State v. Walstad

2009 ND 7
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 3, 2009
Docket20080271
StatusPublished

This text of 2009 ND 7 (State v. Walstad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Walstad, 2009 ND 7 (N.D. 2009).

Opinion

Filed 2/3/09 by Clerk of Supreme Court

IN THE SUPREME COURT

STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA

2009 ND 19

In the Matter of the Adoption of H.G.C.

B.A.C., Petitioner and Appellee

v.

N.W.P., Respondent and Appellant

and

Carol Olson, as Executive Director of the

North Dakota Department of Human Services, Respondent

No. 20080096

Appeal from the District Court of Cass County, East Central Judicial District, the Honorable Cynthia Rothe-Seeger, Judge.

AFFIRMED.

Opinion of the Court by Sandstrom, Justice.

Leslie Johnson Aldrich, Johnson Law Office P.C., 1018 1st Avenue North, Fargo, N.D. 58102-4602, for petitioner and appellee.

Mark T. Blumer, P.O. Box 475, Valley City, N.D. 58072, for respondent and appellant.

Adoption of H.G.C.

Sandstrom, Justice.

[¶1] N.P. appeals from a district court order terminating his parental rights to H.G.C., a minor child he has with A.C.  We conclude the district court’s findings of abandonment under N.D.C.C. § 14-15-19(3)(a) are not clearly erroneous, and we affirm.

I

[¶2] In October 2007, B.C. petitioned to terminate N.P.’s parental rights and for a step-parent adoption of H.G.C.  According to testimony at the hearing, H.G.C. was born to N.P. and A.C. in 2001.  N.P. and A.C. were never married to each other, but they occasionally lived together, including periods after the child was born.  N.P. testified he had H.G.C. in his care approximately half of the time until 2003.  A 2003 judgment granted A.C. and N.P. joint legal custody and granted A.C. physical custody of H.G.C.  N.P. was granted visitation with H.G.C. every Wednesday and every other weekend, and N.P. exercised the scheduled visitation until sometime in 2005.  N.P. was required to pay child support and one-half of the uncovered medical expenses under the 2003 judgment.  N.P. sporadically paid child support until January 2005, when he stopped paying support; however, he began making very small payments of approximately ten dollars per month in November 2006 and began paying larger amounts in January 2007, including some of his arrearages.

[¶3] In October 2005, N.P. voluntarily began in-patient chemical dependency treatment, but had to end his treatment on November 18, 2005, to serve time in jail on outstanding warrants.  After N.P. was released from jail on December 19, 2005, he visited H.G.C. a few times, but he stopped visitation in March 2006 after A.C. told N.P. he was no longer allowed to see the child.  N.P.’s family also ended contact with the child around the same time period.

[¶4] In July 2006, N.P. was arrested for felony possession of drug paraphernalia, and he was incarcerated until December 2006.  N.P. sent a letter to A.C. and a birthday card to H.G.C. in October 2006.  N.P. also sent A.C. and H.G.C. a card in December 2006.   N.P. did not receive a response to either the letter or the cards.  After his incarceration, N.P. lived at the Bismark Transition Center until May 2007, and he received chemical dependency and gambling addiction treatment.  N.P. began working full-time and started paying child support regularly.

[¶5] In August 2007, A.C. married B.C., whom she had met in 2004.  Before A.C. married B.C., she lived with her parents in the home her parents had lived in for more than 30 years.  In September 2007, N.P. tried to call A.C. at her parents’ house, but he was unable to speak to her and he left a phone number for A.C. to call him back.  A.C. testified she tried to contact N.P. using the phone number he gave, but she was unable to reach him.  

[¶6] After a hearing, the district court granted B.C.’s petition to terminate N.P.’s parental rights in an April 2008 order, finding:

4. [N.P.] has been in and out of jail and the penitentiary throughout [the child’s] life.  [N.P.] has a significant criminal history.  In 2005, his visitation came to an end. [N.P.] was using illegal drugs and had entered inpatient treatment.  At best, his last visit with [the child] was before Easter in 2006. [N.P.’s] mother and family stopped contact with [the child] in late 2005, as well.  In July 2006, he was arrested and later sentenced to 18 months in the penitentiary for felony drug paraphernalia, among other charges.  He had eight warrants at the time.  He is in excess of $16,000 behind in child support payments for [the child].  He made only one telephone call to [A.C.’s] mother’s house in September 2007 and 2008.  He sent no presents, cards, letters for [the child] in 2007.  He sent three cards from the Penitentiary—two in October 2006 (one for [A.C.]) and one in December 2006.  The last gift was for [the child’s] birthday in October 2005.  He has abandoned the child.  He has had no significant meaningful contact with [the child] since about March 2006.

. . . .

7. That the natural mother, [A.C.], has never been married to the natural father, [N.P.].  She has not received any child support payments from [N.P.] with respect to the child for two years and support has been spotty. [N.P.] has never provided health insurance, nor paid medical co-pays for [the child].  He did not attend the Children of Divorce class as ordered in the 2003 Amended Judgment. [N.P.] has never had a driver’s license, nor made any attempt to obtain one. [A.C.] does not have a home telephone number or address for [N.P.] He did provide the Expressway Inn address in Bismarck, North Dakota at the January 2008 hearing. [A.C.’s] parents have lived at the same address for 30 years. [A.C.] worked for NDSU for 7 years. [A.C.] did not hide herself or [the child] from [N.P.].  [N.P.] has no substantial relationship with [the child] since 2004, it was off and on in 2005, and ended in spring 2006.  He abandoned [the child] and withholding his consent is unreasonable and not in [the child’s] best interest.

8. That the natural father, [N.P.] has not relinquished parental rights or consented to the termination of rights to the child. [The child] should not have to wait indefinitely for [N.P.], the biological father, to mature sufficiently to be able to fill the parental role of father. [N.P.], although noble in his efforts to stay sober, has failed [the child], leaving others to perform parental duties.

11. That [N.P.] has not shown nor expressed any sufficient interest in the minor child.  The termination is in [the child’s] best interest.

13. Service was properly made on Respondent by Sheriff and mail.  The Defendant, [N.P.], filed no papers with the Court but did testify. [N.P.] had no justification for not sending cards, letters or presents to [the child].  He has no justification for two years of not paying child support.

(Emphasis omitted).  N.P. appealed the findings and order terminating his parental rights.  B.C.’s petition for step-parent adoption was not addressed or disposed of, and this Court temporarily remanded to allow the district court to consider entry of a N.D.R.Civ.P. 54(b) order or for further proceedings on the petition for step-parent adoption.  On remand, the district court entered a final decree of adoption.

[¶7] The district court had jurisdiction under N.D. Const. art. VI, § 8, and N.D.C.C. §§ 14-15-04 and 27-05-06.  This appeal is timely under N.D.R.App.P. 4(a).  This Court has jurisdiction under N.D. Const. art. VI, §§ 2 and 6, and N.D.C.C. §§ 14-15-

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Bluebook (online)
2009 ND 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-walstad-nd-2009.