IN RE: GUARDIANSHIP OF A.L.R.-Q., A.R.W. AND A.M.W. (CHILD CUSTODY)

141 Nev. Adv. Op. No. 66
CourtCourt of Appeals of Nevada
DecidedDecember 23, 2025
Docket89623-COA
StatusPublished

This text of 141 Nev. Adv. Op. No. 66 (IN RE: GUARDIANSHIP OF A.L.R.-Q., A.R.W. AND A.M.W. (CHILD CUSTODY)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Nevada 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 A.L.R.-Q., A.R.W. AND A.M.W. (CHILD CUSTODY), 141 Nev. Adv. Op. No. 66 (Neb. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

141 Nev., Advance Opinion CO&

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEVADA

IN THE MATTER OF THE No. 89623-COA GUARDIANSHIP OF A.L.R.-Q., A.R.W., AND A.M.W., MINOR PROTECTED PERSONS.

KELLY MICHELLE RUCKLE AND FILED EDWARD GORDON RUCKLE, Appellants, DEC 23 2025 vs. SARA Q. AND A.L.R.-Q., A.R.W., AND BY A.M.W., MINOR PROTECTED PERSONS, Respondents.

Kelly Michelle Ruckle and Edward Gordon Ruckle appeal from a district court order terminating a guardianship of minor children. Eighth Judicial District Court, Family Division, Clark County; Stacy M. Rocheleau, Judge. Vacated and remanded.

Hutchison & Steffen, PLLC, and Joseph C. Reynolds and Ramez A. Ghally, Reno, for Appellants Kelly Michelle Ruckle and Edward Gordon Ruckle.

Srnith Legal Group and Kurt A. Smith, Henderson, for Respondent Sara Q.

Wolf, Rifkin, Shapiro, Schulman & Rabkin, LLP, and Royi Moas, Las Vegas, for Respondents A.L.R.-Q., A.R.W., and A.M.W.

COURT OF APPEALS OF NEVADA ca 1 3 (0) 1941B

OPINION

By the Court, WESTBROOK, J.: In In re Guardianship of D.M.F., 139 Nev. 342, 357-58, 535 P.3d 1154, 1167 (2023), the Nevada Supreme Court held that a protected minor has a procedural due process right to notice and an opportunity to be heard before the district court could sua sponte remove that minor's guardian and terminate the guardianship. In reaching that conclusion, the supreme court observed, in dicta, that this right to procedural due process also applies to the protected minor's guardian. Id. at 351 n.6, 535 P.3d at 1163 n.6. Because we agree with the supreme court that a custodial relative who serves as a guardian has a liberty interest in the care, custody, and management of a child under their protection, we now expressly hold that such a guardian is entitled to notice and an opportunity to be heard before a district court may sua sponte remove that guardian and terminate the guardianship. In the proceeding below, the district court terminated the appellants' guardianship over their minor granddaughters, without adequate notice or any opportunity to be heard, after receiving two confidential reports from a reunification therapist pursuant to the Nevada Statewide Rules for Guardianship (NSRG), Rule 5. Although the district court scheduled an NSRG 5 hearing to address one of those reports, it failed to notify the parties that it was contemplating removal or termination of the guardianship, and it denied appellants any opportunity to respond to the allegations in the reports at the hearing. Because the district court violated the appellants' rights to procedural due process, we vacate the

COURT OF APPEALS OF NEVADA 2 «), 1947B se. district court's order and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY Appellants Kelly and Edward Ruckle are the maternal grandmother and step-grandfather of the protected minors, respondents A.L.R.-Q., born in March 2007, A.R.W, born in August 2008, and A.M.W., born in May 2010. Ms. Ruckle is also the mother of respondent Sara Q., who is the mother of the protected minors. For most of their lives, the protected minors have alternated between living with Sara, in Pahrump, and the Ruckles, in Las Vegas. In 2013, with Sara's consent, the Ruckles adopted Sara's eldest child, the protected minors' older sister, A.A.Q., born in December 2005. Sara also consented to the Ruckles having temporary guardianship over the protected minors at various points in time. Then, in October 2018, Sara allowed the children to move in with the Ruckles on a full-time basis. In 2021, the Ruckles petitioned for guardianship over the children, contending that Sara lacked financial, housing, and employment stability and was unable to care for her children. Although Sara opposed the guardianship, she nevertheless wished for the children to continue living with the Ruckles. Following an evidentiary hearing, the district court found that the evidence demonstrated that the protected minors had been living with Sara in squalid conditions without regular 'access to food, clean clothes, or working bathroom facilities. By contrast, the court found that the children were thriving under the Ruckles' care and that the children expressed a strong desire to remain with the Ruckles on a permanent basis. Thus, in January 2022, the district court granted the Ruckles' petition for guardianship over their three granddaughters.

COURT OF APPEALS OF NEVADA 3 19411š cez, Just two months later, Sara petitioned the district court for reunification therapy and a modification of the existing visitation schedule. In her moving papers, Sara explained that she wanted to repair her relationship with her children. Although the Ruckles and the protected minors both opposed this petition, the district court issued an order in May 2022, stating that the children needed to be assessed by therapist Nick Ponzo before it could render a decision. A year later, in May 2023, while her 2022 petition was still pending, Sara again petitioned for reunification therapy. In this petition, Sara advised the court that Ponzo had recommended reunification therapy. The Ruckles opposed this petition as well. After a hearing in July 2023, the district court granted Sara's request for reunification therapy, to include family therapy for the Ruckles, Sara, and the protected minors. Because the parties were unable to agree on a neutral family therapist, the district court chose a therapist proposed by Sara, Dr. Stephanie Holland. In August 2023, the court entered a minute order directing the parties to meet with Dr. Holland "within the next 30 days or as soon thereafter" as possible. The parties stipulated that Sara would bear the full cost of the therapy, Dr. Holland would provide both reunification therapy and family therapy, and the parties would participate in such therapy in good faith. In December 2023, the district court received a letter from Dr. Holland indicating that the court-ordered therapy still had not yet begun.' According to Dr. Holland, there were ongoing disagreements between her

INSRG 5(A) allows a district court presiding over guardianship proceedings to receive and review communications that "might otherwise be considered ex parte communications ... if such communications raise a significant concern about a guardian's compliance with his or her statutory duties and responsibilities, or the protected person's welfare." COURT OF APPEALS OF NEVADA 4 117) 1947B 9en and the Ruckles regarding language in her informed consent agreement. Thus, Dr. Holland sought guidance from the court on how to proceed. In January 2024, the district court issued an order pursuant to NSRG 5, disclosing Dr. Holland's letter to the parties.2 Because Dr. Holland's letter "raise[d] concerns regarding Guardians' and Guardians' Counsel's non-compliance with the Court's directive on this matter," the court scheduled an NSRG 5 hearing to obtain the Ruckles' response. At the NSRG 5 hearing in February 2024, the Ruckles clarified that they wanted to proceed with therapy but that they had concerns with the wording of the informed consent agreement, which they believed would allow Dr. Holland to "control" visitation, rather than simply make recommendations. The Ruckles also "worried that the therapist [was] tainted against them because of the process" and requested a different therapist. The district court advised that it would not remove Dr. Holland, clarified that Dr. Holland would only be permitted to guide and recommend visitation, and ordered the Ruckles to sign the consent agreement and begin reunification and family therapy. From the record, it appears that A.L.R.-Q. went to live with Sara on a full-time basis in either April or May 2024, leaving only A.R.W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 Nev. Adv. Op. No. 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-guardianship-of-alr-q-arw-and-amw-child-custody-nevapp-2025.