In re L.C.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 10, 2020
Docket120072
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re L.C. (In re L.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re L.C., (kanctapp 2020).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

Nos. 120,072 120,073

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

In the Matter of L.C., as grandparent of T.M.M.H., a Minor Child, Appellant,

and

L.M. (N/K/A L.F.), Appellee.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Johnson District Court; NEIL B. FOTH, judge. Opinion filed January 10, 2020. Affirmed.

Scott C. Nehrbass, James D. Oliver, and Sarah C. Otto, of Foulston Siefkin LLP, of Overland Park, and Joseph W. Booth, of Lenexa, for appellant.

Suzanne Valdez, of Smith Legal, LLC, of Lawrence, for appellee.

Stephanie Goodenow, of Goodenow Law, LLC, of Lenexa, guardian ad litem.

Before GARDNER, P.J., BUSER, J., and LAHEY, S.J.

PER CURIAM: This case began as a grandparent visitation petition filed more than 10 years ago by the paternal grandmother. It morphed into a custody battle between Mother and Grandmother, as though it were a battle between two divorced parents. It was later consolidated with Grandmother's petition to determine parentage—she asked the

1 court to declare her to be the mother of her grandson, T.M.M.H. And both of these cases are intertwined with a separate adoption case also on appeal, in which Mother consented to her son's adoption by his stepfather. Matter of Adoption of T.M.M.H., No. 119,944 (unpublished opinion) (this day decided).

After more than nine years of litigation between Grandmother and Mother over T.M.M.H., two significant events happened: The chief judge removed the judge who had long handled the case and assigned a new judge; and T.M.M.H.'s stepfather adopted him. The new judge then granted Mother's motion under K.S.A. 2018 Supp. 60-260(b) to set aside the prior judge's previous rulings, restored full custody of T.M.M.H. to Mother, and granted Grandmother grandparent visitation only. Grandmother appeals.

We find that any rights Grandmother may have claimed as a parent ceased when her grandson's adoption was finalized. And any rights Grandmother may claim after her grandson's adoption are solely as a grandparent and are limited to visitation under the grandparent visitation statute. We affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

The motions filed by the parties in these cases are too many to detail here, so we set forth an outline of the relevant facts. T.M.M.H. was born in November 2006, when Mother was 20 years old. Mother and T.M.M.H.'s biological father (Father) never married. When T.M.M.H. was around six months old, Father died. After Father's death, the paternal Grandmother offered financial assistance and child care assistance to Mother. When T.M.M.H. was around eight months old, Mother and T.M.M.H. moved in with Grandmother and her husband and lived there for about six months. Then, Mother and T.M.M.H. lived with T.M.M.H.'s great-grandmother for around 10 months.

2 In April 2008, Grandmother petitioned for grandparent visitation with T.M.M.H. In Mother's response to the petition, she stated she could not retain counsel, asked the court to appoint counsel, and requested a continuance of the hearing. Mother also explained that she was not opposed to allowing Grandmother visitation but thought it was in T.M.M.H.'s best interest to not yet allow overnight visits. No counsel was appointed for Mother.

In June 2008, Mother and Grandmother entered into a document drafted by Grandmother's counsel, captioned a "settlement agreement and permanent parenting plan" which the district court approved and incorporated as an order of the court. This was the first of three written agreements that Mother and Grandmother entered into from 2008 to 2010. Judge Thomas Kelly Ryan presided over these agreements and the ongoing custody, care, and visitation issues. None of the agreements terminated Mother's parental rights and no one suggested that Mother was unfit to parent T.M.M.H.

Under this first agreement, Grandmother was granted "parenting time a minimum of two days per week and every other weekend" until July 14, 2008. Thereafter, Grandmother was to be the "primary caregiver" for a minimum of three days per week. Among its terms was a guardianship provision stating "[t]his provision is also intended to have the same legal effect and to be in fact a provision granting Grandmother guardianship rights, while not in any way altering or limiting Mother's custodial rights."

The second agreement, captioned the "first amended parenting plan," was entered into in October 2008. Mother had decided to move to Colorado to live with her family, find employment, and get an apartment. The agreement's "sole legal custody" provision stated:

"[T.M.M.H.] will be in Grandmother's exclusive care as Mother is leaving the community, as such Mother is granting by this agreement sole legal custody of

3 [T.M.M.H.]. This provision is also intended to have the same legal effect and to be in fact a provision granting Grandmother guardianship rights, while not in any way altering or limiting Mother's custodial rights."

T.M.M.H. lived with Grandmother, as contemplated by this agreement, and Mother was allowed contact with him when she was in "the Kansas City Metropolitan area." For the year that Mother was in Colorado, she saw T.M.M.H. only four times but called every three days.

The second agreement provided that if Mother moved back to the Kansas City area or wanted to establish a specific parenting plan, the parties would:

"First consult with a psychologist, social worker, or other child-development specialist of theirs or the court's choosing to make a reintegration plan that is in [T.M.M.H.]'s best interests and to assure that the reconnection will be beneficial to [T.M.M.H.], and the parties. Such counseling and review will precede any litigation regarding custody or parenting time in court, absent emergency circumstances."

This agreement, like the first, was entered without a hearing, without counsel for Mother, without the statutory findings required for grandparent visitation, and without mentioning Mother's fundamental right to parent her son.

Around one month before Mother moved back to Kansas in January 2010, she moved to terminate the agreement or modify it to allow Mother sole custody of T.M.M.H. The district court held an evidentiary hearing. Grandmother submitted a letter from T.M.M.H.'s therapist expressing concern about T.M.M.H.'s separation from Grandmother. The district court denied Mother's motion to take T.M.M.H. to Colorado and denied her motion to terminate the parenting plan. Mother did not appeal this decision but later proposed a new parenting plan—the third parenting agreement.

4 That third agreement, captioned "Parenting Plan, 1st Amendment to Mediated Agreement," was signed in October 2010. Mother was not represented by counsel, and Grandmother's counsel was not involved—the agreement was drafted by a mediator and case manager. It repeatedly refers to reintegration of T.M.M.H. with his Mother and clearly shows that it was intended to be temporary, not permanent. For example, its "residential custody provision" stated:

"[T.M.M.H.] will continue living primarily with [Grandmother] as he is re- integrated into [Mother's] home. The full reintegration into [Mother's] home is hoped to be complete within one year of this agreement. We agree that at the year point in time, we will discuss whether [T.M.M.H.] is reintegrated and decide what the best living arrangement for him then is. ....

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