Jesse B. v. Tylee H.

883 N.W.2d 1, 293 Neb. 973
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 2016
DocketS-15-870
StatusPublished
Cited by88 cases

This text of 883 N.W.2d 1 (Jesse B. v. Tylee H.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jesse B. v. Tylee H., 883 N.W.2d 1, 293 Neb. 973 (Neb. 2016).

Opinion

Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/ 06/24/2016 09:09 AM CDT

- 973 - Nebraska A dvance Sheets 293 Nebraska R eports JESSE B. v. TYLEE H. Cite as 293 Neb. 973

Jesse B., individually and as Guardian and next friend of Jaelyn B., a minor child, appellant, v. Tylee H. and Douglas J. Peterson, Attorney General of the State of Nebraska, appellees. ___ N.W.2d ___

Filed June 24, 2016. No. S-15-870.

1. Actions: Judicial Notice. A court may judicially notice adjudicative facts, which are not subject to reasonable dispute, at any stage of the proceeding. 2. Actions: Judicial Notice: Appeal and Error. In interwoven and inter- dependent cases, an appellate court may examine its own records and take judicial notice of the proceedings. 3. Judgments: Jurisdiction. A jurisdictional issue that does not involve a factual dispute presents a question of law. 4. Statutes. The meaning and interpretation of a statute present questions of law. 5. Constitutional Law: Statutes. The constitutionality of a statute is a question of law. 6. Judgments: Appeal and Error. When reviewing questions of law, an appellate court resolves the questions independently of the lower court’s conclusions. 7. Jurisdiction: Appeal and Error. Before deciding the merits of an appeal, an appellate court must determine if it has jurisdiction. 8. ____: ____. If the court from which a party takes an appeal lacks juris- diction, then the appellate court acquires no jurisdiction. 9. ____: ____. An appellate court has the power to determine whether it has jurisdiction over an appeal and to correct jurisdictional issues even if it does not have jurisdiction to reach the merits. 10. Habeas Corpus: Parental Rights: Child Custody. Habeas corpus is an appropriate proceeding to test the legality of custody and best interests of a minor, including the rights of fathers of children born out of wedlock. - 974 - Nebraska A dvance Sheets 293 Nebraska R eports JESSE B. v. TYLEE H. Cite as 293 Neb. 973

11. Constitutional Law: Habeas Corpus: Child Custody. Habeas corpus is a civil remedy constitutionally available in a proceeding to challenge and test the legality of a person’s detention, imprisonment, or custodial deprivation of the person’s liberty. It is an appropriate proceeding to test the legality of custody and best interests of a minor, when the party hav- ing physical custody of the minor has not acquired custody under a court order or decree. 12. Habeas Corpus: Jurisdiction. Because the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus is part of Nebraska’s organic law, district courts have general jurisdiction over these proceedings. 13. Courts: Jurisdiction: Child Custody. District courts have inherent equity jurisdiction to resolve custody disputes. 14. Constitutional Law: Legislature: Courts: Jurisdiction. The Legislature cannot limit or take away the broad and general jurisdiction of the district courts, as conferred by the Nebraska Constitution. But it can give county courts concurrent original jurisdiction over the same subject matter. 15. Courts: Adoption. A parent can challenge the legality of an adoption by objecting to the proceeding in county court. 16. Legislature: Courts: Jurisdiction: Adoption: Habeas Corpus. Despite the Legislature’s grant of exclusive jurisdiction over adoption matters to county or juvenile courts, when a parent claims his or her child is being illegally detained for an adoption, a district court has original overlap- ping jurisdiction over the matter in a habeas proceeding. 17. Courts: Jurisdiction. Where courts have concurrent jurisdiction, the first to assume jurisdiction retains it to the exclusion of the other. 18. Courts: Jurisdiction: Child Custody: Habeas Corpus. When a district court acquires jurisdiction over a habeas proceeding involving the per- manent custody of a child, no other court can acquire jurisdiction over the matter until after the first court’s order is carried out. 19. Actions: Courts: Jurisdiction. Where an action is pending in two courts, the court first acquiring jurisdiction will hold jurisdiction to the exclusion of the other. 20. Actions: Standing: Time. A court determines standing as it existed when a plaintiff commenced an action. 21. Paternity: Child Custody: Time. A paternity acknowledgment in Nebraska operates as a legal finding of paternity after the 60-day rescis- sion period has expired. At that point, the acknowledged father is the child’s legal father—not a presumed father. And he has the same right to seek custody as the child’s biological mother, even if genetic testing shows he is not the biological father. 22. Parental Rights: Public Policy: States: Appeal and Error. It is not contrary to Nebraska’s public policy to recognize an acknowledged - 975 - Nebraska A dvance Sheets 293 Nebraska R eports JESSE B. v. TYLEE H. Cite as 293 Neb. 973

father’s parental rights under another state’s statutes when the Nebraska Supreme Court has recognized an acknowledged father’s parental rights under Nebraska’s statutes. 23. Constitutional Law: Foreign Judgments: Jurisdiction: States. The Full Faith and Credit Clause requires states to give the same effect to a judgment in the forum state that it has in the state where the court ren- dered the judgment. 24. Constitutional Law: Foreign Judgments: States: Paternity: Adoption: Parental Rights. Neb. Rev. Stat. § 43-1406(1) (Reissue 2008) extends the constitutional requirement of giving full faith and credit to a sister state’s paternity determination through a voluntary acknowledgment. So whether a paternity acknowledgment made in a sister state requires a legal father’s consent to an adoption depends upon whether the laws of the sister state confer that right. 25. Adoption: Parent and Child. Adoption terminates the parent-child relationship. 26. Courts: Jurisdiction: Adoption: Parental Rights. To terminate a father’s rights through an adoption procedure, the consent of the adju- dicated father of a child born out of wedlock is required for the adop- tion to proceed unless the Nebraska court having jurisdiction over the custody of the child determines otherwise, pursuant to Neb. Rev. Stat. § 43-104.22 (Reissue 2008). 27. Adoption: States: Statutes. Neb. Rev. Stat. § 43-104.22(11) (Reissue 2008) does not apply to an acknowledged father with the right to con- sent to an adoption under the laws of a sister state. 28. Judgments: Collateral Attack: Jurisdiction. For judgments, collateral attacks on previous proceedings are impermissible unless the attack is grounded upon the court’s lack of jurisdiction over the parties or subject matter. Only a void judgment is subject to collateral attack. 29. Judgments: Collateral Attack: Paternity. The collateral attack rules that apply to judgments also apply to a voluntary paternity acknowl- edgement that has the same effect as a judgment. 30. Adoption. In a private adoption, the child is relinquished directly into the hands of the prospective adoptive parent or parents without interfer- ence by the state or a private agency. 31. Parental Rights. A valid relinquishment of parental rights is irrevo- cable, and a natural parent who relinquishes his or her rights to a child by a valid written instrument gives up all rights to the child at the time of the relinquishment. 32. Parental Rights: Adoption: Appeal and Error. A natural parent’s knowing, intelligent, and voluntary relinquishment of a child for adop- tion is valid. An appellate court will generally uphold relinquishments absent evidence of threats, coercion, fraud, or duress.

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Bluebook (online)
883 N.W.2d 1, 293 Neb. 973, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jesse-b-v-tylee-h-neb-2016.