McIntyre v. Medaris

612 N.E.2d 1068, 1993 Ind. App. LEXIS 406, 1993 WL 122036
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 22, 1993
DocketNo. 18A05-9207-CV-253
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 612 N.E.2d 1068 (McIntyre v. Medaris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McIntyre v. Medaris, 612 N.E.2d 1068, 1993 Ind. App. LEXIS 406, 1993 WL 122036 (Ind. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

SHARPNACK, Chief Judge.

Marcus Melntyre, Father, appeals from a judgment against him approving the adoption of his daughter, M.D., by Gale and Helen Medaris. We reverse and remand with instructions.

Father raises several issues for our review, but we consider only the dispositive issue of whether a father, who has established paternity and who has not given his consent to adoption, must establish that it is in his child's best interests for the court to grant his motion to contest the adoption.

The procedural history and facts relevant to this appeal are as follows. On February 20, 1991, Mother gave birth to a female child, M.D. On February 22, Mother, who was unwed, signed a consent to M.D.'s adoption, naming Meclntyre as M.D.'s father.

On February 25, the prospective adoptive parents, the Medarises, filed several petitions with the Delaware Circuit Court ("the trial court"), one of which was a petition to adopt M.D. and another of which was a request for the court to release custody of M.D. to them pending the final hearing on their adoption petition. On the same day that the Medarises filed their petitions, the trial court awarded temporary custody of M.D. to the Medarises.

On March 12, the Medarises notified the court that they had filed an adoptive hom-estudy, dated January 8, 1991, with the court.1 Although the homestudy had been [1070]*1070conducted for a previous unrelated adoption by the Medarises, the Medarises asked that the prior homestudy suffice for M.D.'s adoption proceedings. The court granted the Medarises' request and informed the Delaware County Welfare Department that it need not conduct a "second" homestudy for purposes of M.D.'s adoption. The Department of Public Welfare responded by issuing a letter, dated March 12 and filed with the court on March 28, stating that the department could not recommend this adoption by the Medarises because it was the department's understanding that this adoption would make the sixth child under the age of four to be adopted by the Medar-ises.

On March 28, Father filed a motion to contest the Medarises' adoption of M.D. In his motion, Father stated that he had just learned of the pending adoption action and that, while he had not yet established paternity, he was an interested party in the adoption proceeding because he was M.D.'s natural father.

On April 15, Father requested that the court appoint a guardian ad litem for M.D. In his petition, Father stated that, due to the estrangement between himself and Mother prior to M.D.'s birth, Father was not present when M.D. was born and had had no opportunity to see her since. Father stated that, due to the adversarial nature of the current adoption proceedings, the Medarises' counsel had refused to allow any visitation between Father and M.D. According to Father, a guardian was needed to protect M.D.'s best interests, to advise the court as to whether or not visitation would be appropriate pending resolution of the adoption proceedings and to supervise such visitation if necessary.

On May 16, Father and Mother entered into an agreement, the terms and conditions of which the Marion Superior Court, Juvenile Division, approved and incorporated into a judgment. In relevant part, the judgment stated:

1. [Mother] is the natural mother of [M.D.], a black female child conceived out-of-wedlock in 1990 and born out of wedlock on the 20th day of February, 1991 in the County of Marion, State of Indiana and born at Wishard Hospital.
2. Marcus Don Melntrye [sic] is the natural father of said child and hereby admits paternity.
8. The parties agree to the issuance of an amended certificate of birth for the child reflecting that petitioner is the father of the child who shall henceforth be known as [M.M.]
4. The father shall have custody of said child and the mother shall have reasonable visitation privileges with said child.
5. Petitioner shall provide medical insurance coverage for said child and all other support and the mother is under no duty or obligation of support.
* * * # # *
ORDER
The Court being duly advised in the premises now finds that the foregoing agreement should be approved.
IT IS THEREFORE, ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that the terms and conditions of the foregoing entry made the Order of Judgment of the Court.

(Record, pp. 50-51.)

On June 26, the trial court held a hearing and, three weeks later, made several rulings: (1) it denied Father's motion to dismiss based upon alleged inadequate notice; [1071]*1071(2) it granted Father's motion for an appointment of a guardian for M.D.; and (8) it set the matter of M.D.'s adoption for a final hearing on September 18.

Two months later, on August 21, the Marion Superior Court, Juvenile Division, after hearing oral argument, overruled the Medarises' motion to intervene in the matter of the paternity of M.D.2 The Marion Superior Court also temporarily modified its earlier agreed judgment entry by ordering that Father "shall not be entitled to custody of [M.D.] until a full evidentiary hearing can be convened," in the Delaware Circuit Court. (Record, p. 119.)

On September 10, Father filed a second motion to dismiss the Medarises' adoption petition. Father argued that he had established his paternity as required and, based upon a simple reading of I1.CG. § 81-8-1-6.3(c)(1)(B), the trial court had no basis upon which to deny his motion to contest M.D.'s adoption.3

Following a hearing, on September 26, the trial court: (1) denied Father's motion to dismiss; (2) denied the Medarises' request to dismiss Father's motion to contest the adoption, based upon Father's failure to establish, or attempt to establish, paternity within thirty (80) days of receiving notice of the adoption proceedings; (8) denied the Medarises' request to certify a question for appeal; (4) determined "that 1.0. § 31-8-1-6.3(c)(1) obligates the court to conduct a hearing on Father's motion to contest the adoption, at which Father bears the burden of proof that it would be in the child's best interest that the motion to contest be granted"; (5) accepted "the parties' stipulation that Father has not consented to the pending adoption, either in writing or by implication"; and (6) set the matter for a hearing on November 27, 1991. (Record, pp. 121-122.)

Following the hearing on November 27, the trial court granted the Medarises' petition for adoption. The court issued extensive findings of fact, as well as the following relevant conclusions of law:

(1) [Father] had the burden of proving that it would be in the child's best interest that his motion to contest the adoption be granted.
(2) While the court concludes that there is no reason to believe that [Father] could not be a capable and fit parent of the child, there is similarly no reason to believe that [the Medarises] could not do the same. [Father] has failed to show why it would be in [M.D.'s] best interest that his motion to contest the adoption be granted.
* * L * * *
(5) The law is with [the Medarises] and against [Father].

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Bluebook (online)
612 N.E.2d 1068, 1993 Ind. App. LEXIS 406, 1993 WL 122036, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcintyre-v-medaris-indctapp-1993.