Julie I. Husby and Gregory L. Husby v. Jennifer M. Monegan and Scout A. Monegan

517 P.3d 20
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 16, 2022
DocketS18023
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 517 P.3d 20 (Julie I. Husby and Gregory L. Husby v. Jennifer M. Monegan and Scout A. Monegan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Julie I. Husby and Gregory L. Husby v. Jennifer M. Monegan and Scout A. Monegan, 517 P.3d 20 (Ala. 2022).

Opinion

Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER. Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts, 303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email corrections@akcourts.gov.

THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

JULIE I. HUSBY and GREGORY L. ) HUSBY, ) Supreme Court No. S-18023 ) Appellants, ) Superior Court No. 3AN-19-09729 CI ) v. ) OPINION ) JENNIFER M. MONEGAN and ) No. 7620 – September 16, 2022 SCOUT A. MONEGAN, ) ) Appellees. ) )

Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third Judicial District, Anchorage, Thomas A. Matthews, Judge.

Appearances: Herbert M. Pearce, Law Office of Herbert M. Pearce, Anchorage, for Appellants. Notice of nonparticipation filed by Michael Gershel, Law Office of Michael Gershel, Anchorage, for Appellees.

Before: Winfree, Chief Justice, Maassen, Carney, Borghesan, and Henderson, Justices.

BORGHESAN, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION This appeal presents two related questions of law arising out of a motion to modify an order giving visitation rights to grandparents. First, which statute governs a motion to modify grandparents’ visitation: AS 25.20.065(a), which permits grandparents to petition for visitation but does not mention modification of visitation orders; or AS 25.20.110(a), which authorizes modification of visitation orders but does not expressly mention grandparents? We conclude that AS 25.20.110(a) applies, requiring a movant to show a substantial change in circumstances before the court may modify the existing order. Second, when a grandparent seeks visitation over a parent’s objection, the grandparent must show clear and convincing evidence that the parent is unfit or that denying visitation will be detrimental to the child.1 If the court awards visitation rights to a grandparent, and the parent later moves to modify the grandparent’s visitation rights, must the court apply this “parental preference rule” in deciding whether to modify visitation? We hold that so long as the parents were protected by the parental preference rule in the proceedings resulting in the grandparent’s visitation rights, the rule does not apply in later proceedings to modify those visitation rights. Having clarified the applicable legal standards, we reverse and remand the superior court’s order in this case because it was error to decide the motions to modify the grandparents’ visitation rights without first holding a hearing on disputed issues of fact.

1 See Ross v. Bauman, 353 P.3d 816, 828-29 (Alaska 2015); cf. Daves v. McKinley, 425 P.3d 92, 96 (Alaska 2018) (“In its initial resolution of a custody dispute between a . . . parent and any third party, including a grandparent, the . . . parent prevails unless the non-parent shows ‘by clear and convincing evidence that the parent is unfit or that the welfare of the child requires the child to be in the custody of the non-parent.’ ” (quoting Dara v. Gish, 404 P.3d 154, 161 (Alaska 2017))).

-2- 7620 II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS A. Facts Jennifer Monegan is the birth mother of a child born in 2011, and Scout Monegan is the child’s adoptive father.2 Gregory and Julie Husby are the child’s maternal grandparents and live in Oregon. Jennifer and her child lived with the Husbys for a time after the child’s birth; the Husbys provided childcare and were significantly involved in the child’s life until he was two and a half years old. However, Jennifer’s relationship with the Husbys began to deteriorate after she started dating Scout. After Jennifer and Scout married in 2013, the Husbys petitioned for visitation in Oregon, where all of the parties lived at the time. Jennifer and the Husbys came to a mediated agreement providing, among other things, that the Husbys would have visitation with the child one weekend per month for 32 hours, as well as unlimited written and telephonic contact. The agreement also gave the parties an ongoing responsibility to update their contact information. An Oregon court approved the agreement and entered a stipulated order in March 2014. The Monegans moved to Alaska in March 2018. In-person visits occurred less frequently after the relocation: Between March 2018 and August 2019 the Husbys visited the child seven times. The Husbys tried to maintain their relationship with the child through letters, gifts, and weekly phone calls, and claim they were able to do so through the summer of 2019. B. Proceedings In September 2019 the Monegans filed a complaint in the superior court to terminate the Husbys’ visitation rights, alleging it was not in the child’s best interests to

2 Scout adopted the child in 2014.

-3- 7620 continue visitation. The Husbys counterclaimed for modification of the stipulated order to allow “reasonable visitation” with the child. 1. Cross-motions to modify visitation The Husbys then filed a motion to enforce the stipulated visitation order. The Husbys alleged that Jennifer and Scout were failing to abide by the stipulated order in several ways, including by limiting the frequency and duration of their phone calls with the child. The Husbys also alleged that Jennifer and Scout had cancelled three visits. In addition to seeking the Monegans’ compliance with the stipulated order, the Husbys reiterated their request for an order modifying the visitation schedule. The Monegans opposed the Husbys’ motion and filed a cross-motion to deny the Husbys visitation rights. The Monegans submitted an affidavit from Jennifer and unsworn declarations from the child’s birth father, the birth father’s wife, and Jennifer’s sister. Relying on these documents, the Monegans alleged that Gregory had secretly contacted the child’s birth father in 2019 to obtain a sample of his DNA for a paternity test. Although the child did not know at the time that he was adopted, Gregory allegedly told the birth father that the child had been asking who his birth father was. The Monegans alleged that once the paternity test came back, Gregory threatened to sue them to vacate the adoption. The Monegans added that Gregory had threatened to read the child a lengthy and derogatory “book” Gregory wrote about the Monegans if they did not comply with his requests. The Monegans also alleged that Gregory had become “belligerent and bullying” in his interactions with them, and attached transcripts of phone conversations between the parties corroborating their account. Jennifer’s sister alleged that Gregory had been physically violent with his children when they were younger. Among other things she alleged that Gregory had once drunkenly waved a gun and threatened to kill himself and told the sister “he could kill [her] and no one would know.” Jennifer’s sister also stated that she had recently

-4- 7620 obtained a restraining order against Gregory because he had screamed at her husband and used “foul language” and “derogatory names” after she rejected the Husbys’ request to visit with her daughter. In response the Husbys submitted an affidavit from Gregory. Gregory denied many of the Monegans’ allegations, denying that he had harassed any of his children or their spouses, engaged in belligerent or bullying behavior, been physically violent with his children when they were younger, or pulled a gun on Jennifer’s sister. The Husbys also submitted an affidavit from Jennifer’s brother, which suggested that an incident involving Gregory that the sister’s declaration portrayed as inappropriate was in fact reasonable and caused him no harm. 2. Superior court’s order terminating visitation rights The superior court issued an order denying the Husbys’ motion to enforce the stipulated order and granting the Monegans’ cross-motion to deny the Husbys visitation rights.

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517 P.3d 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/julie-i-husby-and-gregory-l-husby-v-jennifer-m-monegan-and-scout-a-alaska-2022.