Marriage of Norrod v. Norrod

2007 OK CIV APP 65, 165 P.3d 366, 2007 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 38, 2007 WL 2127872
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 19, 2007
DocketNo. 103,033
StatusPublished

This text of 2007 OK CIV APP 65 (Marriage of Norrod v. Norrod) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marriage of Norrod v. Norrod, 2007 OK CIV APP 65, 165 P.3d 366, 2007 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 38, 2007 WL 2127872 (Okla. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

ADAMS, Judge.

1 Kelly Norrod (Mother) was in a coma as a result of a swimming accident when Appellants Charles and Toni Laws (Grandparents) intervened in the dissolution of marriage proceedings between Mother and Appellee Dennis Norrod (Father), seeking custody of the minor child born during their daughter's marriage. Grandparents appeal the trial court order finding they "failed to meet their burden of proof to show by clear and convincing evidence that [Father] is affirmatively unfit as a parent" and awarding custody of their grandson to Father. Finding the trial court applied the correct burden of proof and that Grandparents have not demonstrated the trial court abused its discretion, we affirm the trial court's judgment.

Facts

{2 Father was a non-commissioned officer in the U.S. Army and stationed at Fort Riley, Kansas, when he and Mother were married in 2002. Because Mother had epileptic seizures for which she took several medications, she lived with Grandparents in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. After T.W.N.'s birth on October 29, 2002, Father's visits with T.W.N. and Mother primarily occurred at Grandparent's home on weekends and holidays, except the summer of 2008 when he took Mother and T.W.N. to Wyoming to meet his family for a two week visit and when Mother and T.W.N. spent three weeks in Kansas prior to his deployment to Iraq.

T3 The couples' marital issues escalated during Father's service in Iraq. Mother initiated marriage dissolution proceedings on July 30, 2004, but Father was not served summons until his return to the United States in October of 2004. The parties subsequently agreed on Mother having tempo[368]*368rary custody of TW.N., with Father having visitation rights.

T4 It had been 2% years since her last seizure, when on May 23, 2005, Mother, a certified lifeguard and water safety instructor, had another one while giving T.W.N. swimming lessons in Grandparents' swimming pool. Grandmother, who had been watching them swim but had left briefly to answer the doorbell, returned to discover both Mother and T.W.N., neither of whom were wearing lifejackets, unconscious in the water. She jumped into the pool, pulled them both out, and was able to resuscitate T.W.N. but not Mother. Within minutes, both T.W.N. and Mother were treated by paramedics and transported by ambulance to the hospital where T.W.N.'s condition stabilized and Mother was comatose and unresponsive.

15 That same day, Grandfather telephoned Father, who was attending his first day of Drill Sergeant School at Fort Jackson, South Carolina, to tell him about the accident but had to leave a message for him instead. Father learned that same night about the accident and the condition of his son and wife, and the next day he initiated a Red Cross Emergency Leave request. He was released one day later and drove to Oklahoma City, arriving the evening of May 26, 2005, at Mother's sister's home where T.W.N. was staying while Grandparents cared for Mother. After Father and Mother's sister went to the hospital to check on Mother, they argued about the custody of T.W.N.

T6 On May 27, 2005, Father's motion for an emergency hearing on custody was granted by the trial court, whose order awarded Father and Grandparents a rotating visitation schedule and ordered Father "not to remove child from OKC metro area" and "not to smoke around child." On May 31, 2005, Father moved to modify the November 4, 2004 Order, seeking temporary custody of T.W.N. due to Mother's continued comatose status, relief from payment of child support, and an injunction restraining the parties, or their legal representatives, from changing or altering the beneficiary designation of any Tife insurance policy.

T7 On June 2, 2005, Grandparents filed a Petition in Intervention, alleging Mother and T.W.N. have resided with them since the child's birth, Father had been largely uninvolved in T.W.N's life, T.W.N. had been severely traumatized by the swimming accident and removal would further traumatize him, and that Father is affirmatively unfit as a parent. They also filed a response to Father's motion to modify custody in which they sought to vacate Father's emergency custody order. That same day, a different trial judge reversed the emergency custody order obtained by Father, granted Grandparents permission to intervene, set a rotating visitation schedule for each party, and reinstated the no smoking order.

T8 Mother died on June 5, 2005, without ever regaining consciousness. Through July of 2005, six separate days of hearings were held during which many exhibits were admitted and numerous witnesses testified, including Grandparents, T.W.N.'s maternal aunt and uncle, Mother's friend and a co-worker, Father, his mother, his friend, and his platoon leader while stationed in Iraq.

T9 By order filed January 10, 2006, the trial court denied Grandparents' request for custody, finding that the mother of T.W.N. is deceased, and that, as a matter of law, Father, not having been shown by Grandparents to be affirmatively unfit as a parent by clear and convincing evidence, is entitled to the care, custody, and control of the child. Because T.W.N. had lived with Grandparents since birth and had bonded with them, the trial court found it is in the best interest of T.W.N. to award Grandparents visitation with him. Grandparents' appeal followed.

Analysis

110 In their first proposition of error, Grandparents allege the trial court applied the wrong burden of proof in deciding custody between them and Father. This issue calls for resolution of a question of law, the review of which is governed by a de movo standard, ie, an appellate court exercises plenary, independent and nondeferential authority when examining a trial court's legal rulings. Shorter v. Tulsa Used Equipment [369]*369and Indus. Engine Services, 2006 OK 72, 148 P.3d 864.

111 Grandparents specifically disagree with the trial court's announcement at the start of trial requiring them to prove by clear and convincing evidence that Father is affirmatively unfit as a parent. They concede this burden of proof was held by the Court in McDonald v. Wrigley, 1994 OK 25, 870 P.2d 777, to apply in divorce proceedings when third parties are seeking custody of a child. However, Grandparents argue it is not a hard and fast rule with no exceptions, citing In re N.L.W, 2000 OK CIV APP 20, 999 P.2d 448, which they contend holds that custody may be given to grandparents over a fit parent's claim to custody when the grandparents had cared for the child over an extended period of time with the consent of the parent entitled to custody and if the court finds it is in the best interests of the child to do so. They further argue that MceDonald v. Wrigley is distinguishable because the grandparent seeking custody therein had neither lived with the child nor contributed to the child's care and unbringing, that "this important distinction apparently was given no weight by the trial court," and that In re N.L.W. requires application of the "best interest/balancing test" to the facts of this case.

1 12 In the case cited by Grandparents, In re N.L.W., another division of this Court affirmed an order awarding custody to the grandparents of a minor child left in their care for seven years by the mother, whom the trial court had acknowledged was a fit parent. Without mention of McDonald v. Wrigley, it cites Application of Grover, 1984 OK 20, 681 P.2d 81, and Bishop v. Benear, 1928 OK 553, 270 P.

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Related

Gibson v. Dorris
1963 OK 235 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1963)
Kahre v. Kahre
916 P.2d 1355 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1995)
McDonald v. Wrigley
1994 OK 25 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1994)
Haralson v. Haralson
1979 OK 73 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1979)
Utt v. State
1979 OK CR 37 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1979)
Application of Grover
1984 OK 20 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1984)
Matter of Adoption of RWS
1997 OK 148 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1997)
Bishop v. Benear
1928 OK 553 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1928)
Shorter v. Tulsa Used Equipment & Industrial Engine Services
2006 OK 72 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2006)
Combs v. Sutton
1997 OK 148 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1997)
In the Matter of the Guardianship of M.R.S.
1998 OK 38 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1998)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2007 OK CIV APP 65, 165 P.3d 366, 2007 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 38, 2007 WL 2127872, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriage-of-norrod-v-norrod-oklacivapp-2007.