In re V.A.H.

972 So. 2d 479
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 27, 2007
DocketNo. 07-CA-472
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 972 So. 2d 479 (In re V.A.H.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re V.A.H., 972 So. 2d 479 (La. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

FREDERICKA HOMBERG WICKER, Judge.

I ¿This is an appeal by the biological father of V.A.H. from a stepfather adoption granted by the juvenile court based on a petition for intra-family adoption filed by the child’s biological mother and her present husband. For reasons that follow, we affirm.

The record shows that V.A.H. was born in November, 2001 in Aabama to S.H. (mother) and C.H. (father). The couple were divorced on April 25, 2003. At the time of the Aabama divorce, the couple agreed to joint custody of V.A.H. with the mother as the custodial parent. The agreement also provided for visitation rights of the father, and child support and medical expenses to be paid by the father.

In October of 2004, the father was convicted on charges of child pornography and incarcerated in federal prison. About one year later on October |326, 2005, the Aa-bama court rendered an “Order of Modification” in which the mother was awarded sole and exclusive custody and control of Y.A.H. Further, all visitation and secondary placement rights of the child’s father were terminated with that order.

The “Order of Modification” resulted from an ongoing Aabama criminal investigation into whether C.H. molested V.A.H. in August or September, 2004 before his federal incarceration. At the time of the 2007 hearing in Jefferson Parish Juvenile Court, the molestation case was still pending before the Aabama Grand Jury.

In May of 2005 before the father’s rights were terminated, the Aabama court granted grandparent visitation to V.A.H.’s parental grandparents. That order also provided that the grandparents pay child support in the amount of $238.00 per month, to be credited to the child support obligation of the child’s father.

The mother testified that the Aabama sexual molestation charge came after the child returned from a visit with her father in 2004 before he went to prison. When the child gave her mother and her doctor information that suggested she had been sexually abused by the father on a visit, all visits between the child and her father and paternal grandparents were suspended. Visits between the child and the grandparents resumed in May of 2005, by the court order after the father’s incarceration.

The father did not comment on the criminal charges for sexual molestation of the child except to say that the grand jury proceedings were set and there should be a resolution on that issue soon.

[481]*481After the father’s incarceration in 2004, the child and her mother relocated to Louisiana. Both the judgment of divorce and the modification order were made executo-ry in Jefferson Parish, Louisiana on September 12, 2006. The child’s | ¿mother married S.M. (stepfather) on April 5, 2006, and the petition for intra-family adoption at issue herein was filed on December 12, 2006.

At the hearing on the petition, the mother testified that the child’s father had had no contact with his daughter for two years and seven months before the hearing, which took place in March of 2007. She testified that during the period between her separation from C.H. in September of 2003, and his incarceration in October, 2004, C.H. was sporadic, inconsistent, lackadaisical and complacent in his visitation. He cancelled or rescheduled visits when his parents were out of town, or when he had no friend to accompany him. He was late picking the child up and dropping her off and negligent in his care for V.A.H., such as taking her to a water park immediately after she had tubes implanted in her ears.

On his last Father’s Day visit in 2004, the father overslept and forgot to pick up his daughter for a promised breakfast outing. This caused V.A.H. to become very upset and begin to cry. The father can-celled his holiday visitation at the last moment, causing the mother, who had arranged to work since her daughter would be with the other parent, to have to make arrangements with her parents while she worked. When the father overslept on Mother’s Day and did not return V.A.H. for a planned event with the mother’s family, his mother handled the matter, returning the child hours late and unbathed.

The mother testified that during the period between his incarceration in October, 2005 and the “Order of Modification” which was signed about one year later in October, 2005, the father did not communicate with the child. There was no court order to prevent him from contacting the child by way of letter or card during that period.

C.H. was released from federal prison about four months before the March, 2007 adoption hearing. During this period he did not petition the court for | ¡¡visitation. He has had no contact with his daughter for two years and seven months before the hearing.

The mother further testified that she received no child support from the time the father was incarcerated in October, 2004 until the Alabama court issued an order in May, 2005 granting the paternal grandparents visitation rights and ordering them to pay child support of $238.00 per month. The paternal grandparents eventually paid the back due child support, rendering it current.

The mother assumed that it was the grandparents’ funds that were used to pay this obligation. However, the paternal grandmother, R.H., testified that the father had made financial arrangements to meet his child support obligation before he was incarcerated. She testified that she and her husband withheld the funds because they were not permitted to see their granddaughter until the Alabama court granted them visitation after the father’s incarceration. Although R.H. testified that she and her husband used the father’s funds to pay the child support, there is no documentation in the record to corroborate that testimony.

The mother testified that the father still owed $868.58 in medical bills at the time of the hearing. She testified that she notified the father of the amount still due in April, 2006, but had not received payment. [482]*482The father acknowledged that he received the bills, but has not paid them.

After the May, 2005 Alabama order instituting grandparent visitation, the child began to see her paternal grandparents again. The child’s mother and stepfather testified that these visits are detrimental to the child and that she is in counseling as a result. The mother testified that the child is often upset after visits with her grandparents. The stepfather testified that upon returning from grandparent visitation, the child has told him that it is his fault that her Daddy is in jail and that her Daddy is in jail because her Mommy put him there. He also |fitestified that the child comes home upset because her grandparents tell her she can’t see her Daddy because her Mommy won’t let her, and that she can five with them if she wants to do so.

According to the mother’s testimony she and the child have been living with the stepfather since August of 2005. Both the mother and the stepfather are gainfully employed and are financially capable of providing for the child. Further, they have subsequently married and are living as a family unit. In her testimony, the mother described the relationship between her husband and daughter as that of father and child. They enjoy going to movies, playgrounds and other activities, including a favorite of grocery shopping together.

The stepfather explained that he has a good father-daughter relationship with the child and they do many activities together such as going to the park, McDonald’s play land and the grocery store.

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Related

Applying for Intrafamily Adoption of L.M.C.
39 So. 3d 643 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2010)
In Re Cem
31 So. 3d 1138 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2010)
In Re VAH
972 So. 2d 479 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2007)

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972 So. 2d 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-vah-lactapp-2007.