In Re the Adoption of William Albert B.

607 S.E.2d 531, 216 W. Va. 425, 2004 W. Va. LEXIS 216
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 2004
Docket31728
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 607 S.E.2d 531 (In Re the Adoption of William Albert B.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Adoption of William Albert B., 607 S.E.2d 531, 216 W. Va. 425, 2004 W. Va. LEXIS 216 (W. Va. 2004).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

In this appeal from the Circuit Court of Tyler County, we are asked to review orders holding that a father had abandoned his three children, and allowing those children to be adopted by their maternal grandparents.

As set forth below, we reverse the circuit court’s orders.

I.

This ease presents a narrow question of fact that, as a result of forum shopping, is posited squarely between two courts with overlapping and/or conflicting jurisdiction. The consequence is that the interests of three children have been crushed in between their parents and their grandparents, who are competing for the custody and control of those children in different forums.

The question of fact before the Court concerns whether or not a father abandoned his three children, such that his parental rights may be terminated and the children may be adopted by their maternal grandparents. The question of fact arises, however, as a result of an adoption action filed by the maternal grandparents in the Circuit Court of Tyler County, while at the same time the children were the subject of a pending custody dispute in a divorce action between their parents filed in the Family Court of Ritchie County.

The appellant, Clyde Dewayne B., and his former wife, Sarah Jo M., are the parents of three children: William Albert B., Katy Ann B., and Sierra Nicole B. 1 They were divorced by an order entered on July 18, 2000, by the Family Court of Ritchie County, and the family court order adopted a parenting plan agreed to by the appellant and his former wife. On paper, the parenting plan allowed the children to reside primarily with Sarah Jo M., while the appellant was to have par- *427 entíng time with his children every weekend and on alternating holidays.

In reality, it appears that the children resided only occasionally with their mother, but spent much of their time in Tyler County residing with their maternal grandparents, appellees Charles B. and Patricia B. The appellant asserts he was able to spend weekends with his children in 2000 and 2001, but by late 2001 he asserts that the appellees routinely prevented the appellant from seeing his children.

On January 3, 2002, the appellant plead guilty to second-offense driving under the influence and driving without a license suspended for driving under the influence, and was sentenced to two six-month concurrent sentences in the North Central Regional Jail. While he was incarcerated, the appellant contends he tried to correspond with his children, who were residing with their appellee maternal grandparents. However, on March 2, 2002, he received a letter from appellee Patricia B. telling the appellant:

“Don’t write to them again. I won’t give it to them so you’re wasting your time and money.... I do all the work of raising these kids and you & yours think you should get them on the weekends to play with and then send back? I don’t think so.... What makes you think that I am going to let you or your family have anything to do with them[?]”

In April 2002, the appellant filed a motion seeking work release. The motion was granted, and the appellant worked for a local roofing company during the remainder of his term in jail. Pursuant to the family court’s order, the appellant’s child support obligation was withheld from the appellant’s paycheck and forwarded to Sarah Jo. M. Unfortunately, it appears that Sarah Jo. M. never forwarded the child support payments on to the appellees.

At the same time, the appellees filed a petition with the Family Court of Tyler County seeking an order allocating custodial responsibility of the children to the appellees. In the petition, the appellees alleged that the children had been abandoned by the appellant and Sarah Jo M., had been abused and neglected, and had witnessed abuse between their parents. In the pleading, the appellees claimed that they were unaware of any proceeding in any other jurisdiction regarding the custody of the appellant’s children — despite the fact that a divorce and custody action involving the appellant and the appel-lees’ daughter remained pending before the Family Court of Ritchie County. Three days after the appellant was released from incarceration, on May 24, 2002, the appellant and Sarah Jo. M. filed a notarized statement with the Family Court of Tyler County asking that the court enforce the existing parenting plan that had been approved by the Family Court of Ritchie County.

On June 19, 2002, the Family Court of Tyler County entered an order dismissing the appellees’ petition for lack of jurisdiction and venue. The court concluded that the pleading filed by the appellees sounded in abuse and neglect, matters that were solely within the jurisdiction of the circuit courts, not the family courts. Further, the court ruled that any issues involving the custody of the children should be resolved in the Family Court of Ritchie County.

That same day, the appellees filed the instant case, a petition to adopt the appellant’s three children, in the Circuit Court of Tyler County. As grounds for the petition, the appellees asserted that the appellant and Sarah Jo M. had abandoned the children. On June 19, 2002, the circuit court entered an order giving the appellees temporary custody of the children pending a final hearing.

Subsequent to the filing of the petition, the children’s mother, Sarah Jo M., signed a “consent to adopt” that was filed with the circuit court. In this document, Sarah Jo M. “voluntarily and unequivocally” allowed the appellees to adopt her children, and forever relinquished and terminated all of her parental rights and obligations regarding the children. However, the document goes on to state “[tjhat this consent is conditional and effective when and if the parental rights of [appellant] Clyde [B.] are terminated by the Court,” and that the consent could be revoked if the circuit court did not terminate the appellant’s parental rights or the appel-lees withdrew their adoption petition.

*428 The record suggests that over the next year, proceedings were conducted by both the Circuit Court of Tyler County and the Family Court of Ritchie County, proceedings that resulted in competing orders. For one, both courts appear to have appointed guardians ad litem, for the children. Further, contrary to the circuit court’s order, the family court issued an order on May 22, 2003, giving temporary legal and physical custody of the children to the appellant. The appel-lees responded to the family court’s order by filing a motion for an injunction in the circuit court to enjoin the family court’s order; the circuit court refused to issue an injunction, citing a lack of jurisdiction.

Hearings were conducted on the adoption petition by the circuit court in June 2003, and orders were issued on September 4 and September 17, 2003. In those orders, the circuit court determined after an inquiry “into the totality of the circumstances” that the appellant had abandoned his children.

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Bluebook (online)
607 S.E.2d 531, 216 W. Va. 425, 2004 W. Va. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-adoption-of-william-albert-b-wva-2004.