In Re Guardianship of Adw

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 14, 2024
Docket368361
StatusPublished

This text of In Re Guardianship of Adw (In Re Guardianship of Adw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan 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 Guardianship of Adw, (Mich. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

In re ADW, minor.

AMBER MILLION, FOR PUBLICATION March 14, 2024 Petitioner-Appellee, 9:10 a.m.

v No. 368361 Lenawee Probate Court DALE WARNER, LC No. 23-052933-GM

Respondent-Appellant.

Before: FEENEY, P.J., and REDFORD and YATES, JJ.

YATES, J.

In this minor-guardianship proceeding under MCL 700.5204(2)(b), which is contained in the Estates and Protected Individuals Code (EPIC), MCL 700.1101 et seq., the probate court chose to appoint the son of respondent Dale Warner (Dale) as temporary guardian for ADW, who is the daughter of Dale and his missing wife, Dee Warner (Dee). The probate court further ordered that ADW should have visits with Dee’s children from a prior relationship, including petitioner, Amber Million (Amber). Dale contends the probate court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction to enter those orders and violated his constitutional rights as a parent by ordering that ADW should have visits with Dee’s children from a prior relationship. We affirm the probate court’s decision to exercise jurisdiction under MCL 700.5204(2)(b), but we reverse the order requiring ADW to participate in visits with her maternal siblings.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

After Dale and Dee both had children from earlier relationships with others, they married. In 2012, they had a daughter, ADW, who is the subject of this proceeding. The evidence indicates that ADW had good relationships with Dee’s children, but Dee disappeared on April 24, 2021, and then those relationships became strained because Dee’s children thought that Dale was responsible for Dee’s disappearance. ADW, who was nine years old at the time, began living exclusively with Dale in the wake of Dee’s disappearance, and Dale prevented ADW from having any contact with

-1- Dee’s children. After ADW started attending counseling in 2022, her therapist described ADW as “well cared for” and “strongly bonded” with Dale. The therapist opined that, because of “the contention between” Dee’s children and Dale, it was not in ADW’s best interests to have “face to face, in person contact with her maternal half siblings.”

On May 3, 2022, Dale executed an “Appointment of Guardian and Conservator for Minor Child of Dale J. Warner” stating: “If for any reason I fail to serve, I request that the Court appoint my son, Jaron D. Warner, . . . as guardian and conservator for my minor daughter, [ADW].” Then, on September 12, 2023, Dale executed a “Consent to Treat Minor Children” form that permitted a doctor to make decisions about ADW’s medical care from September 12, 2023, to January 1, 2024. The timing of Dale’s consent was significant because, one day later, on September 13, 2023, Dale was found in contempt of court for not cooperating with a conservatorship regarding the assets of Dee’s estate and sentenced to serve 93 days in jail for that contempt.

On September 19, 2023, while Dale was in jail, Dee’s adult daughter Amber filed a petition asking the probate court to appoint her as ADW’s guardian. The probate court promptly appointed a lawyer-guardian ad litem (LGAL) for ADW and instructed the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) to review the matter. Five days later, on September 24, 2023, Dale executed a notarized power of attorney, which stated:

I, Dale Warner, of Tecumseh, MI appoint Jaron Warner of Tipton, MI, as my agent and legal guardian of my minor child, [ADW], . . .

I appoint and vest in my agent full powers as a substitute parent, giving them the authority to do anything and everything required for my child’s care. I also authorize my agent to do any of the things that I, as a parent, could do on behalf of my child. I specifically authorize Jaron Warner to:

(1) Consent to medical and/or dental care for my child;

(2) Enroll my minor child in appropriate schools and/or educational programs;

(3) Act or consent to any and all acts with respect to my child’s health and well- being, except the power to consent to guardianship, adoption, or marriage.

This delegation of parental powers is given pursuant to MCL 700.5103, and will become effective on the day I sign it. This power expires six (6) months from the date it begins or on my declaration, whichever comes first.

On September 29, 2023, Jaron accepted the appointment.

While Amber’s petition for appointment of a minor guardian for ADW was pending in the probate court, Amanda Jones (who worked for the DHHS) spoke to Dale, Jaron, ADW, and Amber. On October 9, 2023, Jones testified that ADW wanted to have a relationship with Dee’s children, but she preferred to remain in Jaron’s care. Similarly, LGAL Suzanne Wilhelm stated during the hearing on October 9, 2023, that ADW has “a really good bond with her brother” Jaron. Although ADW “also loves her maternal siblings,” ADW “hasn’t actually interacted with them in a couple years” because Dale “has thwarted their attempts to interact with” ADW. Significantly, ADW told

-2- the LGAL that it “would hurt her brain way too much to move in with her sister” Amber, so ADW wanted to stay where she was. Nevertheless, the LGAL explained that ADW “needs to have this relationship with her . . . maternal adult siblings.”

After the LGAL spoke and the DHHS representative testified at the hearing on October 9, 2023, the court invited the attorneys for Dale and Amber to present their competing arguments on the issue of guardianship for ADW. The court then addressed the petition for minor guardianship in a ruling from the bench. First, the court explained that, despite the documents Dale had signed, when Amber filed her petition on September 19, 2023, “there was no valid execution of a [p]ower of [a]ttorney that would, in fact, allow for legal enforcement.” Second, the court ordered “that a temporary guardianship will be issued for [ADW],” and “it will be with the person who has been providing that care for her since the incarceration of Dale Warner,” specifically, Dale’s son, Jaron. Third, the court chose to “follow the recommendations made by our LGAL” for ADW “to be able to visit with both sides of the family,” but left open the issue of how best to accomplish that goal. Finally, the court scheduled a hearing on November 30, 2023, to consider whether to modify or to render more permanent the temporary minor guardianship.

On October 11, 2023, the probate court memorialized its rulings in an order that appointed Jaron as the temporary minor guardian for ADW, but set forth an expiration date of November 30, 2023. One day later, Jaron accepted the appointment along with letters of temporary guardianship from the court. Next, the issue of ADW’s visits with Dee’s adult children was resolved in an order rendered on October 25, 2023, that directed Jaron to contact Brenea Moore to enable her “to make recommendations regarding the [o]rdered supervised visitation between [ADW] and her maternal siblings at the earliest available time Ms. Moore offers.” That order decreed “that as soon as Ms. Moore has conducted her initial appointment with [ADW] and makes recommendations regarding supervised visits,” the “supervised visits shall immediately commence[.]”

What happened after the entry of the order on October 25, 2023, is murky. Dale wrote in an emergency petition to terminate the guardianship filed on November 7, 2023, that he had been “released from [the] Lenawee County Jail.” But Dale’s freedom was short-lived. He was charged with murdering Dee, arrested on that charge, and detained on a $15 million bond before the hearing in the guardianship case scheduled for November 30, 2023.

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In Re Guardianship of Adw, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-guardianship-of-adw-michctapp-2024.