O.S. v. E.S.

205 So. 3d 1245, 2015 Ala. LEXIS 138
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedOctober 30, 2015
Docket1140889
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 205 So. 3d 1245 (O.S. v. E.S.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O.S. v. E.S., 205 So. 3d 1245, 2015 Ala. LEXIS 138 (Ala. 2015).

Opinions

MAIN, Justice.

I. Facts and Procedural History

This is the second time these parties have been before us. The underlying facts are as follows. B.O.S. (“the husband”) and E.S. (“the wife”) began residing together in 2005. Their union produced a daughter, B.T.S. (“the child”), in August 2006. The couple married in March 2007. The husband, the wife, and the child lived in a residence next door to the residence of the [1246]*1246child’s paternal grandfather, O.S. (“the grandfather”), and his wife, J.A.S. (“the stepgrandmother”) (hereinafter referred to collectively as “the grandparents”). It is undisputed that the grandparents spent considerable time with the child and that the child often visited overnight with the grandparents.

At some point in 2005 (during the wife’s pregnancy) and again on at least one occasion in 2007, the grandfather proposed to the wife an action he phrased as being “like an adoption” of the child by the grandparents but, the grandfather claimed, was not actually a legally binding adoption.1 The grandfather stated to the wife that “nothing would ever change [and] that [the wife] would always be [the child’s] mother.” O.S. v. E.S., 205 So.3d 1219, 1221 (Ala.Civ.App.2013). The grandfather claimed that taking the action he was proposing would enable the child to attend college with the aid of additional Social Security benefits and veteran’s benefits the grandfather would receive because he had “adopted” the child. As far as the husband was concerned, it appears that the grandfather presented him with contradictory statements; the grandfather stated at least once that it would be a “legal adoption” but stated to the husband on another occasion that it would be a “paper adoption only.” O.S. v. E.S., 205 So.3d at 1221.

In August 2007, the husband and the wife agreed to the grandfather’s proposal for a “paper adoption” of the child. The grandfather took the husband and the wife to an attorney’s office, during which time the husband and the wife were presented with and read two documents — a “consent for adoption” and an “affidavit of natural parent.” Both the husband and the wife signed the documents. However, the wife said that she did not sign any other documents; that “nothing had been explained to her” by the lawyer who drafted the two documents she did sign, O.S. v. E.S., 205 So.3d at 1221; that “she had not been given copies of the documents she had signed,” id.; and that “she had not been assisted by her own attorney,” id. Ultimately, on March 11, 2008, the Probate Court of Walker County (“the probate court”) entered a judgment granting the grandparents’ petition to adopt the child.

In January 2010, the husband and the wife separated. The wife took the child, and the wife and the child began residing with the wife’s parents. On February 3, 2010, the husband filed a divorce complaint against the wife in the Walker Circuit Court (“the trial court”). The husband’s complaint requested that the child be removed from the physical custody of the wife and returned to “the adoptive parents, i.e., the grandparents, immediately.” O.S. v. E.S., 205 So.3d at 1220.

The grandparents moved to intervene in the divorce action, asserting that they [1247]*1247were the child’s adoptive parents and seeking immediate pendente lite physical custody of the child. On February 4, 2010, the trial court entered an order allowing the grandparents to intervene in the action, granting their request for pendente lite physical custody of the child, and directing the wife to return the child to the grandparents immediately.

The wife answered the husband’s divorce complaint and also filed in the trial court a document styled as a “counterclaim and independent action” against the grandparents (“the counterclaim”), seeking to set aside the final judgment of adoption rendered by the probate court on March 11, 2008. In her counterclaim, the wife alleged that the grandparents had fraudulently induced her to consent to the grandparents’ adoption of the child. Additionally, the wife alleged that the grandparents had falsely asserted in the adoption petition that the child had resided in the grandparents’ home since the child’s birth; by making that false assertion, the wife claimed, the grandparents had perpetrated a fraud on the probate court.

The grandparents filed in the trial court an answer to the wife’s counterclaim, asserting that the wife’s counterclaim seeking to set aside the probate court’s judgment of adoption “could properly be filed only in the [Walker County] probate court and that the [Walker County] circuit court had no subject-matter jurisdiction to consider the matter.” O.S. v. E.S., 205 So.3d at 1221 (emphasis added). The trial court entered a judgment purporting to set aside the judgment of adoption entered by the probate court, finding that the grandfather had, as the wife had alleged, perpetrated a fraud on the probate court. In an opinion authored by Judge Pittman, a sharply divided Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the trial court’s judgment. O.S. v. E.S., supra (Thomas and Moore, JJ., concurring, and Donaldson, J., dissenting, with writing, which Thompson, P.J., joined).

The grandparents filed a petition for a writ of certiorari with this Court, which we granted. This Court reversed the Court of Civil Appeals’ judgment and remanded the cause, holding that the probate court, rather than the circuit court, had subject-matter jurisdiction over the grandparents’ intervention complaint and the wife’s counterclaim regarding the allegedly fraudulent adoption. Ex parte O.S., 205 So.3d 1233, 1241 (Ala.2014) (“As set forth above, the legislature has given the probate court original jurisdiction over all adoption proceedings, including a challenge to a judgment of adoption on the basis of fraud.”). In remanding the cause, this Court stated, in toto: “Based on the foregoing, we reverse the Court of Civil Appeals’ judgment and remand the matter for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.” 205 So.3d at 1242. We overruled the wife’s application for rehearing without an opinion.

On remand from this Court, the Court of Civil Appeals issued an opinion authored by Judge Pittman on February 27, 2015. That court’s opinion stated, in toto:

“The prior judgment of this court has been reversed and the cause remanded by the Supreme Court of Alabama. See Ex parte O.S., 205 So.3d 1233 (Ala.2014). On remand to this Court, and in compliance with the supreme court’s opinion, we hereby reverse the judgment of [the trial court] and remand the cause for the entry of a judgment of the [trial court] dismissing [the wife’s] action against [the grandparents] for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction.”

On March 3, 2015 (within the period allowed for the wife to file an application for rehearing), the wife filed with the [1248]*1248Court of Civil Appeals a motion entitled “Motion to Amend Order to Transfer to the Probate Court Pursuant to Ala.Code [1975,] § 12-11-11,” which was treated by that court and will be referred to as the wife’s application for rehearing.

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Bluebook (online)
205 So. 3d 1245, 2015 Ala. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/os-v-es-ala-2015.