In re Guardianship of K.E.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJuly 24, 2024
Docket23-1481
StatusPublished

This text of In re Guardianship of K.E. (In re Guardianship of K.E.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa 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 K.E., (iowactapp 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 23-1481 Filed July 24, 2024

IN THE MATTER OF THE GUARDIANSHIP OF K.E., a/k/a A.E.,

S.C., Mother, Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Poweshiek County, Patrick McAvan,

Judge.

A mother appeals a district court order establishing a guardianship for her

minor child. AFFIRMED.

Denise M. Gonyea of McKelvie Law Office, Grinnell, for appellant mother.

Katelyn Kurt of Whitfield & Eddy, P.L.C., Des Moines, for appellee.

Elizabeth S. Blough of Cashatt Warren Family Law, P.C., Des Moines,

guardian ad litem for minor child.

Considered by Badding, P.J., Langholz, J., and Bower, S.J.*

*Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206

(2024). 2

BADDING, Presiding Judge.

The juvenile court established a guardianship under Iowa Code

section 232D.204(2) (2023) for a transgender youth with dysregulated mood

disorder and suicidal ideations. The court appointed Elliot and Jessica—the

parents of the child’s best friend—as the child’s guardians. The child’s father,

Jacob, consented to the guardianship; the child’s mother, Savannah, did not.

At the guardianship hearing, the mother testified: “I wish we could find [the

child] somewhere else to live.” Yet on appeal, she claims the juvenile court erred

in finding the guardianship was “the answer to her wish.” Because there is clear

and convincing evidence that the mother was not willing or able to exercise the

powers the court granted to the guardians and the guardianship is in the child’s

best interest, we affirm upon our de novo review of the record.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

In May 2023, Elliot and Jessica petitioned to be appointed guardians of

K.E.,1 born in 2008. K.E.’s parents are Jacob and Savannah. They separated

when K.E. was two or three years old. From then until about two years before the

petition was filed, K.E. lived with Savannah during the week and with Jacob on the

weekends. But then one night after K.E. and Savannah argued, Jacob testified

that Savannah “came to my house probably about 2:00 or 3:00 in the morning and

just kind of dropped him off and said, ‘He’s your problem now.’” Savannah had

1 These are the initials for the child’s legal name, although the child goes by a

different name now. The child’s preferred pronouns are he, him, and his, which is what the parties mostly used during the juvenile court proceedings. 3

limited contact with K.E. after that, texting Jacob at one point that the child was

“mean, hateful, cruel, and just plain nasty. I am done.”

Savannah testified that K.E. was diagnosed with dysregulated mood

disorder at age eight, which she compared to “bipolarism in children.” K.E. was

hospitalized for a time and placed on medication. While K.E. “always

had . . . problems controlling [his] emotions,” according to Savannah, they had a

good relationship until Savannah suffered a traumatic brain injury from a car

accident in October 2020. After that, Savannah testified their relationship changed

because K.E. was mad that Savannah asked him “to help around the house more

and do chores more.” Jacob, however, said K.E.’s relationship with Savannah was

never good. Savannah testified that she often called the police or Jacob for

assistance with K.E. because the child was “beating me, hurting me, and

everything.”

Jacob enrolled K.E. in a different school after the child came to live with him.

The school’s principal testified that although K.E. was “a very bright individual, very

inquisitive, very open-minded,” he was also “a very troubled student in terms of

making friends, fitting in.” When K.E. first arrived at the school, the child was

reclusive and “kind of ostracized” by the other students. K.E. was often “not

wanting to go to class, hiding out in the bathroom, always wanting to wear their

hood in school.” He had poor attendance and grades, with a 0.53 grade point

average his freshman year of high school. K.E. struggled with self-harm and

threatened to commit suicide on more than one occasion.

Things got better for K.E. after he became friends with O.Z., one of Elliot

and Jessica’s children. The two children met in 2021 while they were still in middle 4

school. K.E. started going to Elliot and Jessica’s house on Friday evenings for

dinner. Soon, according to Elliot, “he was coming over every single day,” though

aside from some sleepovers with O.Z., he would go back to Jacob’s house at night.

Jessica testified they started referring to K.E. as their “bonus kid”:

[W]e felt like he was part of our family when he was spending regular time with us at our home in Iowa. He fits right in with the other kids, shares interests, and enjoys spending time with us, so we started including him in family activities like going to the movies or going out to meals. He was such a pleasure to have with us that we continued to include him in our activities.

K.E.’s principal testified that as the child started spending more time with

Elliot and Jessica’s family, he started improving at school: “[H]e had probably more

of a little bit of anchor with [O.Z.’s] family, a little bit more stability.” K.E.’s father

noticed an improvement too, describing Elliot and Jessica as “just really good

people, and they have already done a lot to help [K.E.] grow as a person. . . . I

noticed just a night and day difference with [K.E.’s] attitude. He’s much more polite,

very calm.”

In the spring of 2023, Elliot and Jessica decided to move their family to

Connecticut where Elliot grew up. Jessica is an obstetrician gynecologist and

accepted a position at a local hospital. When they told K.E. that they were moving,

the child told them that he wanted to go with them. So Elliot and Jessica

approached Jacob with the idea. He supported it because K.E. had “been

struggling in his current living environment.” Jacob was “afraid that if K.E. doesn’t

get out of here and go, that some day I’m going to come home and find him dead.”

But Savannah was opposed. She told Elliot that K.E. “is violent and destructive

and she didn’t want to be responsible if he damaged our property or hurt us. She 5

also said that as a mother, you know, if something were to happen to him, that she

wanted to be able to be here.” Elliot and Jessica intended to fly K.E. home for the

holidays or other visits at their expense, and they offered to fly Savannah out if

something were to happen with K.E. But Savannah was convinced they were

“going to alienate me from my child.”

Elliot and Jessica moved to Connecticut with their three children in June,

while their guardianship petition was pending. K.E. came to visit them twice,

staying for two weeks each time. Elliot testified that K.E. was a different person in

Connecticut:

I don’t think that I ever saw his face in Iowa because he had his hair swept over his eyes because he was hiding his face. . . . He’s cut his hair now in the front so we can see his face, because he feels comfortable and happy. He told me that in Iowa he would spend most of the time daydreaming about a better life because he was just so upset and he didn’t want to go outside, but since he’s come here, he said he doesn’t have time or really any need to daydream because he’s just enjoying his life so much.

The family planned to enroll K.E.

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Related

In Re the Guardianship & Conservatorship of Sams
256 N.W.2d 570 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1977)

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