In re Parentage of C.R.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedSeptember 30, 2022
Docket124696
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re Parentage of C.R. (In re Parentage of C.R.) 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 Parentage of C.R., (kanctapp 2022).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 124,696

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

In the Matter of the Parentage of C.R.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Atchison District Court; MARTIN J. ASHER, judge. Opinion filed September 30, 2022. Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded with directions.

Joseph A. Desch, of Law Office of Joseph A. Desch, of Topeka, for appellant P.R.

John W. Fresh, of Farris, Fresh & Werring Law Offices, of Atchison, for appellee/intervenor T.K.

Before GREEN, P.J., ISHERWOOD and COBLE, JJ.

PER CURIAM: This is a dispute between two presumed fathers seeking to be declared the legal father of C.R., a child born in 2016. Appellant P.R. was incarcerated when C.R. was conceived and born but was released within a few months after C.R.'s birth. Mother, O.B., knowingly and voluntarily named P.R. on C.R.'s birth certificate and gave him P.R.'s last name, and P.R. established a parental relationship with the child. P.R. is also the natural and legal father of two older children he shares with O.B. During a hearing in 2017, despite P.R. acknowledging on the record that he was not C.R.'s biological father, the district court determined P.R. to be C.R.'s legal father because of their established relationship, the intention of O.B. regarding that relationship, and that O.B. and all the children lived with P.R.'s parents for a period including the time surrounding C.R.'s birth.

P.R. continued in his role as C.R.'s father for almost three years, until another man, J.P., intervened in the action. J.P. claimed to be C.R.'s known biological father, with 1 genetic testing to prove as much, and although he had intermittent contact with C.R. from shortly after his birth to the date of intervention, J.P. contended he had received no notice of the earlier paternity proceeding. The district court set aside its earlier order, conducted a second paternity hearing, and determined J.P. to be C.R.'s legal father. P.R. appeals.

We find the district court was correct to set aside its initial paternity order, albeit for the wrong reasons. The first paternity order was void for lack of subject matter jurisdiction because J.P. as the known, presumed biological father of C.R. was not made a party to the paternity action. See K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 23-2211(a). Because the initial paternity order was void, the district court was then faced with competing presumptions of paternity between P.R. and J.P.

After review of the record, we find the district court's determination of J.P.'s paternity was an abuse of discretion because it failed to properly employ the standard set forth in K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 23-2208(c) to the competing presumptions, and did not fully apply the appropriate legal standard to the facts presented. For these reasons, although we affirm the district court's setting aside of the initial paternity order to the extent the void order has no force and effect, we reverse the district court's decision to designate J.P. the legal father of C.R. and remand this matter for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

This paternity matter involves three claimed parents and their separate extended families over a period of more than four years. As a result, only the facts necessary to the resolution of this matter are recited herein. But suffice it to say, the interactions between all parties—children, parents, and grandparents—are in no way comprehensively documented in this snapshot of the parties' interactions.

2 Baby C.R. was born to O.B. in June 2016. O.B. was not married at the time of C.R.'s birth, but she had an ongoing relationship with P.R., including having two prior children with him. The older two children are not subjects of this appeal. O.B. and the older children were residing with P.R.'s parents (E.R. and J.R.) at the time of her brief relationship with J.P. and when C.R. was born, because P.R. was incarcerated. P.R. is not the biological father of C.R. and given O.B.'s relationship with J.P., it was known that J.P. was the biological father of C.R. In fact, J.P.'s mother established a relationship with the child within two months of C.R.'s birth.

After P.R.'s release in approximately October 2016, he assumed the role of C.R.'s father. On May 15, 2017, the district court named P.R. as legal father of C.R. during a hearing on a petition filed by O.B. The district court docket reflects service of the paternity petition only on P.R. and no other person. Both O.B. and P.R. were present at this initial hearing. O.B.'s counsel and the district court suggested the hearing was a "Ross hearing" pursuant to In re Marriage of Ross, 245 Kan. 591, 783 P.2d 331 (1989). The district court explained the hearing was to determine what contacts P.R. had with the child to determine whether or not there should be genetic testing. After hearing formal witness testimony from O.B. and discussion with P.R., who appeared without counsel, the district court found that "even though biologically [P.R. was] not the father, [P.R. was] going to be legally treated as the father." The district court entered a journal entry declaring P.R. to be the father of C.R.

Days thereafter, the district court entered an order acknowledging that although P.R. and O.B. were residing together at that time, O.B. would have primary residential custody of all three children. The court ordered P.R. to have parenting time but did not order child support because the parties were currently living together.

The relationship between O.B. and P.R. was rocky, at best. Within a few months of P.R.'s paternity determination, O.B. and P.R. separated, and the district court ordered

3 P.R. to show cause why he failed to comply with the district court's orders regarding visitation of C.R. by not returning him at the conclusion of a visit. A few months later, P.R.'s parents, E.R. and J.R., were awarded grandparent visitation with C.R. after the district court acknowledged not only their substantial relationship with C.R., but their physical custody and legal guardianship of C.R.'s two older siblings. P.R. was then incarcerated from October 2017 through March 2018.

Upon his release, P.R. quickly filed a motion to enforce his parenting time. Two weeks later, O.B. filed a motion to suspend P.R.'s parenting time, alleging he was not fulfilling his obligations as a father and lacked a bond with C.R. "due to [P.R.'s] willful and intentional criminal acts that lead to his repeated incarceration." Within two days, E.R. and J.R. filed a motion to enforce their grandparent visitation, claiming O.B. was not complying with the prior district court order. Addressing the pending motions, the court suspended P.R.'s visitation with C.R., with the exception that P.R. could have time with all three children at his parents' home when E.R. and J.R. were exercising their grandparent visitation. The district court noted on the record that because P.R. was living with his parents, he could "consolidat[e] [his] visitation in with their visitation" and this arrangement would permit P.R. to resolve a pending criminal case.

Two weeks after O.B. filed her motion to suspend P.R.'s parenting time, in May 2018—nearly two years after C.R.'s birth—J.P. filed his first motion to intervene as C.R.'s biological father. O.B. did not oppose the motion and the district court granted it. J.P.

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