnancy and has remained incarcerated since his arrest. L.W. became D.C.N.'s informal adopted mother as planned.

L.W. unexpectedly died in December 2017 just two years after taking custody of D.C.N. After L.W.'s death, her mother Dana began caring for D.C.N. Father believed that Dana, who he considered a friend and a grandmother to D.C.N., would be a safe, caring, and responsible guardian for his child. Father and Dana informally agreed that she would keep Father apprised of D.C.N.'s well-being through regular communication.

About three months after L.W.'s death, on March 1, 2018, Dana petitioned for legal temporary guardianship of D.C.N. under case number 2018-PR-000255-GU. Father signed a waiver of notice and consent to Dana's appointment as guardian. The waiver described the guardianship as temporary: "In giv[ing] this consent, I understand that this action is not a termination of my parental rights, an adoption, or any other permanent action and that I may petition the Court to vacate this Guardianship at anytime."

Father attached an "Affidavit Statement" to his signed consent and a letter to Dana's attorney requesting that the affidavit become a "part of this proceeding" and for Dana to receive a copy. In the Affidavit Statement, Father included a list of his desires and expectations as D.C.N.'s parent, including that he: • asserted his parental rights; • wished for Dana to stand as guardian until he was released from incarceration; • reserved the right to vacate the guardianship at any time he deemed appropriate based on D.C.N.'s best interests; • named alternative guardians in the event Dana was no longer available including his eldest daughter; • requested weekly or at least monthly updates on D.C.N.'s life and progress by phone, letter, visitations, or email; 3 • requested consultation about major events; • requested that his son be called his given name; • requested that Dana love and hug D.C.N. several times a day, be disciplined when appropriate, and taught at every opportunity; and • stated that he was grateful to Dana and her daughter for their act of kindness in caring for D.C.N.

On March 12, 2018, Dana's attorney sent a letter to Father with a copy of the Order of Appointing Guardian for a Minor, reassuring him that: "I have also enclosed the letter that you sent me. I am unable to file documents on behalf of a third party, as the court has gone to an e-filing system for attorneys. I have retained a copy for our file."

Unfortunately, the relationship between Father and Dana broke down when she decided—against Father's wishes—that due to D.C.N.'s age, visits and phone calls with Father were confusing and detrimental to D.C.N.'s welfare.

According to Father's handwritten contact log, he received a short letter and updated pictures from Dana in September 2019. The log states that Father received a prison form stating they rejected a letter from Dana in October 2019 due to the color of the stationery. In December 2019, Father sent a "long letter to [Dana] about not giving up [his] parental rights and her selfishness of not telling [D.C.N.] more about his father." Father also sent Dana a letter in the second week of January 2020 requesting D.C.N.'s birth mother's contact information and discussing Dana's decision not to tell D.C.N. about Father. According to Father's handwritten contact log, he called Dana several times between January and December 2020 and had his sister call and text her, but Dana did not answer or respond from March through October. Additionally, Father's log indicates he sent letters to Dana in February, March, April, May, June, July, September, October, November, and December 2020—each time requesting access to D.C.N. and for Dana to get better at updating Father. For example, in a letter sent on March 30, 2020, Father 4 wrote Dana and expressed that he desperately missed D.C.N. and wanted more contact and to have a relationship with him before his release.

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