T.R.F. v. Felan

760 P.2d 906, 90 Utah Adv. Rep. 36, 1988 Utah App. LEXIS 138, 1988 WL 90680
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedAugust 30, 1988
Docket870307-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 760 P.2d 906 (T.R.F. v. Felan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
T.R.F. v. Felan, 760 P.2d 906, 90 Utah Adv. Rep. 36, 1988 Utah App. LEXIS 138, 1988 WL 90680 (Utah Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

BILLINGS, Judge:

This is an appeal from an order which permanently terminated appellant Ray Fel-an’s parental rights and authorized the petitioners to proceed with the adoption of his child. The trial court found that Felan, prior to the filing of petitioners’ petition for adoption, had adopted his child by acknowledgment pursuant to Utah Code § 78-30-12 (1987), and that he was a fit and proper person to have custody of his child. Nevertheless, the trial court permanently terminated Felan’s parental rights. The court based its decision on Felan’s *907 failure to file a notice of paternity under Utah Code Ann. § 78-30-4(3)(b) (1987), before the petitioners filed their petition for adoption, and on the “best interests” of the child. We reverse and remand.

Appellate review of a trial court’s termination of parental rights is highly fact sensitive. Consequently, we review the facts of this dispute in detail. Felan’s child was bom on October 30,1980, in Salt Lake City, Utah. Felan was stationed in Japan with the United States Marine Corps at the time of the child’s birth. Felan and the child’s mother were not married at the time of conception, nor did they marry after the child’s birth. Felan is named as the child’s father on the birth certificate and the child was given his surname. He is also identified as the child’s father on the child’s baptismal record.

Felan and the child’s mother discussed marriage and having a child before the child was conceived. However, Felan at the time was married to another woman. 1 Felan purchased baby furniture for his child, including a crib, a playpen, a highchair, a rocker, and clothing, costing roughly $1200. When the child was about six-weeks old, the child’s mother took the child to visit Felan in Japan for approximately two weeks. Felan and the child’s mother remained in contact during his stay in Japan. When the child was one and one-half years of age, Felan was transferred to Twenty-nine Palms, California. While stationed at Twenty-nine Palms, according to the child’s mother, “[Felan] would come [to Salt Lake City] often or I would go down there.” The child’s mother’s job entailed traveling and she worked in Anaheim, California “a couple of times so that [Felan] could see [the child] and we could be together.” During one of these visits, Felan had the child by himself for roughly a week while the mother attended business meetings. According to Felan, the relationship he had with the child’s mother was like any other “military family.” That is, they would see each other when they could, planning visits around where Felan was stationed. After his term in Twenty-nine Palms, Felan was discharged from the military after twenty-three and one-half years of service.

In August 1983, after he was discharged, Felan returned to Salt Lake City where he resided with the child’s mother and the child until December 1983. Thereafter, he moved to Austin, Texas where his parents and other relatives lived, to seek employment. The child’s mother and the child went to visit Felan in Austin to celebrate the child’s third birthday. It was important to both Felan and the child’s mother that the child know Felan’s relatives.

In January 1984, Felan accepted a position with the United States Postal Service and returned to Salt Lake City. Felan lived with the child’s mother and their child from the end of January 1984 until May 1984 in the mother’s rented house. Thereafter, Felan put a $15,000 down payment on a house where the child’s mother, their child, and her other children resided. After Felan allegedly physically and emotionally abused the child’s mother, the couple’s relationship deteriorated. In December 1984 the mother, along with all of her children, moved out of Felan’s home.

It is unclear from the record how often Felan visited his child after his separation from the mother. At first, the child’s mother admits she did not tell Felan where she lived. Felan claims he accidentally discovered the residence of his child. Felan claims he thereafter saw the child’s mother on a regular basis. Eventually he stopped seeing the mother, but he continued to see the child. According to the child’s mother, Felan visited the child twice a month for two to three hours each time, and occasionally he would take the child on overnight visits to his home. Felan also took the child on extended trips by himself. For example, he took the child to Texas on two occasions and once took her to Las Vegas. Indeed, Felan took the child to visit his family in Texas for 22 days in August 1985, just five months before the petition to adopt was filed. Furthermore, Felan, the child’s mother, and their child had a “family” picture taken in late December 1985, *908 just one month before the child’s mother secretly consented to the child’s adoption by the petitioners.

The trial judge found Felan had not provided his child with adequate financial support. Although at trial Felan produced cancelled checks made out to the child’s mother totaling over $2,500, he never made regular child support payments. The child’s mother never filed an action to enforce Felan’s legal obligation to support the child. Felan did buy the child a bicycle and other items during the child’s visits with him.

The mother underwent a mastectomy in May 1985. As a result of the mother’s health, the petitioners began tending the child in August 1985. Further cancer was discovered in September 1985. The petitioners took physical custody of the child in January 1986. When the petitioners had custody, Felan’s requests to see his child were often refused. When the petitioners learned the mother was terminally ill, they asked to adopt the child and the mother consented. On January 7, 1986, the petitioners filed a verified petition to adopt the child. Shortly thereafter, the mother filed her consent. Felan did not know of the mother’s intention to relinquish the child for adoption nor of petitioners’ desire to adopt his child until after the petition for adoption had been filed and after the child’s mother’s death. 2 Felan filed his acknowledgment of paternity the day after he learned of the petition for adoption. Felan insists the child’s mother led him to believe he would be allowed to rear the child upon her death.

On September 17,1986, Felan applied for a military identification card for the child, which entitles the child to military benefits such as commissary privileges, dental, health, and death benefits. Felan’s employment records identify the child as one of his beneficiaries. The child is currently covered by Felan’s medical insurance. The trial court specifically found that Felan satisfied the requirements delineated in section 78-30-12, Utah’s acknowledgment statute:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
760 P.2d 906, 90 Utah Adv. Rep. 36, 1988 Utah App. LEXIS 138, 1988 WL 90680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trf-v-felan-utahctapp-1988.