Ring v. Jensen

20 P.3d 205, 172 Or. App. 624, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 261
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 28, 2001
Docket96-3408, P96-6642, 97A-1125; CA A105865
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 20 P.3d 205 (Ring v. Jensen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ring v. Jensen, 20 P.3d 205, 172 Or. App. 624, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 261 (Or. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

*626 EDMONDS, P. J.

Father (Erik Jensen) appeals from the trial court’s judgment granting maternal grandmother’s (Maria Ring) petition for visitation with father’s daughter (child), ORS 109.121, and denying stepmother’s petition to adopt child, ORS 109.309; ORS 109.350. 1 Our review of the facts is de novo. ORS 19.415(3). We reverse in part.

Father and child’s mother (Lynne Ring) were involved in a relationship in 1990. They lived together immediately before child’s birth and for approximately one year after her birth. Child and mother then lived with maternal grandmother and her domestic partner for one year, before father and mother ended their relationship. Thereafter, father and mother continued to share parenting responsibilities for child, who spent alternating weeks with each parent. During the time that child was in mother’s care, grandmother provided care during the day. During the time that child was in father’s care, child was cared for at times by a babysitter and at times by stepmother, to whom father was not married at the time. Mother was murdered in 1994, when child was four years old. Child began to live exclusively with father at that time and has remained in his care. Father and stepmother have married and have shared responsibility for parenting child and stepmother’s three children, who also live with them.

After mother’s death, grandmother initiated visits with child by calling father’s home and requesting visitation time from father or stepmother. In 1996, grandmother perceived that father was becoming reluctant to allow visitation between her and child. She filed a petition with the court for an order of visitation pursuant to ORS 109.121, and for the appointment of a conservator over child’s financial affairs in October 1996. While those matters were pending, father and stepmother (Martha Jensen) filed a petition for the adoption *627 of child by stepmother. Grandmother moved to modify custody from father to herself in July 1998. The trial court commenced the hearing on the visitation petition on March 13, 1998. Hearings were also conducted on April 1, October 1 and 9, and December 3,1998.

The trial court denied the petition for adoption, ruling that ORS 109.350 required a finding that the adoption be “fit and proper.” In light of expert testimony about child’s emotional unreadiness to be adopted as the result of her mother’s death, the court concluded that the adoption was not in child’s best interests. The court also ruled that father had denied grandmother reasonable opportunities to visit and that visitation was appropriate and in child’s best interest. It awarded grandmother the right to visitation every other weekend, during spring vacation every other year, during one-half of each Christmas school vacation, for four weeks each summer, on the day of child’s mother’s death each year, on grandmother’s birthday each year and on Mother’s Day and Thanksgiving every other year.

First, we address father’s fourth assignment of error. In that assignment, father contends that the trial court should have granted stepmother’s adoption petition, arguing that there is no statutory authority for a court to refuse to grant an uncontested step-parent adoption. The Supreme Court has identified four categories of “interested parties” to an adoption proceeding: (1) the child who is the subject of the petition, (2) the biological parents or those standing in their place, (3) the party or parties seeking to adopt, and (4) the state. In re Flora’s Adoption, 152 Or 155, 159, 52 P2d 178 (1935). A person who has an interest that would be affected by the outcome of an appeal must be a party to the proceeding, or a court is without the power to issue an effective judgment. See generally McCulley v. Bone, 160 Or App 24, 43-44, 979 P2d 779, rev dismissed 329 Or 523 (1999); Steers v. Rescue 3, Inc., 146 Or App 746, 749-50, 934 P2d 532 (1997) (if an effective judgment cannot be given without the participation of a particular party, then the party is “indispensible”). Stepmother is not a party to the notice of appeal, 2 and this *628 court cannot grant father’s requested relief — reversal of the denial of stepmother’s adoption petition and a grant of her adoption petition — without her participation. Therefore, we do not reach father’s fourth assignment of error.

Father’s first and second assignments of error are that the court erred in granting grandmother’s petition for visitation under ORS 109.121, 3 or that, alternatively, if the court properly exercised its authority under the statutes, the amount of visitation ordered was excessive. ORS 109.121 provides, in part:

“(l)(a) A child’s grandparent may, upon petition to the circuit court, be granted an order establishing reasonable rights of visitation between the grandparent and the child if:
“(A) The grandparent has established or has attempted to establish ongoing personal contact with the child; and
“(B) The custodian of the child has denied the grandparent reasonable opportunity to visit the child.
“(5) Any order creating visitation rights under this section shall be according to the court’s best judgment of the facts of the case and shall include such conditions and limitations as it deems reasonable. In making or modifying such an order, the court shall be guided by the best interests and welfare of the child.”

Father concedes that grandmother met the requirement of ORS 109.121(l)(a)(A) because grandmother has a long-term, caring relationship with child. He argues, however, that grandmother failed to establish the other threshold qualification under ORS 109.121(l)(a)(B), because she *629 did not demonstrate that he denied reasonable opportunities to visit the child. The decision on grandmother’s petition turns on the resolution of that issue. 4

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 P.3d 205, 172 Or. App. 624, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ring-v-jensen-orctapp-2001.