Sheryl M. v. Tammy R.

39 Cal. Rptr. 3d 773, 137 Cal. App. 4th 126
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 28, 2006
DocketG035622
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 39 Cal. Rptr. 3d 773 (Sheryl M. v. Tammy R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheryl M. v. Tammy R., 39 Cal. Rptr. 3d 773, 137 Cal. App. 4th 126 (Cal. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Opinion

ARONSON, J.

Sheryl M. appeals from an order dismissing her petitions to free Michael R. from his birth mother Tammy R.’s parental custody and control on the ground of abandonment (Fam. Code, § 7820 et seq.; all statutory references are to this code unless otherwise noted) and to independently adopt him. (§ 8802.) We conclude Sheryl failed to demonstrate standing to adopt under section 8802 and therefore the family court did not err in dismissing her adoption petition. We also reject her claim she raised a prima facie case of parental abandonment under section 7822. Finally, we disagree with Sheryl’s claim the family court lacked jurisdiction to alter the probate court’s child custody order. 1 Accordingly, we affirm the order dismissing Sheryl’s petitions.

I

Factual and Procedural Background

A single mother with two other children, 36-year-old Tammy gave birth to Michael in November 2003. She was unmarried and did not cohabit with the man she identified as the biological father, Loren G. Tammy relinquished her son to a licensed adoption agency, Nightlight Christian Adoptions (NCA). The agency placed Michael with prospective adoptive parents Sheryl and Roger M. following the birth. In a document entitled, “Relinquishment,” Tammy named the M.’s as the intended adoptive parents.

*132 On November 18, 2003, NCA petitioned to determine the extent of Loren’s parental rights and whether his consent for the adoption was required. (§ 7662 [no adoption without judicial determination that nonrelinquishing parent’s rights have been terminated or that consent is not required].) Loren timely petitioned in the probate court to establish a parental relationship. 2 NCA filed an amended petition in December. 3 The M.’s petitioned to adopt Michael in January 2004, and NCA joined in the petition. In February, the probate court joined the M.’s as necessary parties in Loren’s action, and the family court consolidated the three proceedings and ordered genetic testing to determine whether Loren was Michael’s biological father. After one postponement, the court scheduled a hearing for May 2004.

In early May 2004, the M.’s, NCA, and Loren entered into a postadoption contact agreement. (See § 8616.5.) Loren agreed to give up his parental rights, and the M.’s promised to inform Michael when he was older that Loren was his biological father and to permit four visits per year, among other provisions. The court signed the agreement, dismissed NCA’s and Loren’s petitions, and ordered that the adoption proceed without Loren’s consent. 4

In late August 2004, Sheryl petitioned to dissolve her marriage. On September 13, NCA notified Tammy of the pending divorce and that the couple could not meet Tammy’s desire for a two-parent adoption of Michael. Tammy immediately notified NCA she intended to rescind her relinquishment, and submitted a formal written request to rescind on September 30.

On October 25, Sheryl petitioned the probate court for appointment as Michael’s temporary guardian on the grounds that Tammy “may” rescind the relinquishment, “but there is no information that she has” and therefore a guardianship was necessary to “maintain the status quo until the relinquishment issue is resolved.” The following day, over Tammy’s objection, the *133 court granted temporary letters of guardianship, expiring November 22, 2004, and ordered weekly 45-minute supervised visits for Tammy at NCA’s offices. The court set a “rehearing” for November 22, 2004, and ordered a guardianship investigation under Probate Code section 1513. 5

On November 2, NCA consented to Tammy’s rescission of the relinquishment. In reaching this conclusion, NCA referred to the recent change in circumstances, including: Tammy’s clearly stated intention to have Michael raised in a two-parent/income household and no exposure to drug use; the pending dissolution of the M.’s marriage, apparently prompted by the husband’s drug use; Tammy’s demonstrated parental skills, and her ability to now provide a two-parent home for Michael because of her marriage seven months earlier to Jeff J. Because of the temporary guardianship, NCA informed Tammy it could not return physical custody of Michael and advised her to retain counsel in the guardianship matter.

Represented by counsel, Tammy filed objections to Sheryl’s guardianship petition in advance of the November 22 rehearing. She claimed she selected the M.’s based on representations they could provide Michael stability and financial security. She was also misled to believe the adoption would be “open” so that she and Michael’s siblings could visit him regularly. She immediately rescinded her relinquishment when she learned Sheryl’s husband had admitted to drug use, and no longer lived in the home. She formally “objected] to the appointment of any Guardian” and demanded an immediate return of her child.

The court extended the temporary guardianship several times, apparently to conclude the previously ordered investigation. On January 11, Tammy’s counsel filed a declaration noting the investigating social worker concluded that an appropriate disposition would be to return Michael to his mother. Counsel requested the court terminate the temporary guardianship. He attached an NCA report concerning Tammy’s visits with Michael in November *134 2004. The agency found Tammy’s behavior “very appropriate,” Michael appeared content during two of the visits, but cried during the last one. Because Sheryl ignored requests to stay in a separate office during these visits, NCA requested she leave the property during any future visits.

Sheryl’s lawyer disputed NCA’s account, claiming each visit had been cut short because of the child’s negative reaction to Tammy and that the parties had agreed at a previous hearing the visits would cease. Counsel submitted a letter from the M.’s family therapist that urged the court to reconsider Tammy’s visitation with Michael because there was no existing relationship and “to have a child at this stage begin a new relationship with a mothering figure is to potentially disrupt the child’s psychological well-being. The baby as a one-year-old is frightened by strangers and perceives the birth mother as a stranger.” Michael’s pediatrician had a similar opinion and recommended visitation be withheld “until a final decision on the adoption can be made.”

In January 2005, Sheryl petitioned to terminate Tammy’s parental rights under section 7820 on the grounds of abandonment. Sheryl alleged Tammy had not provided for Michael’s support and had rarely visited Michael since his birth, and asserted it would be in Michael’s best interests to terminate Tammy’s parental rights.

Tammy filed a response to Sheryl’s petition. Her opposition included an allegation the M.’s had misrepresented their marital relationship and failed to disclose the husband’s background, which included information about his psychological problems, and incidents of domestic violence and arrests during a previous marriage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 Cal. Rptr. 3d 773, 137 Cal. App. 4th 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheryl-m-v-tammy-r-calctapp-2006.