In Re: Lillian F. W.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 30, 2013
DocketM2012-01450-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of In Re: Lillian F. W. (In Re: Lillian F. W.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re: Lillian F. W., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE May 8, 2013 Session

IN RE: LILLIAN F. W.

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Warren County No. 4147 Ben H. Cantrell, Sr. Judge

No. M2012-01450-COA-R3-CV - Filed September 30, 2013

This is an appeal from orders entered by the Circuit Court in an appeal from a juvenile court’s judgment finding a child dependent and neglected and establishing custody and visitation. These proceedings are part of a custody struggle between the biological father of the child, who lives in California, and her maternal grandparents, who live in Tennessee. Both parties have participated in proceedings in the courts of Tennessee and California. Although the substantive orders of the two courts were very similar, each of the parties decided at some point not to follow the orders of the court in the state of the other party’s residence, resulting in conflicting orders of custody and a jurisdictional battle in which both parties have invoked the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Enforcement Act. We have determined that the only type of subject matter jurisdiction at issue here is the temporary, emergency jurisdiction that the juvenile court exercised to determine Grandparents’ petition for dependency and neglect.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Vacated in Part and Affirmed in Part

P ATRICIA J. C OTTRELL, P.J., M.S., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which F RANK G. C LEMENT, J R. and R ICHARD H. D INKINS, JJ., joined.

Cindy H. Morgan, Sparta, Tennessee, Connie Reguli, Brentwood, Tennessee, for the appellant, Tony N.

Luke Austin Evans, Heather Graves Parker, Murfreesboro, Tennessee for the appellees, Sam W. and Melinda W. OPINION

I. A P ETITION IN C ALIFORNIA

The child at the center of this case, Lillian F.W., was born in Warren County Tennessee on May 29, 2008, to Graelynn W. (“Mother”). Tony N. (“Father”) was residing in California at the time of the child’s birth, and he continues to live there.

Mother filed a petition in the California court on January 13, 2009, to establish parentage and for child support. The petition and summons indicated that Mother and Father were both residents of California and that the action was brought in that court because the child “resides or is found in the county.” Mother signed at the bottom of the document “under penalty of perjury.”

There was a hearing in the California court almost exactly a year later. Both Mother and Father appeared at the hearing on January 14, 2010. The parties had appeared before that court on August 17, 2009, where they signed “ in the court” a Stipulation and Order, which apparently dealt with a partial child custody investigation.

The court’s “Minute Order” from the January 14, 2010, hearing (again taking place one year after the filing of Mother’s petition), indicates that the parties stipulated in the hearing that a child custody investigation had taken place, and the report was submitted into evidence. They also stipulated that Father was the father of Lillian and that Father would have specified monitored visitations in Tennessee. The court continued the matter for a followup or review hearing, but we can find no order from a hearing on the date scheduled.

The January 14, 2010, hearing resulted in a judgment filed April 22, 2010. The court’s order established Father’s paternity and adopted the parties’ stipulation as to visitation, but added some details and also allowed Father the opportunity for increased and unmonitored visitation in Tennessee, progressing to overnight visitation. The court ordered the parents to set up webcams and allowed visitation through those devices. The court awarded Mother sole physical custody and also sole temporary legal custody, “without prejudice to Father’s rights,” until a review hearing.

The April 2010 order indicated that Mother was experiencing some legal problems in Tennessee, where she was living at the time. The order stated, “Mother will continue to reside with her parents until her current DUI charge is resolved in court. Should mother be found guilty, then she and the minor child will continue to live with the child’s maternal grandparents until she has completed her sentencing and probation.”

-2- II. M OTHER’S D EATH AND R ECOURSE TO T ENNESSEE C OURT

On May 5, 2010, Mother died unexpectedly in Tennessee. A few days later, on May 11, 2010, Father filed a Petition for Child Custody in the Juvenile Court of Warren County, Tennessee. He named as respondents Mother’s parents Sam and Melinda W. (“Grandparents”) who had been taking care of the child both before and after Mother’s death. There was no action taken on Father’s Tennessee petition for over a year.

Later, Father would assert that his petition was filed seeking the Tennessee court to exercise its emergency jurisdiction only.1 Meanwhile, custody proceedings continued in the California court.

III. F URTHER C ALIFORNIA P ROCEEDINGS

Father filed a notification in the California court on May 13, 2010, that he would appear in that court to seek an order for custody of the child and to remove her from Tennessee to California. On June 11, 2010, Grandparents went to California and filed a petition for joinder in the California proceedings. They stated that except for very limited periods, the child had resided with them for her entire life, that they had provided for all her physical, emotional and financial needs, and that the child had experienced very limited contact with Father. They also asserted that it would be in the child’s best interest for them to be granted custody and that it would be detrimental for her to be placed in Father’s custody. The California court granted the motion for joinder.

The parties thereafter stipulated that David Mann, Ph.D., a California psychologist, would be appointed “to evaluate custody and visitation.” The parties were ordered to contact Dr. Mann and cooperate with him. A checked box on a standard form attached to a subsequent order setting out the schedule for Dr. Mann’s evaluations indicates that the California court found California to be the child’s home state. Grandparents subsequently took the child to California several times for two to three days at a time to allow Dr. Mann to conduct his evaluations. Dr. Mann filed a report in the California court, which adopted his recommendations in an order dated May 19, 2011.

In accordance with Dr. Mann’s recommendations, the court determined that the child should remain in Grandparents’ custody, but that after the completion of parenting classes and individual counseling, Father would be allowed to exercise visitation in California as well as in Tennessee. The court also allowed the frequent webcam visits between Father and

1 He would also later assert that the parties agreed to dismiss this action, but that Grandparents changed their minds.

-3- child to continue. A hearing the following month resulted in an order dated July 20, 2011, that reiterated the same provisions, but called for specific visitation to begin between Father and child in California starting that same month.

In August of 2011, Father appeared in the California court and asserted that Grandparents had not sent the child to California for the ordered visitation. Grandparents were not present in court at that time. The court then declared that Grandparents were not in compliance with its visitation order, and it granted Father sole legal and physical custody of the child. Grandparents were ordered to deliver the child to the Nashville airport on September 11, 2011.

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In Re: Lillian F. W., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-lillian-f-w-tennctapp-2013.