LaBrec v. Davis

534 S.E.2d 84, 243 Ga. App. 307
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 10, 2000
DocketA99A2271
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 534 S.E.2d 84 (LaBrec v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LaBrec v. Davis, 534 S.E.2d 84, 243 Ga. App. 307 (Ga. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinions

Smith, Judge.

We granted Kevin LaBrec’s application for discretionary appeal to consider an order granting the petition of Jonathan Davis to legitimate the minor child, Denver, whom LaBrec had been raising since birth as his own son. Notwithstanding the existence of an order that had legitimated Denver as LaBrec’s child, the trial court granted Davis’s petition. Because we find that the trial court misapplied controlling authority, apparently failed to consider the legal effect of a prior order legitimating the child as LaBrec’s son, and also failed to consider the best interest of the child, we vacate the judgment and remand for further findings consistent with this opinion.

The underlying litigation arose after Davis, Denver J. LaBrec’s apparent biological father, filed suit against LaBrec, the only father Denver had ever known.1 The competing paternity claims to Denver, a minor child, evolved into a difficult and contentious court battle.

The evidence shows that LaBrec and Elizabeth Wolff “had been in an intimate relationship for approximately six years prior to the child’s birth,” a relationship that ended shortly after Denver was born. This child, raised as Denver J. LaBrec, was born May 17, 1995. LaBrec claims, and Davis does not dispute, that LaBrec was present at Denver’s birth and that LaBrec’s name appears on the birth certificate as Denver’s father. See Court of Appeals Rule 27 (b) (1) (failure to controvert an appellant’s statement of facts constitutes consent to statement).

Denver’s mother, Wolff, has a history of mental instability. Some time subsequent to giving birth, Wolff experienced serious psychological problems. After Wolff attempted suicide in July 1996 while visiting relatives in Missouri, LaBrec returned with Denver to Georgia. LaBrec sought and obtained a court order legitimating Denver as his son and that order was entered on July 15, 1996. In support of LaBrec’s petition to legitimate, Wolff testified by affidavit, acknowledging LaBrec as the natural and biological father of Denver. In August 1996, LaBrec commenced a court action to obtain sole legal and physical custody of Denver. In response to LaBrec’s effort to [308]*308obtain custody, Wolff for the first time asserted that LaBree was not Denver’s father. Nevertheless, Wolff and LaBree entered a consent agreement, and on February 4, 1997, the trial court awarded sole permanent legal and physical custody of Denver to LaBree.

On August 7, 1997, Davis served LaBree with a complaint in which Davis sought to establish paternity, to legitimate the child, and to gain custody of Denver. Davis, the probable biological father of the minor child according to DNA test results, admitted that he had engaged in unprotected sexual relations with Wolff about nine months before the child’s birth. Davis claimed that he did not discover that he was Denver’s father until December 5, 1996, when the child was already over a year and a half old.2

Based on an assertion of his delayed discovery of the existence of the minor child and a claim to be a “loving, fit, and proper person to have custody,” Davis sought to have set aside both prior court orders, the order finding Denver LaBree to be the legitimate child of LaBree and the other order awarding permanent custody of the child to LaBree. Davis also sought a new order legitimating the child as his son, awarding custody of the child to him, and changing the child’s surname from LaBree to Davis. Because Davis had to fulfill an enlistment obligation in the Air Force, he suggested that until he returned stateside his mother, Susan Green, would be fit to raise Denver along with her own “three minor children in White Water, Missouri, a small farming community.”3

Meanwhile, Davis’s lawsuit proceeded through the legal system. At the March 1999 hearing on Davis’s petition, counsel conceded that Davis would continue to have a military obligation to the Air Force until 2004.4 His counsel admitted to the court, however, that Davis was no longer stationed in Guam but was in Missouri at the time of the hearing. Davis’s counsel argued that since Davis had not abandoned his opportunity interest in fathering Denver and was “fit” to be a parent, Davis had a constitutional right to legitimate his child under the holding of In re Baby Girl Eason, 257 Ga. 292, 297 (358 SE2d 459) (1987).

The court-appointed guardian ad litem addressed the court and pointed out that the two people who Davis suggested would care for [309]*309Denver, Davis’s mother, Green, and Davis, “have never met this child.” During the hearing, the trial judge noted that he had personally “struggl[ed] with this thing.” The court stated:

Here you have got a will be four-year-old . . . child who has lost [his] relationship with mother, who has only known LaBrec as father for the entire — entirety of his life for that matter, who, in fact, faces the possibility of even losing — being snatched from that relationship. . . .

Obviously frustrated, the court noted, “I don’t care what the . . . black letter law says, I think that is just horrible.” Nevertheless, the trial court felt constrained by In re Baby Girl Eason.

Relying upon Eason, supra, the trial court determined that Davis'had “not waived his ‘opportunity interest’ to develop a relationship with his child.” The court declared Denver LaBrec “to be the legitimate son of Jonathan R. Davis,” with inheritance rights from Davis, and pronounced that “henceforth the name by which said child shall be known shall be DENVER JAMIN DAVIS.” After legitimating Denver as the biological offspring of Davis, the court granted Davis limited visitation rights of every other Saturday or Sunday, provided that he gave 24 hours notice to LaBrec. The court ordered Davis and LaBrec to keep each other notified at all reasonable times as to the child’s whereabouts.

1. LaBrec claims that the trial court erred in finding that Davis had not abandoned his opportunity to bond with the child after he was informed of his paternity. We agree.

The threshold inquiry must be whether Eason, upon which the trial court and the dissent rely, controls our analysis of this situation. While Eason provides an analytical framework, the Supreme Court recognized in that case that its holding could not be applied across the board to every set of facts that might be presented. In fact, the Supreme Court expressly noted in Eason that the existence of an established familial bond could require consideration of the best interest of the child rather than simply the fitness of the biological parent. Here, established familial bonds exist.

In Eason, the Supreme Court considered the rights of unwed biological fathers against the rights of strangers who wished to adopt. Eason made no mention of a situation in which the rights of a legal father (LaBrec) who legitimated the child, gained custody, and was raising him were being challenged by the apparent biological father (Davis). The dissent overlooks the critical fact that it is LaBrec who is the parent of Denver as a matter of law and as a matter of fact. To apply Eason in the mechanical fashion advocated by the dissent would create an anomaly: Davis (the apparent biological father) then [310]*310would be totally precluded from challenging LaBrec’s legal status as Denver’s father unless

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LaBrec v. Davis
534 S.E.2d 84 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2000)

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Bluebook (online)
534 S.E.2d 84, 243 Ga. App. 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/labrec-v-davis-gactapp-2000.