In Re EWB

441 So. 2d 478
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 29, 1983
Docket15830-CAJ
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 441 So. 2d 478 (In Re EWB) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re EWB, 441 So. 2d 478 (La. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

441 So.2d 478 (1983)

In re EWB Applying For Adoption.

No. 15830-CAJ.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

November 29, 1983.

*479 DeLaune & Blondeau by A.L. Blondeau, Bossier City, for appellee.

Love, Rigby, Dehan, Love & McDaniel by Joe B. Cordill, Jr., Shreveport, for appellant.

Before MARVIN, JASPER E. JONES and FRED W. JONES, Jr., JJ.

JASPER E. JONES, Judge.

This is a stepparent adoption proceeding. The petitioner seeks to adopt his wife's daughter by a previous marriage. He alleges the consent of the child's father is unnecessary because of his failure to pay court ordered child support for over a year. The father opposes the adoption. After a hearing the trial judge found the father's consent unnecessary and the adoption was in the best interest of the child. He granted the adoption and ordered the child's name changed. The opponent appeals. We reverse for the reason that the adoption was not in the best interest of the child.

Opponent and the mother were granted a divorce in California in January, 1979. The divorce decree granted the mother custody of the child of the marriage, age 6 at the time of the adoption hearing, and ordered opponent to pay $225.00 per month child support. Opponent was granted reasonable visitation privileges. Prior to the divorce but after the couple separated, the mother and the child moved to Bossier City, where *480 the mother resided prior to her marriage. She married petitioner in January, 1979. Opponent remained in California. He remarried in March, 1980.

There was a great deal of animosity between the ex-spouses which led to friction over what was meant by reasonable visitation privileges. Opponent filed a rule in Caddo Parish to set specific visitation rights in March, 1979. The judgment on the rule gave opponent, among other visitation rights, the right to have physical custody of the child for two weeks each summer.

The judgment setting forth specific visitation rights did not terminate the friction over opponent's visitation rights and he began withholding various amounts from his child support payments. In March, 1980 opponent filed a rule in Caddo Parish for contempt against the mother for failure to comply with the visitation rights set forth in the judgment. She responded with a rule for contempt against opponent and a motion to make the unpaid child support executory. Judgment was rendered making past due child support of $1,031.00 executory. Opponent's specific visitation privileges were basically retained. Opponent never paid the back support but he began making his full monthly payments.

In early September, 1980 opponent contacted his ex-wife about having the child come to California for her two week summer visit for 1980. The mother refused to allow the visit because she considered the summer to be over and the child, who was 3 years old at the time, was in nursery school. The mother testified she considered nursery school to be more important than the child's visit to her father. In response to the mother's refusal to permit the visit, opponent stopped payment on his child support check for September and has not paid anything since.

Prior to the hearing opponent tendered government checks totaling $653.59 payable to his order to be applied to his unpaid child support into the registry of the court to be paid to the mother if the adoption was not granted. The trial judge refused to permit the conditional deposit of the checks in the registry of the court but permitted the checks to be placed into evidence. The opponent testified he intended to eventually pay the unpaid child support and to maintain same current in the future.

The testimony at the hearing indicates petitioner and the child have a good relationship and they love each other very much. Petitioner appears to be an ideal father figure. He has a good job, attends church regularly and is an excellent husband and father. He becomes involved in most of the child's activities and he spends as much time as possible with her. A child has been born of the marriage between petitioner and the mother and petitioner treats his child and the child he seeks to adopt in the same manner.

After the hearing the trial judge found that: (1) opponent's refusal to pay child support was unjustified; (2) opponent had forfeited the right for his consent to be required to the adoption under La.R.S. 9:422.1 because of his failure to pay child support for over one year; and (3) it would be in the best interest of the child to order the adoption.[1]

On appeal, opponent concedes his consent to the adoption is not required. He contends *481 the trial court's finding it was in the best interest of the child to order the adoption was incorrect.

Although a parent has lost the right for his consent to be required to the adoption of his child under R.S. 9:422.1, the adoption should only be granted when it is in the best interest of the child. La.R.S. 9:432 B; Adoption of Latiolais, 384 So.2d 377 (La.1980); In re BAS Applying for Adoption, 424 So.2d 405 (La.App.2d Cir. 1982).

Whether an adoption is in the best interest of the child must be decided on the facts of each case and the trial judge is vested with great discretion in making that determination. In re Hinton, 390 So.2d 972 (La.App.2d Cir.1980); In re BAS, supra. This discretion is not absolute and the trial judge's determination of best interest is subject to reversal if the record reveals manifest error in his determination. See Adoption of Latiolais, supra; In re Glass Applying for Adoption, 42A So.2d 383 (La. App.2d Cir.1982).

The trial judge's oral reasons for judgment dictated into the record include the following reasons on the issue of the best interest of the child:

I think its a large part of my judgment to take into consideration what [opponent] must have thought by his actions... The impression I get is that basically because of the dissatisfaction between the parents of [the child] he took it on himself to stop the child support payments... Basically what [opponent] seems to have done is, he apparently put his best interest and the interest of visitation, as he seems to think it should have been at a higher priority than the best interest of the child because he withheld the payments apparently in order to try to secure what he thought was best for himself and also for the visitation relationship.
.....
At any rate, I find here under all the circumstances with the good relationship that I have found in the [petitioner's] home and what with the decision that [opponent] made to stop the child support under the circumstances that he did, I have concluded that it's in the best interest of the child in these particular fact circumstances, which as we all know differ from any other case, you've got to take every case on its facts, but I found on these particular facts that it's in the best interest of the child to permit [petitioner] to adopt the child.[2]

While the natural parent's failure to pay child support and the relationship between the child and stepparent are certainly factors to be considered in determining the child's best interest, they are not the controlling factors. Where the trial judge erred is he considered the relationship between the child and opponent entirely from the standpoint of the legal effect of opponent's failure to pay child support and the fact that opponent did not consider the child's interest in not paying.

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Bluebook (online)
441 So. 2d 478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ewb-lactapp-1983.