In re M. C. J.

523 S.E.2d 6, 271 Ga. 546
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 18, 1999
DocketS99G0742
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 523 S.E.2d 6 (In re M. C. J.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re M. C. J., 523 S.E.2d 6, 271 Ga. 546 (Ga. 1999).

Opinion

Benham, Chief Justice.

This appeal concerns the proper forum for an action in which one parent seeks termination of the parental rights of the other parent by means of a deprivation petition. Appellant, the mother of two children, filed an action in juvenile court under OCGA § 15-11-80 et seq. to terminate the parental rights of the children’s biological father, appellee, to whom she had never been married and who had never legitimated the children. The children have been in the sole physical custody of their mother since birth. She based her petition for termination of appellee’s parental rights on an allegation that the children had been deprived because of misconduct or inability of the father who is currently serving a 40-year prison sentence. See OCGA § 15-11-81 (b) (4) (A) (i). The juvenile court granted the petition and terminated appellee’s parental rights. On appeal to the Court of Appeals, appellee and the guardian ad litem appointed to represent the inter[547]*547ests of the children asserted that the juvenile court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the petition. The Court of Appeals agreed, citing Lewis v. Winzenreid, 263 Ga. 459 (435 SE2d 602) (1993), for the proposition that juvenile courts do not have jurisdiction over deprivation proceedings brought between parents to obtain custody, and In the Interest of W W. W., 213 Ga. App. 732 (445 SE2d 832) (1994), which holds that when a deprivation action is between parents, it is prima facie a custody matter. In the Interest ofM. C. J., 236 Ga. App. 225 (1) (511 SE2d 533) (1999). Accordingly , the Court of Appeals held that such cases must be filed in the superior court, which must then transfer the matter to juvenile court if it determines that the case is an actual deprivation case rather than a custody case. Id. We granted appellant’s petition for certiorari to consider the correctness of the holdings stated above. Concluding that the Court of Appeals has misinterpreted this Court’s holding in Lewis v. Winzenreid, supra, we reverse its judgment.

In Lewis, a non-custodial parent refused to return her child after a visit, and filed a deprivation petition in juvenile court seeking to have custody assigned to her. After the juvenile court found the child deprived and awarded custody to the petitioner, the original custodial parent filed a habeas corpus petition in superior court seeking return of the child. The superior court ordered the child returned to the original custodial parent, and this Court affirmed, holding that because the deprivation petition did not allege present deprivation, the action was not a true deprivation action, and the juvenile court therefore lacked subject matter jurisdiction. Since the lack of subject matter jurisdiction rendered the juvenile court’s judgment void, this Court held that the superior court properly refused to give effect to that judgment. In the course of reaching that decision, the opinion in Lewis addressed the issue of using a deprivation petition to initiate a custody dispute. The conclusion reached in Lewis was aptly summarized in a footnote in a subsequent case as follows:

[P]arental fight over custody of child that was brought as deprivation proceeding but did not make any valid allegations of deprivation as defined by [OCGA] § 15-11-2 (8) was not a valid deprivation proceeding within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court, but was a custody dispute that fell within the jurisdiction of the superior court.

Watkins v. Watkins, 266 Ga. 269 (fh. 7) (466 SE2d 860) (1996).

In the present case, the Court of Appeals stated in its opinion that this Court held in Lewis that “the juvenile courts of this state should not entertain deprivation proceedings brought between parents to obtain custody.” In the Interest ofM. C. J. at 225. In fact, what [548]*548this Court held in Lewis was that

[t]he juvenile courts of this state should not entertain deprivation proceedings brought by a non-custodial parent to obtain custody from a non-resident custodial parent, for there is a great likelihood in such a situation that the allegations of deprivation will be motivated less by concern for the child than by a desire to avoid the more stringent standard of proof applicable in a modification action in the superior court, wherein a non-custodial parent is required to establish a material change of circumstances substantially affecting the interest and welfare of the child arising since the original decree. [Cit.]

Lewis at 462-463. While we do not believe the “non-resident” status of the custodial parent was significant to the holding in Lewis, the fact that the parent bringing the action was a non-custodial parent was highly significant because the focus of the case was on the situation in which a non-custodial parent attempted to use a deprivation proceeding to wrest custody from the custodial parent. The parent who first brought a deprivation action in In the Interest of W. W. W., supra, was also a non-custodial parent bringing a deprivation action for the purpose of obtaining custody, and the Court of Appeals correctly applied Lewis to hold that the juvenile court was without subject matter jurisdiction of the case.

However, the Court of Appeals went further in W.W.W. and held that “Lewis concluded the juvenile court ‘should not entertain’ a deprivation petition filed by one parent against another. [Cit.] Lewis means that when the dispute is between parents, it is prima facie a custody matter.” The quoted language is not an accurate reading of Lewis. Our holding in that case should not be extended beyond what it says, that juvenile courts “should not entertain deprivation proceedings brought by a non-custodial parent to obtain custody from a . . . custodial parent.” (Emphasis supplied.) Id. at 462. To say that every deprivation action brought by a parent and naming the other parent as the source of the deprivation must be considered a custody case goes beyond the holding in Lewis. Under the long-established rule that “pleadings . . . are to be construed according to their substance and function and not merely as to their nomenclature, being always mindful to construe such documents in a manner compatible with the best interest of justice,” (Planet Ins. Co. v. Ferrell, 228 Ga. App. 264, 266 (491 SE2d 471) (1997)), each deprivation petition must be judged on its own merits. If it appears from an analysis of the pleading that it is actually a disguised custody matter, then it is outside the subject matter jurisdiction of the juvenile courts.

[549]*549Decided October 18, 1999. McNally, Edwards, Bailey & Lander, Thomas E McNally, Jr., Kenneth J. Lander, for appellant.

The Court of Appeals also held mill that “[t]he superior court may determine the proceeding is a ‘valid deprivation petition’ (Lewis, supra), and it can transfer the case to juvenile court as any court would do on finding it does not have jurisdiction.” Id. at 734. Consistently with that holding, the Court of Appeals held in In the Interest ofM. A., 218 Ga. App. 433, 434 (461 SE2d 600) (1995), that

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