In Re Parentage of CAMA

84 P.3d 1253
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 17, 2004
Docket51001-1-I
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 84 P.3d 1253 (In Re Parentage of CAMA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Parentage of CAMA, 84 P.3d 1253 (Wash. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

84 P.3d 1253 (2004)

In re PARENTAGE OF C.A.M.A., a minor child,
Christian E. Appel, Respondent Father, and
Christine S. Norton, Respondent Mother,
Herlinde Appel, Appellant Intervenor.

No. 51001-1-I.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 1.

February 17, 2004.

*1254 Charles Kenneth Wiggins, Kenneth Wendell Masters, Attorneys at Law, Bainbridge Island, WA, Mark Theodore Patterson, Snohomish County Bar President, Everett, WA, for Appellant Herlinde Appel.

David Anthony Kastle, Law Office of David Anthony Kastle, Lynnwood, WA, Jordan Gross, Yarmuth Wilsdon Calfo PLLC, Seattle, WA, for Respondent Christian E. Appel.

Christine S. Norton, Port Townsend, WA, for Respondent Pro Se.

William Berggren Collins, Narda D. Pierce, Attorney General's Office, for Amicus Curiae Washington State Attorney General.

Marc T. Christianson, Attorney at Law, Tacoma, WA, Jonathan Mark Weiss, Law Office of J. Mark Weiss PS, Seattle, WA, for Amicus Curiae Washington State Bar Assn.

GROSSE, J.

Washington's current third party visitation statute, RCW 26.09.240, requires a non-parent seeking visitation to show a significant relationship with the child by clear and convincing evidence, as necessary predicate, and allows a petition by a non-parent only in the circumstance that the child's parent or parents have already commenced an action for dissolution of marriage, legal separation, or modification of a parenting plan. These essential conditions in the current statute distinguish it from that at issue in prior cases, In re Custody of Smith and Troxel v. Granville.[1] Therefore, the current statute provides a constitutional basis for consideration of Herlinde Appel's petition for visitation of the granddaughter who had lived with her for the last five of her seven years. The trial court's conclusion to the contrary is reversed.

FACTS

C.A.[2] was born on December 25, 1992 in San Diego, California. She is the daughter of Christine Sue Norton and Christian Appel who ended their relationship after C.A.'s first birthday. She then lived with her father. After a year and a half, Christian and C.A. moved to his parents' home in Germany and they lived there for the next two years with Herlinde and Joachim Appel, who helped care for C.A. while her father worked.

*1255 In 1997, C.A., her grandparents, and Christian came to the United States to visit Christian's sister. At that time Christian informed his parents that he and C.A. would remain in the United States. His parents convinced him that it would be less disruptive for C.A. if she returned to Germany with them until Christian was suitably established.

In 1999, Christian informed his parents that he was engaged to be married and was coming to get C.A. to live with him and his new family in Snohomish, Washington. C.A. attended her father's July 2000 wedding with her grandparents. Afterwards, the grandparents left C.A. with Christian while they traveled to visit friends. In their absence, Christian filed a parentage action in Snohomish County Superior Court to establish his paternity of C.A. He located and served C.A.'s mother in Port Townsend, Washington, and obtained her agreement to a temporary parenting plan.

Christian's petition stated that C.A. currently resided with him. He did not mention C.A.'s grandparents, and he did not disclose his daughter's past residence in Germany with them. A court commissioner approved the temporary parenting plan on August 7, 2000. When C.A.'s grandparents returned to collect her for their return trip to Germany, Christian presented them with a court document giving him custody of C.A. Herlinde filed a petition in the Snohomish County Superior Court to intervene. After a lengthy series of appeals, including an unpublished decision, this court remanded the matter to the trial court.[3]

On remand, Herlinde petitioned for visitation, asserting that without court intervention she might not be allowed to see her granddaughter. Christian moved to dismiss the petition. The trial court specifically found that C.A.'s parents were not unfit and that under these facts there was no basis to grant visitation to the grandparents.[4] The court granted Christian's motion to dismiss Herlinde's petition. Herlinde now seeks review of that determination.

1. Third party visitation actions are governed by RCW 26.09.240.

The conflict in this case arises in the court's December 3, 2001 oral decision[5] wherein the trial court interpreted Smith and Troxel as holding that "parents enjoy... a fundamental, constitutional, substantive right to exercise in an unfettered manner their discretion as to who their child has contact with and who the child does not have contact with." But this is too broad a reading of those cases.

The current RCW 26.09.240, enacted in 1996, addresses a court's authority to award visitation to non-parents by permitting a non-parent to seek visitation with a child. The statute provides:

(1) A person other than a parent may petition the court for visitation with a child at any time or may intervene in a pending dissolution, legal separation, or modification of parenting plan proceeding. A person other than a parent may not petition for visitation under this section unless the child's parent or parents have commenced an action under this chapter.
(2) A petition for visitation with a child by a person other than a parent must be filed in the county in which the child resides.
(3) A petition for visitation or a motion to intervene pursuant to this section shall be dismissed unless the petitioner or intervenor can demonstrate by clear and convincing evidence that a significant relationship exists with the child with whom visitation is sought. If the petition or motion is dismissed for failure to establish the existence of a significant relationship, the petitioner or intervenor shall be ordered to pay reasonable attorney's fees and costs to the parent, parents, other custodian, or representative of the child who responds to this petition or motion.
*1256 (4) The court may order visitation between the petitioner or intervenor and the child between whom a significant relationship exists upon a finding supported by the evidence that the visitation is in the child's best interests.
(5)(a) Visitation with a grandparent shall be presumed to be in the child's best interests when a significant relationship has been shown to exist. This presumption may be rebutted by a preponderance of evidence showing that visitation would endanger the child's physical, mental, or emotional health.
(b) If the court finds that reasonable visitation by a grandparent would be in the child's best interest except for hostilities that exist between the grandparent and one or both of the parents or person with whom the child lives, the court may set the matter for mediation under RCW 26.09.015.
(6) The court may consider the following factors when making a determination of the child's best interests:

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Related

In re the Custody of A.C.
123 P.3d 121 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2005)
Appel v. Appel
154 Wash. 2d 52 (Washington Supreme Court, 2005)
In Re Parentage of CAMA
109 P.3d 405 (Washington Supreme Court, 2005)
Katare v. Katare
105 P.3d 44 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2005)
In re the Marriage of Katare
105 P.3d 44 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2004)
Rexach v. Ramírez Vélez
162 P.R. Dec. 130 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 2004)
Jennifer Marie Rexach v. Carlos Javier Ramirez Velez
2004 TSPR 97 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 2004)

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Bluebook (online)
84 P.3d 1253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-parentage-of-cama-washctapp-2004.