In re Guardianship of W.L.

2015 Ark. 289
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 25, 2015
DocketCV-15-126
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 2015 Ark. 289 (In re Guardianship of W.L.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas 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 W.L., 2015 Ark. 289 (Ark. 2015).

Opinion

Cite as 2015 Ark. 289

SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS No. CV-15-126

IN THE MATTER OF THE Opinion Delivered June 25, 2015 GUARDIANSHIP OF W.L., A MINOR APPEAL FROM THE LOGAN COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT DAVID LINEHAM [NO. 42P PR-2009-98] APPELLANT HONORABLE DAVID H. V. MCCORMICK, JUDGE

SARAH RACHEL HYDE ET AL. APPELLEES REVERSED AND REMANDED; COURT OF APPEALS OPINION VACATED.

RHONDA K. WOOD, Associate Justice

Under our guardianship statutes, a court may terminate a guardianship if it is no

longer necessary or if it is in the ward’s best interest. We hold that a guardianship is no

longer necessary when a fit parent who consented to a guardianship revokes consent.

Here, the circuit court’s ruling that the father, David Lineham, was unfit was clearly

erroneous. Therefore, the court should have granted David’s petition to terminate a

guardianship to which he had earlier consented. We reverse the order keeping the

guardianship in place and remand for the court to enter an order terminating the

guardianship and placing W.L. in David Lineham’s custody.

I. Relevant Facts

The relevant facts in this case were developed at hearings stemming from two

petitions to terminate a guardianship. David Lineham and Sarah Hyde started dating in Cite as 2015 Ark. 289

2007. The two lived in a suburb of Washington D.C. in northern Virginia. Sarah became

pregnant. Their child, W.L., was born in March 2008. At that time, David and Sarah lived

with David’s parents, but they moved into their own apartment in July 2009.

Sarah’s parents, Dennis and Anna Hyde, also lived in the area. (The Hydes also had

another home in Arkansas). In early fall of 2009, the Hydes had guardianship papers

prepared and they presented them to David and Sarah for consent. David testified that he

and Sarah consented to the Hydes’ exercising a guardianship over W.L. so that W.L.

would be able to have access to health insurance and daycare under Dennis Hyde’s

military benefits. W.L. continued to reside with David and Sarah. In December 2009, the

Logan County Circuit Court entered an order appointing the Hydes as guardians over

W.L. The Hydes eventually moved to Arkansas in July 2010. W.L. moved with them and

has lived with Dennis and Anna ever since.1

David Lineham filed a petition to terminate the guardianship in December 2010, a

year after the guardianship’s inception and five months after the Hydes had moved to

Arkansas. It took the circuit court over a year—until January 2012—to hold a hearing in

the case.2 At this hearing, David testified that he never intended to give up his parental

rights to W.L. He also testified that in September 2010 he had married Danielle Lineham,

1 Sarah initially moved with the Hydes to Arkansas, but ended up moving back to Virginia. She has subsequently returned to Arkansas. 2 This court is disturbed by the length of time it took for the court to hold the hearing. Cases involving the placement of a child should be heard quickly to provide permanency for the child.

2 Cite as 2015 Ark. 289

that both he and Danielle were employed, and that they shared a two-bedroom

apartment. However, David also testified that he had visited W.L. only twice in Arkansas

and that his telephone communication with her was sporadic. David also admitted that he

had not provided the Hydes with any financial assistance since they had become W.L.’s

guardians.

In April 2012, the circuit court entered an order denying David’s petition and kept

the guardianship in place. The court found that the guardianship was still necessary in

order to maintain W.L.’s access to food, clothing, and financial support, which David had

not provided. The court further found that David and his new wife Danielle “lack[ed] a

meaningful relationship” with W.L. The court set a visitation schedule whereby David

could visit W.L. in Arkansas and permitted W.L. to visit David in Virginia during the

summer. David did not appeal from this order.

The present round of litigation started in October 2012 when Sarah, W.L.’s

mother, filed a petition to terminate her parents’ guardianship over W.L. David

subsequently filed a second petition to terminate the guardianship. These motions were

filed in the underlying guardianship case, which had been assigned to the probate division

of the Logan County Circuit Court. Sarah also filed a petition for declaratory judgment

and establishment of paternity, a case which had been assigned to the domestic-relations

division of the same court. Eventually all parties—David, Sarah, and the Hydes

(guardians)—agreed that Sarah would file a petition for custody in the domestic-relations

3 Cite as 2015 Ark. 289

case and that the case would then be consolidated into the probate matter. An order was

entered to that effect in November 2012. David then filed a counterclaim for custody.

The circuit court held a two-day hearing in August 2013 to decide the

consolidated petitions to terminate the guardianship and, if necessary, the petitions for

custody. David testified that he and his wife still lived in Virginia. Since the last hearing,

he had made eighteen trips to Arkansas to visit W.L. and had made multiple phone calls to

her each week. David worked full-time at a car dealership, making a gross salary of

between $5000 and $5500 per month. David’s wife, Danielle, testified that she also

worked full-time and made around $35,000 per year. In essence, David addressed the

court’s concern from the previous hearing that he lacked significant contact with his

daughter and did not have a meaningful relationship with her.

Sarah testified that since the last hearing she had had another child and later married

the father, William Lawson. Sarah had sporadic residency, but now lived in a trailer on the

Hydes’ property in Arkansas. She said she paid rent to her parents by “working on the

farm.” Neither she nor her husband owned a vehicle. She had a suspended driver’s license

in Virginia. She did not have a job and testified that she had $1.16 in her bank account.

Finally, Sarah admitted that she had two felony drug convictions for possession of heroin

and Dilaudid. Those convictions were in Virginia, where she was also facing a probation-

revocation hearing the following month.

The court also heard testimony from Dennis and Anna Hyde. They testified that

David had still not provided any financial support for W.L. while they had been her

4 Cite as 2015 Ark. 289

guardians. Anna testified that David had done “all that he’s been asked to do” and that

“he’s been an actively engaged father.” She also stated that he had provided clothing and

toys for W.L. and had developed a relationship with her. Despite this, both of the Hydes

testified that they believed the guardianship was necessary in regards to David, but not as

to their daughter, Sarah. In other words, they thought their guardianship should be

terminated if the court were to return custody to Sarah; but if the court were to return

custody to David, they thought their guardianship should stay in place.

After hearing the testimony, the court took the case under advisement and later

issued a letter opinion and order. First, the court found that “from its previous ruling that

David Lineham was determined to be unfit, although specific wording to that effect was

not used.” Second, the court found for the first time that Sarah was unfit and that David

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2015 Ark. 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-guardianship-of-wl-ark-2015.