Knopp v. Knopp

2001 MT 120, 27 P.3d 953, 305 Mont. 351, 2001 Mont. LEXIS 190
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 23, 2001
DocketNo. 99-675
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 2001 MT 120 (Knopp v. Knopp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knopp v. Knopp, 2001 MT 120, 27 P.3d 953, 305 Mont. 351, 2001 Mont. LEXIS 190 (Mo. 2001).

Opinions

JUSTICE TRIEWEILER

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 The Petitioners, Gordon L. and Judith E. Knopp, filed a petition for a parenting plan of a minor child, J.N.P., the natural daughter of Tammy Lynn Knopp, in the District Court for the Eleventh Judicial District in Flathead County. The District Court concluded that it had no authority to grant a parenting plan to Knopps absent termination or suspension of Tammy Lynn’s parental rights. Therefore, the Court dismissed Knopps’ petition for a parenting plan. Knopps appeal from the District Court’s order dismissing their petition. We affirm the order and judgment of the District Court.

¶2 The sole issue on appeal is whether the District Court erred when it concluded that it had no authority to grant the Knopps’ petition for a parenting plan absent suspension or termination of the natural parents’ parental rights.

¶3 The District Court dismissed Knopps’ petition based on its conclusion of law that it was without authority to grant the petition. We review a district court’s conclusions of law to determine whether they are correct. Carbon County v. Union Reserve Coal Co. (1995), 271 Mont. 459, 469, 898 P.2d 680, 686.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

¶4 Tammy Lynn Knopp is the young and single mother of J.N.P. Gordon and Judith Knopp are her uncle and aunt.

¶5 When Tammy was financially unable to provide for her children, she left one son who is uninvolved in this case with her mother until she could care for him. Knopps offered to take care of her daughter, J.N.P., until Tammy “got on her feet.” She agreed to leave J.N.P. with Knopps at their residence on a temporary basis until she found employment and a place to live in Great Falls. Tammy signed a document prepared by Gordon entitled “temporary guardianship” which purportedly was for the sole purpose of authorizing Knopps to seek medical attention for Tammy’s daughter if it became necessary.

¶6 Tammy placed her daughter in the temporary care of the Knopps on December 30,1998, and left for Great Falls to look for employment. This action was commenced on March 5, 1999, when Gordon and Judith Knopp petitioned for a parenting plan and child support for J.N.P. Although the document they filed is referred to as a “petition for parenting plan, child support and medical support,” the petition sought designation of Knopps as custodians of the child, sought an order that the child reside with Knopps and sought to limit the natural mother [353]*353and father to restricted and supervised visitation. If it had been granted, the parenting plan would have given Knopps authority to make the child’s medical decisions, day-to-day decisions, educational decisions, non-emergency health care decisions, decisions about her spiritual development, and required Knopps’ consent for the child to marry, obtain a driver’s license, enlist in the armed services, get a tattoo or have any part of her body pierced. In other words, the Knopps’ petition was the functional equivalent of a petition for custody of J.N.P.

¶7 Knopps applied for temporary custody and received it on an ex parte basis so that when Tammy Lynn returned and sought to remove her daughter to their new home, she was not allowed to do so.

¶8 On July 1,1999, Tammy Lynn appeared through her attorney and moved the court to terminate the guardianship and restore her parental rights. In support of her motion, she represented that she left her daughter temporarily with Knopps on December 28, 1998, until she coüld get financially established in a new community, and that she was now employed full time and had a stable residence but that her aunt and uncle (Knopps) had denied her custody of her child. She also pointed out that her parental rights had never been terminated nor suspended.

¶9 In support of her motion to dismiss the petition, J.N.P.’s mother argued that parental rights can only be terminated pursuant to Title 41 and that this Court had previously held that a temporary guardianship granted by a mother to a non-parent did not amount to a termination by circumstances. She cited and relied on Guardianship of D.T.N. (1996), 275 Mont. 480, 914 P.2d 579. She argued that as a matter of law, Knopps were not proper parties to a parenting plan prior to termination of her parental rights.

¶10 Knopps objected to the mother’s motion to dismiss based on § 40-4-211, MCA, and the “best interest” standard found at § 212.

¶11 The District Court held a hearing to consider Knopps’ petition and the mother’s motion to dismiss on August 24, 1999. Prior to that hearing, the natural mother filed a supplemental brief in which she again restated that the court did not have legal authority to award custody to a non-parent until the natural parent’s rights have been terminated. She again cited to our decision in D.T.N. and made other statutory arguments.

¶12 At the hearing to consider Knopps’ petition, the District Court heard testimony from Gordon L. Knopp and Tammy Lynn. The essence of their testimony was summarized previously in this opinion. However, in addition, both agreed that no proceedings had ever been commenced by the state or county to terminate Tammy Lynn’s parental rights. Nor was there any effort to demonstrate that the child had ever been abused, dependent or neglected. At the conclusion of the [354]*354testimony, the District Court made the following statements in open court:

THE COURT: Well, I just read this D.T.N. case. Have you read that?
MS. LEATZOW: No, I have not.
THE COURT: I hadn’t either. It’s cited in Paula’s brief. I don’t think that I have any resource-let me read to you from this case. This is a 1996 decision authored by Justice Trieweiler reversing the Ravalli County District Court-an order of the Ravalli County District Court, which granted a petition similar to the petition here, and the mother appealed.
And in that decision the court said that-they cited the Aschenbrenner case, which was a decision where they terminated the custodial rights of a natural parent. They held that parental rights could not be terminated in that matter. They went on to say, then, in this decision, whether the grandparents-this was grandparents seeking a petition similar to this-whether the grandparents were better able to provide a good environment for the children-excuse me, let me read this again: Whether the grandparents were better able to provide a good environment for the children than the mother was irrelevant because the mother had a fundamental constitutional right to the custody of her children.
Quoting down, they said: The “best interest of the child” test is only relevant after there has been a showing of dependency or abuse or neglect pursuant to our termination of parental rights statutes, or in custody disputes between two natural parents. However, where third parties seek custody, it has long been the law in Montana that the right of the natural parents prevails until a showing of a forfeiture of this right.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2001 MT 120, 27 P.3d 953, 305 Mont. 351, 2001 Mont. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knopp-v-knopp-mont-2001.