W.W. v. H.W.

CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedApril 14, 2023
DocketCL-2022-0710
StatusPublished

This text of W.W. v. H.W. (W.W. v. H.W.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
W.W. v. H.W., (Ala. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Rel: April 14, 2023

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts, 300 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other errors, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published in Southern Reporter.

ALABAMA COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS OCTOBER TERM, 2022-2023 _________________________

CL-2022-0710 _________________________

W.W.

v.

H.W.

Appeal from Morgan Juvenile Court (JU-21-823.01)

THOMPSON, Presiding Judge.

On November 1, 2021, H.W. ("the mother") filed in the Morgan

Juvenile Court ("the juvenile court") a petition seeking to terminate the

parental rights of W.W. ("the father") to the minor child born of their

marriage. The juvenile court conducted a hearing on May 16, 2022, at CL-2022-0710

which it received ore tenus evidence. On that same day, the juvenile court

entered a judgment granting the mother's petition and terminating the

father's parental rights. In its judgment, the juvenile court found, in part,

that the father had abandoned the child. The father filed a timely notice

of appeal to this court.

The record does not indicate when the parties married, but, on

September 2, 2020, the Cullman Circuit Court conducted a pendente lite

hearing in a divorce action involving the parties. During that pendente

lite hearing, the parties reached a settlement agreement concerning their

competing claims in the divorce action. The Cullman Circuit Court

entered a judgment on October 7, 2020, that divorced the parties and

incorporated the terms of the parties' settlement agreement. Pursuant to

that divorce judgment, the mother was awarded sole custody of the child,

and the father was awarded supervised, alternating-weekend visitation

with the child for a period of six months. The divorce judgment required

the father to attend a substance-abuse assessment and to submit to

random drug screens during that six-month period. According to the

provisions of the divorce judgment, after the father had completed the

substance-abuse assessment and six months of drug screens, the parties

2 CL-2022-0710

were to file a joint motion in the Cullman Circuit Court so that the father

could receive a standard schedule of unsupervised visitation with the

child. The divorce judgment further required that the wife transport the

child to the alternating-weekend visitations with the father and that the

father pay the mother $64.80 for doing so; the father explained that that

amount was to compensate the mother for gasoline for her vehicle.

The divorce judgment also awarded the father telephone visitation

with the child on Mondays, Thursdays, and Fridays between 5:00 p.m.

and 7:00 p.m., and it provided that the mother could contact the child by

telephone on Saturdays when the child was visiting the father. Pursuant

to the terms of the divorce judgment, the party who intended to contact

the child during the times specified in that judgment was to "text the

other party simply stating that [he or she is] about to contact the child.

If the minor child is not available at that time, the minor child shall

return the contact that same day."

In addition, the divorce judgment required that the father pay the

mother $526.13 per month in child support, and it ordered that an

income-withholding order ("IWO") be entered within 14 days of the entry

of that judgment. The divorce judgment specified that, until the father's

3 CL-2022-0710

child-support obligation could be paid through the IWO, the father was

to pay his monthly child-support obligation directly to the mother.

On August 18, 2020, while the divorce action was pending, the

Cullman Circuit Court entered a pendente lite protection-from-abuse

("PFA") order against the father. The mother testified that she had

requested the entry of the PFA order because the father had been

constantly harassing her, had yelled and cursed at her, and had

threatened to kill her. The divorce judgment specified that the PFA order

was to "remain in full force and effect except for any provisions that

would conflict with the [father's] rights to visitation and communication

with the child as set out herein."

The mother testified that in accordance with the settlement

agreement that was later incorporated into the divorce judgment, the

father was to complete a substance-abuse evaluation on September 9,

2020. However, the mother testified, she did not know whether the father

had attended that evaluation. The mother stated that she had received

two photographs from the father via text messaging that showed the

results of two drug screens that the father had taken some time after

October 2020; the father did not send the mother any text message

4 CL-2022-0710

explaining those photographs. The mother stated, however, that the

father had "also sent me pictures before the divorce that he had found

online" and that, after the divorce, he had sent her text messages saying

he had mailed child-support payments but that she had never received

any of those payments. The mother stated that, based on those facts, it

was difficult for her "to know when things are true and when they are

not." Regardless, the mother said, the father did not notify her that he

had completed the requirement that he submit to drug screens for six

months.

The mother explained that the father "is not allowed" to drive with

the child in a vehicle because he had "been caught" driving while under

the influence of alcohol and, at the time the parties reached their

settlement agreement, he had been unable to provide proof that he had a

driver's license or vehicle insurance. For that reason, the mother said,

the settlement agreement had provided that the mother transport the

child to any visitations with the father. The mother also testified that,

before the parties entered into the settlement agreement in September

2020, the father had not exercised visitation with the child for almost one

year.

5 CL-2022-0710

The mother and the father agreed that the father had exercised his

supervised alternating-weekend visitation, as outlined in the settlement

agreement, only twice. The first supervised weekend visitation between

the father and the child occurred on September 6, 2020, through

September 8, 2020, which was the weekend following the execution of the

settlement agreement. The mother stated that the father next exercised

his supervised weekend visitation with the child on October 2, 2020,

through October 4, 2020. Those two weekend visitations were supervised

by the father's mother, S.N. ("the paternal grandmother").

The mother testified that during the father's October 2020

visitation with the child, the child had used a social-media video-

conferencing platform to contact her. The mother stated that the child

was crying during that contact, and, the mother said, she could see and

hear the father and his girlfriend "fighting" in the background behind the

child. The mother admitted that she had contacted law enforcement and

had asked them to check on the situation. Law-enforcement officers

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W.W. v. H.W., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ww-v-hw-alacivapp-2023.