In re the Matter of: Matthew J. Covington v. Alyssa Eckstrom, and Eileen Eckstrom, Third Party Intervenor, Dale Covington, third party intervenors

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedJune 22, 2015
DocketA14-1262
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re the Matter of: Matthew J. Covington v. Alyssa Eckstrom, and Eileen Eckstrom, Third Party Intervenor, Dale Covington, third party intervenors (In re the Matter of: Matthew J. Covington v. Alyssa Eckstrom, and Eileen Eckstrom, Third Party Intervenor, Dale Covington, third party intervenors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Matter of: Matthew J. Covington v. Alyssa Eckstrom, and Eileen Eckstrom, Third Party Intervenor, Dale Covington, third party intervenors, (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

This opinion will be unpublished and may not be cited except as provided by Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A14-1262

In re the Matter of: Matthew J. Covington, Respondent,

vs.

Alyssa Eckstrom, Appellant,

and

Eileen Eckstrom, Third Party Intervenor,

Dale Covington, et al., third party intervenors, Respondents.

Filed June 22, 2015 Affirmed; motion denied Ross, Judge

Ramsey County District Court File Nos. 62-FA-13-1004 62-F8-07-050104

Matthew J. Covington, Tampa, Florida (pro se respondent)

Michael P. Boulette, Lindquist & Vennum, LLP, Minneapolis, Minnesota; and

Becky Owen, Binder Law Office, P.A., Minneapolis, Minnesota (for appellant)

Eileen Eckstrom, Roseville, Minnesota (pro se third party intervenor)

Jillian K. Duffy, Kimberly J. Robinson, Robinson Duffy, P.L.L.C., Minneapolis, Minnesota; and Erik F. Hansen, Burns & Hansen, P.A., Minneapolis, Minnesota (for third party intervenors, respondents, Dale and Linda Covington)

Barnett I. Rosenfield, Pamela S. Hoopes, Mid-Minnesota Legal Aid, Minnesota Disability Law Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota; and

Liselotte D. Kaiser, Jean Lastine, Central Minnesota Legal Services, Minneapolis, Minnesota (for amicus curiae)

Linda Gerr, St. Paul, Minnesota (Guardian ad Litem)

Considered and decided by Reilly, Presiding Judge; Ross, Judge; and Kirk, Judge.

UNPUBLISHED OPINION

ROSS, Judge

In this custody dispute over eight-year-old N.B., the district court’s custody order

granted sole legal and physical custody to paternal grandparents Dale and Linda

Covington and parenting time to mother Alyssa Eckstrom. Eckstrom argues on appeal

that clear and convincing evidence does not support the district court’s finding that the

reasons for placing N.B. in the Covingtons’ primary care override N.B.’s interest in a

day-to-day relationship with Eckstrom as her mother. She also argues that the district

court should have treated the Covingtons’ petition as a motion to modify custody, should

have given greater weight to particular facts, and should have assigned Eckstrom at least

25% parenting time. Because the evidence supports the district court’s finding that the

child faces physical and emotional danger in her mother’s care and because Eckstrom’s

other arguments do not support reversal, we affirm.

2 FACTS

Alyssa Eckstrom gave birth to N.B. in 2006. Eckstrom has been diagnosed with

severe cognitive disabilities, including mental retardation, with test scores indicating that

her intelligence quotient is lower than all but 1% of her age group. She did not

immediately become an independent adult at age 18; her mother formally continued to be

her guardian when Eckstrom reached adulthood. The probate court in the guardianship

proceedings found that Eckstrom “[l]acks sufficient understanding or capacity to make or

communicate responsible decisions concerning her person” and that she has an “inability

to meet her [own] needs for medical care, nutrition, clothing, safety, or shelter.”

Eckstrom continued living with her mother under her guardianship until 2010.

N.B. also has special needs. From birth she has endured an auditory neuropathic

condition that resulted in sensorineural hearing loss. N.B. uses cochlear implants. Even

with the implants N.B. has receptive and expressive language delays.

N.B.’s father, Matthew Covington, is not substantially part of this custody dispute.

The district court had granted him sole legal and physical custody of N.B. because of

Eckstrom’s disabilities, but Matthew left the child in his parents’ care and left the state in

2012. Matthew’s parents, Dale and Linda Covington, began primarily caring for N.B.

then. Even before Matthew left, the district court in 2009 had granted Eckstrom parenting

time only when she was in the presence of a mature adult approved by Matthew’s

parents.

Only days after the district court put N.B. primarily in the care of the Covingtons

in 2009, Eckstrom gave birth to her second daughter, K.C. K.C., like her older sister, has

3 special needs. Eckstrom successfully petitioned to be restored to capacity the following

year, and she began living independently of her mother, albeit dependent on government

assistance.

The Covingtons moved to Cannon Falls in October 2010. The move facilitated

N.B.’s medical treatment at the Mayo Clinic, and the Covingtons helped her obtain

cochlear implants. The 2010 move increased the distance between N.B. and Eckstrom,

who lived in Roseville and who lacked a driver’s license. Eckstrom rarely saw N.B.

Eckstrom’s mother, Eileen, intervened in the custody litigation in 2012. Before

Matthew left town, the district court entered an order in February 2012 based on a

stipulation between Matthew, Eckstrom, and Eckstrom’s mother, granting Eckstrom

unsupervised parenting time. Adopting a later stipulation between the same parties, the

district court entered an order in March 2013 granting Eckstrom and Matthew joint legal

and physical custody of N.B. and placing N.B. with Eckstrom. This was despite the fact

that Matthew had already moved away, and the Covingtons, who had been N.B.’s

primary caregivers, were not provided any notice about the agreement and order. The

Covingtons learned of it only when police arrived to their home with Eckstrom to remove

N.B. from them immediately. The move prevented N.B. from finishing the school year in

Cannon Falls.

The Covingtons immediately petitioned for third-party custody. The district court

appointed a guardian ad litem for N.B., required Eckstrom to be assessed for her

“adaptive functioning,” and ordered her and the Covingtons to undergo parenting

4 assessments. The guardian ad litem and two evaluators submitted reports to the district

court. A referee held a two-day evidentiary hearing in April and May 2014.

The district court, through the referee, made its custody decision after finding that

evidence provided by a psychologist and N.B.’s guardian ad litem proved “by clear and

convincing evidence that placing the minor child with the Covingtons takes priority over

preserving the day to day parent child relationship between [Eckstrom] and the minor

child because of the presence of physical or emotional endangerment to the minor child.”

The court also made a finding that “due to [Eckstrom’s] developmental difficulties, [she]

is unable to provide appropriate care and protection for the minor child.” The district

court then found by a preponderance of the evidence that it is in N.B.’s best interests to

be in the Covingtons’ custody. It ordered the Covingtons immediately to serve as N.B.’s

sole legal and physical custodians, subject to Eckstrom’s parenting time.

Eckstrom appeals.

DECISION

Eckstrom offers four reasons to reverse the district court’s custody decision. She

argues that the Covingtons did not prove that N.B. was subject to physical or emotional

danger in her care. She argues that the district court failed to make findings required by

the third-party custody statute. She argues the district court misapplied the law by failing

to require the Covingtons to meet the statutory requirements for modification of a prior

custody order. And she argues that the district court failed to apply the statutory

presumption that she is entitled to at least 25% parenting time.

5 I

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In re the Matter of: Matthew J. Covington v. Alyssa Eckstrom, and Eileen Eckstrom, Third Party Intervenor, Dale Covington, third party intervenors, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-matter-of-matthew-j-covington-v-alyssa-eckstrom-and-eileen-minnctapp-2015.