T.E.W. v. T.S.

97 So. 3d 157, 2012 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 122, 2012 WL 1760216
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedMay 18, 2012
Docket2110104
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 97 So. 3d 157 (T.E.W. v. T.S.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
T.E.W. v. T.S., 97 So. 3d 157, 2012 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 122, 2012 WL 1760216 (Ala. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

THOMPSON, Presiding Judge.

T.E.W., Jr. (“the father”), appeals a judgment of the Calhoun Juvenile Court finding his minor child dependent and [158]*158awarding custody of her to T.S. (“the aunt”), the child’s maternal aunt.

■ The record indicates that the child was born to D.S. (“the mother”) and the father in 2005; the mother and the father never married. In January 2007, - the juvenile court entered a judgment adjudicating the father’s paternity and incorporating an agreement reached by the mother and the father pertaining to custody and child support. Pursuant to that judgment, the father was awarded visitation at the mother’s discretion and was ordered to pay child support.

On December 2, 2010, the aunt filed an action in the juvenile court seeking to have the child declared dependent and seeking an award of custody of the child. The aunt alleged that the mother was ill and unable to care for the child and that the mother fully supported an award of custody of the child to the aunt. In an affidavit submitted in support of her dependency petition, the aunt alleged that the father lived in a home with a number of his relatives, including a disabled brother who posed a threat to the child, who was five years old at the time. Also on December 2,2010, the juvenile court entered an order awarding pendente lite custody of the child to the aunt.

On January 5, 2011, the father filed an answer disputing the aunt’s claim that the child was dependent, and he asserted a counterclaim for an award of custody of the child. Later in January 2011, the aunt filed a suggestion of death in which she informed the juvenile court that the mother had died on December 23, 2010.1

The juvenile court conducted an ore ten-us hearing on March 9, 2011. In May 2011, the aunt moved that the child be evaluated by a mental-health professional. The child’s guardian ad litem opposed that motion. The juvenile court granted the aunt’s motion and specified that the child’s guardian ad litem approve the parties’ selection of a therapist. On October 12, 2011, the aunt filed a notice in the juvenile court alleging that she was unable to comply with the May 2011 order because, she alleged, the guardian ad litem had refused to approve a counselor for the child because he had stated that he did not feel that the child needed counseling.

On October 18, 2011, the juvenile court entered a judgment finding the child dependent and awarding custody of her to the aunt. The father timely appealed.

The evidence in the record on appeal indicates that, from the time of the child’s birth in July 2005 until December 2009, the father visited the child only in the mother’s home. The father stated that the mother’s moods had varied and that he had found it easier to allow her to arrange his visitation at her convenience rather than to request specific visitation with the child. The father testified that until December 2009 his visitation with the child had been regular and that he had sometimes stayed overnight in the mother’s home in order to exercise visitation with the child.

The father testified that he began having regular weekend visitation with the child in his home in December 2009 and that he often helped the mother with the child during the week. The father testified that, because of the mother’s deteriorating health during the fall of 2010, he often took the child to or retrieved her from school, and he stated that the child [159]*159sometimes visited him overnight on school nights during that time.

According to the father, before Thanksgiving 2010 the mother informed him that the child would spend the Thanksgiving holiday with the aunt and that he would have the child for the Christmas holidays. However, according to the aunt, shortly before Thanksgiving, the mother arranged for an attorney to draft an agreement pursuant to which she assigned her custodial rights to the child to the aunt. Thereafter, in early December 2010, the aunt filed her dependency petition and was awarded temporary custody of the child. The father testified that he first learned that the child was living with the aunt when he was served with the paperwork for the dependency action in mid-December 2010.

The father testified that when he was served with the paperwork for the dependency action he immediately contacted his attorney. The father stated that he did not attempt to contact the aunt because he did not know her contact information.

The father stated that a friend had informed him of the mother’s death five days after it occurred when the mother’s obituary was published in a newspaper. The aunt testified that, when the mother died, she did not have the father’s telephone number and, thus, did not attempt to contact him to inform him of the mother’s death until December 30, 2010. The aunt testified that she ultimately obtained the father’s contact information from an Internet search and that the father had already learned of the mother’s death at the time she contacted him.

The father acknowledged that between the entry of the December 2, 2010, pen-dente lite custody order and the March 9, 2011, hearing on the merits he had contacted the child only twice by telephone and that those contacts had occurred in January and February 2011. The father testified that he did not have the aunt’s contact information in December 2010. The father explained that he did not contact the child more frequently because he did not want to do anything to upset the child. In addition, the aunt arranged for the child to call the father on the telephone on two other occasions. It does not appear that the father visited the child between the time the aunt obtained pendente lite custody and the March 9, 2011, hearing. The aunt argued before the juvenile court that the father’s failure to maintain regular contact with the child demonstrated a lack of commitment to the child.

The aunt also based a portion of her dependency allegations on the fact that, until shortly after the mother’s death, the father had resided with his disabled brother. The father’s brother is disabled as a result of a brain injury he suffered in an automobile accident. The father testified that his disabled brother has neurological and intellectual deficits and that he also has physical injuries that require that he use a walker or a wheelchair. The father testified that his disabled brother needs continual supervision and that the father’s mother provides that care.

In 2001, the disabled brother was accused of inappropriate sexual contact with a four- or five-year-old girl. The father insisted that he knew nothing about those allegations. The father explained that he did not live with his disabled brother and his mother when those allegations arose, that he did not want to have anything to do with that situation, and that his mother had handled the situation. The father stated that, even after the birth of the child and the time when the child visited him in the home he shared with his disabled brother, he had not inquired about that incident. He also acknowledged that the child’s mother had expressed concern about the child’s being around his disabled [160]*160brother because of the 2001 abuse allegations. The father testified that, in spite of those concerns expressed by the mother, he had still not inquired about the 2001 alleged abuse incident.

The father insisted, however, that the child had never been alone in the presence of his disabled brother when she visited him in the home he had shared with his disabled brother.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 So. 3d 157, 2012 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 122, 2012 WL 1760216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tew-v-ts-alacrimapp-2012.