Shannon Kathleen Smith Hurt Lively v. Paulette Holland Smith and Link Monroe Smith

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedOctober 20, 2020
Docket1929193
StatusPublished

This text of Shannon Kathleen Smith Hurt Lively v. Paulette Holland Smith and Link Monroe Smith (Shannon Kathleen Smith Hurt Lively v. Paulette Holland Smith and Link Monroe Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Shannon Kathleen Smith Hurt Lively v. Paulette Holland Smith and Link Monroe Smith, (Va. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges Malveaux and Athey Argued by videoconference PUBLISHED

SHANNON KATHLEEN SMITH HURT LIVELY OPINION BY v. Record No. 1929-19-3 JUDGE MARY BENNETT MALVEAUX OCTOBER 20, 2020 PAULETTE HOLLAND SMITH AND LINK MONROE SMITH

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF TAZEWELL COUNTY Richard C. Patterson, Judge

Dennis H. Lee (Galumbeck & Kegley, Attorneys, on brief), for appellant.

Flux Neo (Neo Law Firm, PLLC, on brief), for appellee Paulette Holland Smith.

No brief or argument for appellee Link Monroe Smith.

Shannon Kathleen Smith Hurt Lively (“mother”) appeals the dismissal of her complaint

seeking to set aside her son’s adoption by her parents, Paulette Holland Smith and Link Monroe

Smith (“Paulette” and “Link”). She argues the circuit court erred in its application of Code

§ 63.2-1216 to her case. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the circuit court.

I. BACKGROUND

When reviewing a circuit court’s decision on appeal, we view the evidence in the light

most favorable to the party who prevailed below—here, Paulette—and grant them the benefit of

any reasonable inferences.1 See Shah v. Shah, 70 Va. App. 588, 591 (2019). So viewed, the

evidence is as follows.

1 Although a named defendant in this matter, Link filed a statement in support of mother’s complaint and moved the circuit court to set aside the order of adoption. Mother and J.H. married and had a son, T.S., who was born in 2007.2 J.H. was abusive,

and he and mother divorced in March 2009.

Also in 2009, mother was sentenced to four years’ incarceration for a number of offenses,

including felonies. Mother asked Paulette and Link to assume custody of T.S. Following an

April 2009 hearing, the juvenile and domestic relations district court (“the JDR court”) entered

an order granting full custody to Paulette and Link. Mother later testified that at that time her

parents told her that their custody of T.S. would be temporary and that when she returned home

she would “have [T.S.]” as long as she refrained from using drugs.

In summer 2011, Paulette and Link petitioned the circuit court to adopt T.S. Mother later

testified that she had learned J.H. “was coming after [T.S.], and that grandparents didn’t have a

leg to stand on in Virginia, and I needed to assign him over . . . so that [J.H.] couldn’t get [T.S.]

while I was incarcerated.” Link testified that he had several telephone conversations with

mother about adopting T.S. During those conversations, Link expressed concern about J.H.

attempting to take T.S. away and also stated his understanding that if T.S. was adopted, he would

have access to Link’s health insurance. Mother stated that she was told the adoption would be

temporary “until you get home. It’s just a piece of paper.”

Felicia de Courcy, counsel for Paulette and Link, mailed mother a consent to adoption

form. She accompanied the form with a cover letter stating that she represented Paulette and

Link in the adoption and that “[i]t is my understanding that you are in agreement for the

adoption. Enclosed please find a [c]onsent which you need to sign under oath before a notary.”

Mother signed the consent and had it notarized on May 25, 2011. That day, she also

wrote a letter to de Courcy explaining that “[s]ince I received your letter I have been moved to

the Deerfield Work Center . . . . [T]he delay in my response is solely because of my transfer.”

2 We use nonparties’ initials, rather than their names, to protect their privacy. -2- Mother also informed de Courcy that Link held her power of attorney and stated that “if these

proceedings can be expedited in any manner, please feel free to exercise th[o]se papers.” Mother

closed by stating, “I want to take this opportunity to thank you for over-seeing this matter. Your

time and attention to our situation is greatly appreciated!”

On August 16, 2011, the circuit court entered a final order of adoption which

acknowledged mother’s consent and decreed that T.S. was, “to all intents and purposes, the child

of Link . . . and Paulette.”

Mother was released from incarceration in September 2012 and returned to her parental

home in Tazewell County. At that time, Paulette was helping to care for her mother and sister in

Ohio and traveled there almost weekly. T.S. accompanied Paulette on her trips since Paulette

was providing the majority of his care. Mother testified that between September 2012 and

February 2013 she lived first in her parents’ home and then in a house next door and that she had

resumed her relationship as T.S.’s mother. However, Paulette specifically denied that mother

was “raising” T.S. or was his “primary caregiver” during this time. Paulette testified that prior to

February 2013, she continued to take T.S. with her on her regular trips to Ohio and that she had

T.S. with her “the majority of the time.”

In February 2013, following a family argument, Paulette and T.S. left Tazewell for Ohio

and began to spend the majority of their time there. Mother testified that after February 2013,

T.S. periodically returned to Virginia, but only for visits.

Due to ongoing marital problems, Paulette filed for a separation from Link in October

2014. She subsequently filed for divorce and was awarded primary physical custody.

In August 2015, mother petitioned the JDR court to amend custody. In her handwritten

petition, mother requested that full custody be given to her because “Link & Paulette . . . are

going through a messy divorce . . . . His biological mother wants to bring [T.S.] home . . . to

-3- avoid him having to go through this mental & emotional stress.” The JDR court denied the

motion, noting that a final order of adoption had been entered by the circuit court in 2011 and

that mother’s parental rights had thus been terminated. As a result, mother lacked standing to

petition for custody. Mother testified that this was the first occasion on which she realized that

her parental rights had been terminated.

In June 2018, following a search for an attorney to represent her, mother filed a

complaint seeking to set aside the adoption. Mother alleged that her consent to the adoption had

been fraudulently obtained. She further alleged that she had been denied due process during the

adoption proceedings since she had been a person under a disability—i.e., an incarcerated

felon—and no guardian ad litem had been appointed for her. As a result, mother argued, she had

understood neither her rights under the circumstances nor the legal consequences of her consent.

Paulette filed a demurrer arguing, in part, that Code § 63.2-1216 foreclosed all challenges

to the adoption because more than six months had passed since entry of the adoption order. The

circuit court sustained the demurrer with respect to the allegation of fraud and scheduled a

hearing on the remaining issues.

At the hearing, the parties testified as described above and mother acknowledged signing

the consent form and having it notarized. However, she stated that she had received it without a

cover letter and represented that “all [she] got was just a consent form with a sticky [flag]

attached to it” indicating where it should be signed. When the notary asked her if she knew what

she was signing, mother told her that she did not and that “my parents had sent it to me, and I

was supposed to sign it.

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