Walker, Amanda v. Topher Halligan

CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedMarch 6, 2026
Docket326, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of Walker, Amanda v. Topher Halligan (Walker, Amanda v. Topher Halligan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker, Amanda v. Topher Halligan, (Del. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

AMANDA WALKER,1 § No. 326, 2025 § Petitioner Below, Appellant, § Court Below—Family Court § of the State of Delaware v. § § File No. 24-11-03TN TOPHER HALLIGAN, § Petition No. 24-26531 § Respondent Below, Appellee. §

Submitted: January 23, 2026 Decided: March 6, 2026

Before TRAYNOR, LEGROW, and GRIFFITHS, Justices.

ORDER

Upon consideration of the briefs and the record on appeal, it appears to

the Court that:

(1) This is a difficult case. The appellant (“Mother”) sought termination

of the parental rights of the appellee (“Father”) as to the parties’ child (the

“Child”) so that Mother’s husband (“Stepfather”), who has been a loving,

supportive stepparent to the child for almost all her life, could adopt her. The

Family Court found that Father had “done little to assert his parental rights” and

that his efforts to have a relationship with the Child were “abysmal.” But

recognizing the high burden of proof by which a petition to sever the parent-child

1 The Court previously assigned pseudonyms to the parties under Supreme Court Rule 7(d). relationship is tested, the court determined that Mother had not established a

statutory ground for termination and denied the petition. For the reasons

discussed below, we affirm the Family Court’s judgment.

(2) The Child was born in October 2017. In July 2018, Mother filed a

petition for an order of protection from abuse (“PFA”) against Father. In August

2018, Father filed a petition for paternity adjudication.2 Father did not appear for

the PFA hearing, and on August 29, 2018, a default PFA order was entered

against him. Shortly thereafter, Mother filed a petition for custody of the Child,

and Father moved to reopen the PFA order, alleging that he had not received

notice of the hearing. The Family Court granted Father’s motion and scheduled

a new PFA hearing but then reinstated the PFA order when Father again failed to

appear. In November 2018 and March 2019, Father was found to have violated

the PFA order; the PFA no-contact order ultimately remained in place until

November 9, 2021. On July 24, 2019, following a hearing for which Father failed

to appear, the Family Court granted Mother sole custody and primary residence

of the Child.

(3) Mother filed a TPR petition against Father in November 2024 and

amended petitions in December 2024 and February 2025. Mother sought

termination of Father’s parental rights on the grounds of unintentional

2 Father was later adjudicated to be the Child’s biological father. 2 abandonment under 13 Del. C. § 1103(a)(3) and failure to plan under 13 Del. C.

§ 1103(a)(6). Stepfather filed a petition for adoption of the Child.

(4) At the TPR trial on July 14, 2025, each party testified and presented

three additional witnesses. The evidence reflected that Father had not had contact

with the Child since the PFA petition was filed and had not provided any support

for the Child. Father asserted that he had last attempted to contact Mother in

2023, but she had blocked his number and moved to an unknown location.

Mother denied blocking communications from Father and asserted that he could

have contacted her through her family members. The Child was thriving in

Mother and Stepfather’s home, where she also lived with her younger sibling.

She was excelling in school and engaged in numerous extracurricular activities.

Stepfather treated the Child as his own and wanted to adopt her. The social

worker who performed a home study and prepared a social report to accompany

the TPR and adoption petitions opined that it would be in the Child’s best

interests for the TPR and adoption to be granted. The social worker testified that

she had attempted to contact Father when preparing the social report, but he had

not responded.

(5) Father testified that he had a commercial driver’s license and

worked as a truck driver. Father, his fiancée, and two of his family members

testified about his positive relationship with two of his sons, who spent some time

3 in his care but were not in his full-time custody, and his fiancée’s children, who

were young adults at the time of trial. Father’s sons’ mother testified that Father

had never paid any child support and that the children had told her that Father

was verbally and physically abusive. Father admitted that he had pleaded guilty

to patronizing a prostitute and disobeying a police signal; he also admitted that

he had been charged with second-degree murder when he was sixteen years old.3

(6) In a post-trial decision, the Family Court determined that Mother

had not established statutory grounds for termination of Father’s parental rights.

As to unintentional abandonment, the Family Court found that Father had “done

little to assert his parental rights,” made “little effort” to communicate with or

visit the Child, and had “a history of violence, bad decisions, and threatening

behavior toward Mother, Stepfather and the public.” But the court concluded

that Mother had not established unintentional abandonment under Section

1103(a)(3) because “Mother prohibited Father’s contact and contact from

paternal relatives,” “moved without disclosing her address,” “actively sought to

stay away from Father,” and “created barriers to his contact.” The court also

found that Mother failed to prove that Father did not pursue the establishment of

3 It is unclear from the record on appeal whether Father was convicted of second-degree murder. 4 paternity, because he sought adjudication of paternity in 2018. Moreover, the

court emphasized:

Most significantly, Mother failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence Father is not able or willing to promptly establish and maintain contact with [the Child] and pay reasonable support for her care. Father’s efforts to maintain a relationship with [the Child] were abysmal[;] however[,] now he is willing to promptly establish and maintain contact with her. He filed a Petition to Modify Custody on April 29, 2025, and he agrees to participate in therapy with [the Child] to develop a relationship. Father is also gainfully employed. Though he has not financially supported [the Child] or provided any gifts to her, if Mother files a Petition for Child Support against Father, he can pay reasonable support.

The court therefore concluded that Mother had not proven unintentional

abandonment under Section 1103(a)(3).

(7) Regarding failure to plan, the Family Court found that the Child was

both neglected and dependent as to Father—and that Father had failed to

discharge parental responsibilities for at least twelve of the eighteen months

preceding the filing of the TPR petition—because he had done nothing to provide

for the Child’s care and support and lacked any relationship with her.4 The court

found that the evidence was not clear and convincing that Father was unlikely to

remedy the dependency or neglect in the near future,5 however, because he was

4 See 13 Del. C. § 1103(a)(6) (providing for a “private” termination of parental rights if the child “is a dependent child or neglected child in the respondent’s care at the time of the hearing” and the Court finds all of four additional factors, including that the “respondent failed to discharge parental responsibilities for at least 12 of the 18 months preceding the filing of the petition”). 5 Id. § 1103(a)(6)d. 5 “parenting two of his children,” was “alleged to have a meaningful place in the

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