Klb v. Wmf

864 So. 2d 333, 2002 WL 63672
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 18, 2002
Docket2000409
StatusPublished

This text of 864 So. 2d 333 (Klb v. Wmf) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Klb v. Wmf, 864 So. 2d 333, 2002 WL 63672 (Ala. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

864 So.2d 333 (2002)

K.L.B.
v.
W.M.F.

2000409.

Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama.

January 18, 2002.
Rehearing Denied January 24, 2003.
Certiorari Denied May 16, 2003.

*337 Bert W. Rice, Atmore; and Charles E. Johns, Jr., Brewton, for appellant.

J. Milton Coxwell, Jr., of Coxwell & Coxwell, Monroeville, for appellee.

Alabama Supreme Court 1020723.

MURDOCK, Judge.

In November 1998, W.M.F. ("the stepfather") filed a petition to adopt his stepdaughter, A.B.B. Although the child's father, K.L.B. ("the father"), contested the petition, the Monroe County Probate Court approved the adoption. This court reversed that decision. See K.L.B. v. W.M.F., 757 So.2d 476 (Ala.Civ.App.2000) ("K.L.B. I") (holding that the probate court and the district court had not complied with the Alabama Adoption Code). After the remand from this court and upon motion by the stepfather, the probate court transferred the case to the juvenile court, pursuant to § 12-12-35, Ala.Code 1975. The juvenile court entered a judgment finding that the father had impliedly consented to the adoption and holding that the stepfather could adopt the child.

The father appeals, arguing, among other things, that the juvenile court erred in finding that the father had impliedly consented to the adoption and in not finding that the father had withdrawn any such consent. Based on our review of the record, we agree.

Lack of Consent

This case, unlike so many that come before the courts of this state, does not involve a father who has shown little or no interest in his child.[1]Compare S.W.B. v. R.C., 668 So.2d 835 (Ala.Civ.App.1995). The child is now 14 years of age and, except for a period of nine months in 1998, there is no question that the father has attempted to be extensively involved in his daughter's life. In addition, since the adoption petition was filed in 1998, the father has desperately fought to keep his daughter. In August 1997, however, an issue was made of the father's use of a belt to discipline his child, at which point everything began to change for the father.

The child was born in 1987. The child's mother and the father were divorced the following year, and the mother was awarded custody of the child. Both parents thereafter remarried and each has a child with his or her second spouse. The father also has two stepchildren. For nine years, the father had "continuous and regular visitation and contact" with his daughter, including every other weekend, holidays, birthdays, and extended periods in the summers. The relationship between the father and the child was good, although hindered by continuing postdivorce strife between the father and the mother. In 1993, for example, the father successfully sought relief from the trial court for the mother's not allowing the child to use the father's last name at school.[2]

*338 During a scheduled visit in August 1997, the father used a belt to discipline the child. The punishment caused some bruising. The father testified that he gave the child "four licks on the rear end"; that he was not aware at the time that he was causing any bruising; and that after he had inflicted the punishment, he, the daughter, and three of her friends proceeded to enjoy an outing that day, swimming at a creek. When the child returned to the mother's home, according to the father, the mother telephoned and told the father that she (the mother) hated him. About this same time, according to the father's testimony, the stepfather told the father in a telephone conversation that "if he had been there [when the punishment was inflicted], he'd [have] killed [the father]." The mother and the stepfather hired an attorney, who wrote the father a letter telling him that "visitation under the scheduled order as it exists at the present time cannot continue."

In the wake of these events, the child did not visit the father from August 1997 to December 1998. During this time, the father did not seek judicial enforcement of his visitation privileges, and did not send the child a Christmas present in 1997. The father did continue to make his childsupport payments from August 1997 through February 1998, but for a period of nine months beginning in March 1998, the father did not comply with the divorce judgment's provisions regarding child-support payments and payment of medical expenses. The father continued attempting to telephone the child from August 1997 through January 1998 (on average, about once a month), but the child either would not speak to him or was not allowed to speak to him. The mother testified that the child was simply unwilling to talk with the father and that she could not make the child do so. The father testified that the mother was responsible for disrupting communication between him and the child.

With respect to the cessation of visitation, the father testified as follows:

"A.... Every time I'd get her on the phone, her mama was there, she'd get all upset, emotional, and her mother would say, `I hate you, I hate you,' and then she'd put [the child] on there to tell me that she hated me, she hated me, and —
"Q. Could you hear that the child was crying?
"A. Yes. Yes. The whole time.
"Q. During that time period, you got a letter from [the mother and stepfather's attorney], didn't you ...?
"A. Yes.
"....
"Q.... That [letter] said `Please be further advised that visitation under the scheduled order as it exists at the present time cannot continue'?
"A. Yes, that's the way I understood it.
"Q. You talked to her — you called her about seeing the child that fall, didn't you?
"A. Yes.
"Q. What did she tell you?
"A. She don't want to see you, she don't want to see you, and it was just — all she was doing was mentally abusing the child.... I kept seeing that and how much it was upsetting her and everything....
"....
"Q. Did you go and get counseling and advice from a lawyer?
"A. No, I thought maybe she would grow up a little bit and wouldn't have to put her through all this.
"Q. You continued to call your child?
"A. Yes, until the mental abuse just got — I couldn't stand to see her bawling *339 and crying and being pulled between her and her mom — her mom and I like she was."

The father testified that during 1998 he would park his car near, or drive by, the child's school and the child's home in the hope of at least seeing her from a distance.

From the divorce in 1988 until the trial, with the exception of nine months in 1998, the father consistently paid his child support. The father testified that he and the mother disagreed concerning the mother's unwillingness to permit visitation during the nine-month period in 1998 and her failure to take the child to preferred-care doctors, and that it was for those reasons that he withheld child-support payments from March through November 1998. The father also presented evidence indicating that the child remained covered during this time under a family cancer policy and life-insurance policy and was a contingent beneficiary of the father's retirement plan, among other things.

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Bluebook (online)
864 So. 2d 333, 2002 WL 63672, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klb-v-wmf-alacivapp-2002.