MATTER OF ADOPTION OF INFANT McGEE
This text of 937 P.2d 622 (MATTER OF ADOPTION OF INFANT McGEE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In re the Matter of the ADOPTION OF INFANT McGEE, a person under the age of eighteen.
Richard and Anne Hess (Prospective Adoptive Parents) Appellants,
In re the PARENTAGE OF Infant McGEE, a person under the age of eighteen.
Natural Mother: Toni McGee, Appellant.
Alleged Father: Lane Morrison, Respondent.
Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 1.
*623 Linda Jean Nye, Ferndale, Catherine Wright Smith, Edwards, Sieh, Hathaway, Smith & Goodfriend, Seattle, for Appellants on appeal.
Debra Ann Lev, Bellingham, for Toni McGee on appeal.
Richard Charles Kimberly, Richard Mark Sybrandy, Bellingham, for Respondent on appeal.
BECKER, Judge.
Infant McGee's prospective adoptive parents and birth mother appeal the trial court's refusal to terminate the parental rights of the birth father. The trial court concluded the birth father was an unfit parent, but had not abandoned his parental duties. Because the court's unchallenged findings amply establish the father's unfitness to parent under the operative language of the statute, and there is no additional requirement to show abandonment or intent to abandon, we reverse and remand for orders permitting the adoption to go forward.
Infant McGee was born August, 1994, to unmarried parents. The baby's mother, Toni McGee, at one time lived with the father, Lane Morrison. Upon finding that she was pregnant, Toni McGee made plans to have the baby placed for adoption. After birth, the baby was placed with the Hess family. They petitioned for the termination of Lane Morrison's parental rights. Morrison resisted, and obtained an order permitting him to have weekly one-hour supervised visitation with the baby. The case proceeded to a five-day trial in June, 1995.
RCW 26.33.120 is the statute governing termination of parental rights in the context of a petition for adoption. It requires petitioners to prove with clear, cogent, and convincing evidence that termination is warranted:
the parent-child relationship of a parent may be terminated upon a showing by clear, cogent, and convincing evidence that it is in the best interest of the child to terminate the relationship and that the parent has failed to perform parental duties under circumstances showing a substantial lack of regard for his or her parental obligations and is withholding consent to adoption contrary to the best interest of the child.[[1]]
This standard does not call for a balancing of the factors. The threshold question is "whether the parent has failed to perform parental duties under circumstances showing a substantial lack of regard for his or her parental obligations." This issue must be *624 resolved by the court before it may consider the best interests of the child.[2]
The trial court made the following findings of fact, all of them undisputed on appeal. During the time Toni McGee lived with Lane Morrison, she endured mental, emotional and physical abuse. Morrison pointed a pistol at her on more than one occasion. Twice, while sober, he forced her to lie down on the floor of the shower while he urinated upon her. Toni McGee moved out. Her contacts with Morrison after that were occasional. It was during one such contact she became pregnant with Infant McGee. Because of threats she had received from Morrison, Toni McGee obtained a no contact order. Morrison violated the order and threatened to kill Toni McGee. He refused to discuss single co-parenting with her and told her, "you will not live to raise this child without me."
According to expert testimony found credible by the court, Morrison has severe psychological problems. He is unable to physically nurture a child; he has an obsessive need to control; and he has a thought disorder and a dependent personality disorder. He is unaccepting of psychiatric treatment. He is a batterer who has inspired great fear in the child's mother, Toni McGee, and in his other child's mother, Tami Hohmann.
During the time Morrison lived with Tami Hohmann, he was a regular user of cocaine and a "low level" drug dealer. While living with Toni McGee, he continued a pattern of heavy drinking, use of marijuana, and domestic violence.
After he and the mother of his first child separated, Morrison made few child support payments. He did not pursue visitation with that child because he did not want to pay a large amount of back child support. He threatened to kill Tami Hohmann and her parents. Hohman did not seek child support enforcement because of her fear of Morrison.
After a lengthy oral opinion that occupies 26 pages of transcript, the court entered 61 findings of fact. Only three findings of fact reflect favorably on Morrison's parental fitness:
2. The Court finds that Lane Morrison initially expressed pleasure when he discovered that Toni McGee was pregnant with his child.
3. The Court finds that Lane Morrison expressed a desire to parent Infant McGee subsequent to the child's birth, as evidenced by Morrison's successful attempts, through his attorney, to establish visitation with the child, and as evidenced by his testimony during these proceedings that he desires to parent the child.
4. The Court finds that Lane Morrison appears to enjoy the company of the child during weekly one hour supervised visitations.
The trial court concluded that it would be in the best interest of the child to terminate the relationship, and that Morrison was withholding consent to adoption contrary to the child's best interests. The court also concluded that Morrison was unfit to parent. The court nevertheless denied the termination on the basis that Morrison had not clearly abandoned his parenting duties:
Even though this Court specifically finds that Lane Morrison is an unfit parent and that he exhibited abusive control throughout his relationships with Tami Hohmann and Toni McGee, and despite credible expert testimony that he is incapable of nurturing the child and would, in fact, be a danger to the child, and despite credible expert testimony that he is unlikely to change, this Court nevertheless concludes that there is not clear, cogent and convincing evidence that he has abandoned his parenting duties.
The trial court then denied the petition for termination of Morrison's parental rights. From this ruling, the Hesses and Toni McGee both appeal. They contend that the father's desire to be a parent to Infant McGee is insufficient to prevent the termination of his rights, given the factual findings that overwhelmingly establish his parental unfitness. Morrison contends the trial court correctly refused to terminate his parental *625 rights because the petitioners did not prove he intentionally abandoned the child.
Before 1985 the former step-parent adoption statute required the court to determine "whether such parent has deserted or abandoned the child under circumstances showing a willful substantial lack of regard for parental obligations."[3] The present statute, RCW 26.33.120, applies in step-parent adoptions as well as in adoptions by persons other than step-parents. The present statute does not use the terms "deserted", "abandoned", and "willful".
A 1990 decision in a step-parent adoption case,
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
937 P.2d 622, 86 Wash. App. 471, 1997 Wash. App. LEXIS 863, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-adoption-of-infant-mcgee-washctapp-1997.