Matter of RLS

1994 OK CIV APP 102, 879 P.2d 1258
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 28, 1994
Docket81609
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1994 OK CIV APP 102 (Matter of RLS) 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
Matter of RLS, 1994 OK CIV APP 102, 879 P.2d 1258 (Okla. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

879 P.2d 1258 (1994)

In the Matter of R.L.S. and C.E.S., alleged deprived children.
The STATE of Oklahoma, Appellants,
v.
Robin STONECIPHER, Appellee.

No. 81609.

Court of Appeals of Oklahoma, Division No. 4.

June 28, 1994.

J. Tully McCoy, Dist. Atty., Lee Cate, Asst. Dist. Atty., Norman, for appellant.

Eric H. Hermansen, Oklahoma City, for appellee.

Released for Publication by Order of the Court of Appeals of Oklahoma, Division No. 4.

*1259 BRIGHTMIRE, Chief Judge.

It finally came to an end: The mother's forum-shopping effort in this child custody conflict. The end came when an Oklahoma district court finally called a Louisiana parish court and confirmed that the Oklahoma court did not have jurisdiction of the subject matter and that the children involved should be returned to Louisiana — the state whose courts had divorced the parents, provided for the custody of their children, and the state whose courts have found the mother guilty of contemptuously violating its custody order.

The order of the court below, which was issued after many months of delays and hearings, directed the mother to surrender the children to the custody of the Louisiana Department of Human Services on June 2, 1993.

The State appeals. Its extraordinary attack on the order is founded on this two-prong premise: (1) Neither the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Act, (UCCJA), 43 O.S. 1991 §§ 501 through 527, nor the Parental Kidnapping Prevention Act, (PKPA), 28 U.S.C. § 1738A, justify the dismissal of the State's action — quite apart from the question of whether the best interests of the children are served by the continuation of the Oklahoma action; and (2) the "best interests of the child" standard established in 43 O.S. 1991 §§ 505(A)(3) and (D), control over other child protection statutes, inasmuch as it is the State, as distinguished from a parent, which is exercising protective power over subject children.

We hold neither contention has merit and affirm the trial court's order.

I

The background facts are these. In 1991, the then Debora Stonecipher, her husband, Robin Stonecipher and their two little girls, R.L.S. and C.E.S., lived in the State of Louisiana. On a date not disclosed by the record the mother sued her husband for a divorce. Then, on June 20, 1991, without dismissing the divorce action, the mother, as the father's lawyer was to later put it, went forum shopping in Oklahoma and began living in the City of Moore with her two minor children.

About a year later, on June 3, 1992, the Louisiana trial court granted the parties a divorce and, over the mother's objection, issued a Joint Custody Implementation Plan naming the father as the primary custodial parent of the two girls — R.L.S., then 5 years old and C.E.S., age 9. Other specifics of the plan included a call for the parties to work together in an effort to properly raise the children; and the granting of physical custody of the children to the father during the school year and to the mother during the summer months. The mother moved the *1260 court to grant a new trial. The motion was denied July 20, 1992. It appears that the decree and custody plan became final.[1]

Eventually, the summer of 1992 came to an end. The mother failed to return the children to Louisiana as the Louisiana court had ordered. Instead, she went to the State of Oklahoma Department of Human Services and accused the children's father of having sexually abused them — an accusation she had not made in her Louisiana action. In other words, instead of bringing such a serious matter to the attention of the Louisiana court, or the Louisiana district attorney, or the Louisiana DHS, or appealing the Louisiana court judgment on that basis, she presumably decided to simply ignore it until the first custodial summer ended in Oklahoma. Or, as the father's counsel argued to the court on March 31, 1993, she "lost her action. in Louisiana ... then tries to get Oklahoma to exercise jurisdiction, and that is classic forum shopping" — something that both the PKPA and the UCCJA were aimed at trying to stop.

The evidence, both direct and circumstantial, supports the father's position. It is undisputed that the mother ignored the Louisiana court judgment, waited until after the two girls had enrolled in school in Oklahoma, and then went to the Oklahoma DHS and enlisted its powerful forces to aid in her efforts to obstruct and defeat the custodial orders of the Louisiana court. She attained her objective, at least for many months, by the simple expedient of accusing the girls' father of the serious crime of having molested them at some undisclosed time in the past. Her efforts, of course, bore fruit. For it came to pass that on September 15, 1992, the District Attorney of Cleveland County, at the behest of the DHS, filed an action in the district court seeking to have the two little girls declared deprived. The petition, sworn to by an assistant district attorney, alleged that:

"[the] children do not have proper parental care or guardianship or whose home is an unfit place for the children by virtue of neglect, cruelty or depravity on the part of their parents. Specifically, the father, Robin Stonecipher, has sexually molested the above named minors on several occasions while said children were in his care."[2]

The record further shows that on that same day the clerk issued a "Juvenile Summons and Notice — Order to Appear" directed to "Robin Stonecipher, 107 Hazel Dr., Haynesville, LA 71038" notifying him that the "attached" petition was set for "arraignment" in the courtroom of Judge Alan J. Couch located at the "Alan J. Couch Center" in Norman, Oklahoma, on September 21, 1992, at 2:30 p.m., and ordering him to be present. This "summons" was issued the same day the petition was filed — September 15 — and evidently mailed the same day because the affidavit of service contains a copy of a postal receipt[3] showing delivery to the father on September 21! The Oklahoma court failed to promptly contact the Louisiana court as required *1261 by law.[4]

Nevertheless, a hearing was held on September 21. On that date the mother and the children signed documents[5] "admitting" the charges in the petition, waiving a separate disposition hearing, waiving a jury, and agreeing that the judge could combine the adjudication with the previous arraignment. Thereupon the court entered and wrote out in longhand a "Court Minute" which, the best we can tell, reads:

"All matter re father reset to Sept. 28, 1992 @ 3:00 p.m. Temp. order granting custody to mother is approved by agmt. Mother & children agree that children are deprived & they are wards of ct. Father has not stipulated. C"

By now the custodial train was moving right on down the non-jurisdictional track in Oklahoma with a full head of steam, with no apparent sign of a potential derailment. On September 22, 1992, an application for a temporary emergency custody hearing was filed along with an order, signed by the judge the previous day — September 21, 1992, — granting "temporary emergency custody" to the mother.

Three days later, on September 25, 1992, an "Adjudication Order as to the Mother and juveniles" was filed which recited what took place on September 21, 1992, and added this:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1994 OK CIV APP 102, 879 P.2d 1258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-rls-oklacivapp-1994.