In the Interest of Greene

909 A.2d 988, 2006 WL 3313751
CourtDelaware Family Court
DecidedSeptember 21, 2006
DocketNos. CS05-03050, CS03-06749
StatusPublished

This text of 909 A.2d 988 (In the Interest of Greene) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Delaware Family Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Interest of Greene, 909 A.2d 988, 2006 WL 3313751 (Del. Super. Ct. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

HENRIKSEN, J.

Pending for decision by the Court are two Petitions for Visitation concerning the above-named minor children. One of the petitions was brought by the children’s 28-year-old mother, Melissa Greene. Melissa [989]*989Greene (mother) was found guilty in December 2005 of Murder By Abuse or Neglect for having placed her approximately one-hour-old newborn baby on the doorstep of her alleged paramour on January 28, 2003. She was convicted and sentenced in the Superior Court for 40 years at Level 5, the first 15 years of which are a mandatory term of incarceration. Under the terms of her December 2005 Sentencing Order, she was also required to have no contact with John Davidson, the alleged father of the child, be evaluated for substance abuse and follow-up recommendations for counseling, testing, and treatment, and be evaluated for emotional and psychological problems with follow-up treatment and counseling.

The children’s 52-year-old maternal grandmother, Margaret Hayes (grandmother), had also filed a Petition seeking grandparent visitation.

Mother seeks limited visitation, supervised at the corrections facility, consisting of one hour per month, which may be expanded over time with mother’s participation in the Reach Program. The Reach Program is designed to facilitate visitation and contact between incarcerated mothers and their children. Grandmother seeks limited visitation. She would like to be able to facilitate the transportation of the children to and from the prison for mother’s visitation with the children. If the Court does not allow mother to have visitation, grandmother then seeks a certain amount of limited contact in her own right.

The children had been in both mother and father’s care until May 16, 2003, when an Ex Parte Emergency Order was rendered from this Court awarding temporary custody of the children to the Division of Family Services (DFS). Testimony at the present hearing indicated the children were first placed by DFS on that date into the care of their maternal grandmother, Ms. Hayes. However, after a search of DFS records, DFS determined that Ms. Hayes had at one time been substantiated for abuse of a child when she struck her daughter, Anna, across the face, leaving a mark from her ring approximately the size of a nickel around Anna’s mouth. DFS records also indicated that Ms. Hayes’ then husband, Richard Hayes, had been substantiated for sexual abuse of their daughter Anna. Once this information was discovered, DFS immediately removed the children from maternal grandmother’s care and placed them into a foster home where they remained for a brief time until a preliminary protective hearing was held before this Court on June 13, 2003. The Court’s Dependency Neglect hearing of June 13, 2003 resulted in an Order returning the children to father’s care and providing that any contact between the children and mother would only be supervised at the visitation center, or supervised in the home of the children’s paternal grandmother, Audrey Norman, by the children’s father or Ms. Norman. The Court’s June 13, 2003 Dependency Order is the only Order that the Court has issued concerning these children as between mother and father.

On February 11, 2006, mother filed a Petition seeking to modify her visitation rights. Maternal grandmother filed her Petition for Visitation on November 23, 2005.

On March 9, 2005, the Superior Court amended mother’s bond requirements to provide that she was to have no contact with father or -with Tracy Stone, a friend of mother’s who helped her deliver the abandoned infant to the doorstep of the infant’s purported father.

In arriving at its decision, the ■ Court considered the testimony of each of the parties, as well as Edith Gaston, a friend of maternal grandmother’s who recalled [990]*990maternal grandmother’s considerable involvement with the children in their soccer league; Kelly Hankins, who had observed a considerable amount of positive interaction between maternal grandmother and the children in soccer play and at maternal grandmother’s home; Stuart Johnson, the children’s therapist from People’s Place; and Beverly Ellis, the DFS investigator who was involved in the removal of the children on May 16, 2003. The Court also interviewed the children in separate, private, recorded conversations.

FACTS

Based upon the testimony heard by the Court, the Court has no doubt that maternal grandmother was heavily and particularly involved in the children’s lives from the moment of their birth until October 30, 2004 when father informed her she was to have no further contact with the children. Since maternal grandmother had posted mother’s bond and mother was living with maternal grandmother, maternal grandmother indicated that she believed she might jeopardize her daughter’s bond if she pursued contact with her grandchildren at that time.

Maternal grandmother is also the mother of now 18-year-old Anna and 17-year-old Toby, as well as the stepmother of 23-year-old Jamie, who also has a child, nine-year-old Adam. Both Anna and Toby were involved in soccer. Maternal grandmother always took Elizabeth and Hannah to Anna and Toby’s soccer games and practices, and maternal grandmother eventually formed a special soccer league for children under four years of age so that Elizabeth and Hannah could be involved in soccer. Maternal grandmother was present for the children’s births, saw them on an almost daily basis, and for a period of time, served as the children’s caretaker while the parents worked.

Edith Gaston, a friend of maternal grandmother’s and officer and coach of the soccer league, testified to the positive interaction between maternal grandmother and these children, noting that maternal grandmother kept these children active and busy, and that the children loved and enjoyed their maternal grandmother. Ms. Gaston’s only comment as to mother was that she often saw her at soccer games, but that she saw maternal grandmother with the children more than mother. According to Ms. Gaston, father appeared occasionally at the soccer games.

Kelly Hankins, whose own child was in soccer, echoed the positive comments Ms. Gaston made about maternal grandmother’s interaction with the grandchildren, including after-game events which took place in grandmother’s home. Ms. Hankins described the children ás very loving. Ms. Hankins made little comment, if at all, on mother’s interaction with the children.

As noted, grandmother has not had any contact with her grandchildren since October 30, 2004, when father informed her that she was no longer invited to have contact. Approximately one year later, grandmother sent letters to father indicating that she wanted to be able to visit with her grandchildren. Grandmother then filed her Petition seeking visitation on November 23, 2005.

LAW AND REASONING

1. Grandmother’s Visitation

When the Court issued a Dependency Neglect Order on June 13, 2003, placing the children in father’s care with mother’s contact only allowed with supervision, the Court, without specifically stating it was issuing a sole custody Order, granted de facto sole custody to father. Following mother’s arrest on September 13, 2004, and father’s decision not to allow [991]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
909 A.2d 988, 2006 WL 3313751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-greene-delfamct-2006.