Kasper v. Nordfelt

815 P.2d 747, 165 Utah Adv. Rep. 42, 1991 Utah App. LEXIS 111, 1991 WL 138167
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJuly 25, 1991
Docket900290-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 815 P.2d 747 (Kasper v. Nordfelt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kasper v. Nordfelt, 815 P.2d 747, 165 Utah Adv. Rep. 42, 1991 Utah App. LEXIS 111, 1991 WL 138167 (Utah Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION

GARFF, Judge:

Appellants, Ruby L. Kasper and David Kasper appeal from a summary judgment dismissing their complaint to intervene in an adoption and, alternatively, to receive grandparent visitation rights.

Because this is a summary judgment, we recite the facts from the statement of un *748 disputed facts. Where there is a discrepancy or where we cite additional facts, we view the facts in the light most favorable to the losing party.

On September 26, 1989, appellee, Jennifer Nordfelt, an unmarried minor, gave birth to a child. The child’s father, David V. Kasper was killed in an automobile accident on June 17, 1989. He and Nordfelt never married, but planned to marry on or about July 22, 1989. David V. Kasper’s parents, Ruby L. Kasper and David Kas-per, filed a “Complaint for Grandparent Visitation Rights” the day the child was born. This complaint included the following: “The plaintiffs wish to either adopt said child, or to exercise their grandparent rights of visitation. They believe it is in the minor child’s best interest to adopt said child and/or to have extensive visitation rights with said child.”

The day after giving birth, Nordfelt executed an affidavit and release relinquishing her child to LDS Social Services, a child placement agency licensed by the state of Utah to receive children for placement or adoption. She placed the child with the agency in order to have it placed for a confidential and anonymous adoption. In this release, Nordfelt consented “to the legal adoption of [her child] by those persons whom the said LDS Social Services, may, in their discretion, designate and approve to be adopting parents who are able to furnish said child with a proper name, home and care.” Nordfelt requested that the adoption be anonymous and confidential because she believed that such an adoption served the best interests of herself and her child. The release was notarized, but it has not yet been approved by a judge, presumably because, due to this appeal, the adoption has not yet been finalized.

After the Utah Department of Health verified that no one had registered an acknowledgment of paternity with the state, the agency immediately placed the child with prospective adoptive parents, with whom the child has since resided.

The trial court concluded that the child was not parentless so as to give rise to a recognizable interest in the Kaspers to permit their intervention in the adoption proceedings, or to permit grandparent visitation rights. The court then dismissed, with prejudice, the Kaspers’ complaint.

The issues on appeal include whether the court erred in concluding, as a matter of law, that the Kaspers had no right to intervene in the adoption proceedings, and no right to grandparent visitation.

In reviewing a summary judgment, we view the facts and inferences to be drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the losing party, and affirm only where it appears there is no genuine issue of material fact, and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Ehlers & Ehlers v. Carbon County, 805 P.2d 789, 791 (Utah App.1991).

The applicable law at the time of the mother’s relinquishment provided that, “[a] child cannot be adopted without the consent of each living parent.” Utah Code Ann. § 78-30-4(1) (1987). 1 The law also provided that a parent who is a minor child can consent to an adoption or can release the custody of a child to an adoption agency. Utah Code Ann. § 78-30-4(2) (1987). Where “the parent or parents whose consent would otherwise be required” relinquishes a child to such an agency, the agency receives the right to consent to the child’s adoption. Utah Code Ann. § 78-30-4(1) (1987). For the adoption to be finalized, the prospective adoptive parents, the child, and, in this case, the agency empowered to consent to the adoption, must appear and the court must determine that the interests of the child will be promoted by the adoption. Utah Code Ann. § 78-30-8 and -9 (1987).

The Kaspers assert that, under Wilson v. Family Servs. Div., Region Two, 554 P.2d 227 (Utah 1976), grandparents have a “dormant” or “inchoate right or interest” in the custody of a parentless child, and that since *749 the child’s mother had relinquished her child to the agency, the child was thus parentless. In Wilson, the mother of the child was charged with neglect and abuse and agreed to disclaim rights to custody. The juvenile court permanently terminated her parental rights and the child was placed with family services for adoption. This procedure immediately “permanently terminates the legal parent-child relationship and all the rights and duties, including residual parental rights and duties, of the parent or parents involved.” Utah Code Ann. § 78-3a-48 (1987). We distinguish Wilson from the present case because here, there has been no permanent deprivation of parental rights by a court, but rather a voluntary relinquishment by a parent to a licensed agency. Further, the mother’s parental rights have not been judicially terminated because the child has not as yet been adopted. Both case law and the adoption statute provide that a birth parent’s rights and duties do not dissolve until the time of the adoption. Fauver v. Hansen, 803 P.2d 1275, 1277-78 (Utah App.1990); Riding v. Riding, 8 Utah 2d 136, 329 P.2d 878, 880-81 (Utah 1958); Utah Code Ann. § 78-30-11 (Supp.1991). See also Davis v. Davis, 708 P.2d 1102, 1112 (Okla.1985) (“The replacement of the lost parent is effected in the very same proceeding that produces the severance of the old parental bond.”) (Emphasis in original.) Therefore, the child is not “parentless” as that term is used by the court in Wilson, and thus the Kaspers have no inchoate right to custody.

Although the Wilson court opined that under some circumstances family relationships might be of such a nature that their application to adopt should be given consideration, Wilson, 554 P.2d at 230, we do not find such a circumstance here, where the only living parent of the child deliberately and thoughtfully decided to place the child for adoption with an agency, and not with the paternal grandparents.

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Bluebook (online)
815 P.2d 747, 165 Utah Adv. Rep. 42, 1991 Utah App. LEXIS 111, 1991 WL 138167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kasper-v-nordfelt-utahctapp-1991.