Alissa Christine BEARDSLEY, Appellant, v. Dante’ Antonio GARCIA, Jr., Respondent.
No. A06-922
Supreme Court of Minnesota
July 31, 2008
751 N.W.2d 81
MAGNUSON, C.J., not having been a member of this court at the time of the argument and submission, took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
Robert William Gadtke, Gadtke and Beyer, Edina, for Respondent.
Rana Suzanne Alexander Fuller, Kristine Chance Lizdas, Minneapolis, Jessie Ree Nicholson, Janet C. Werness, South-
OPINION
ANDERSON, G. BARRY, Justice.
Appellant Alissa Christine Beardsley and respondent Dante’ Antonio Garcia, Jr., signed a recognition of parentage acknowledging that Garcia is the biological father of D.G., one of Beardsley‘s sons. The district court subsequently granted Beardsley an order for protection against Garcia, but it granted Garcia temporary parenting time with D.G. in the order. Beardsley appealed the district court‘s grant of temporary parenting time to Garcia, and the court of appeals affirmed. We affirm the decision of the court of appeals.
On March 2, 2006, Beardsley petitioned for an order for protection (OFP) against Garcia.1 Beardsley stated in the petition that she has two minor sons, A.F. and D.G., but that she and Garcia have no children in common. Beardsley alleged that on February 24, 2006, Garcia threatened to split her head open, knock out her teeth, and possibly kill her. She also alleged that A.F. overheard Garcia threaten to kill her 2 days later when A.F. answered a phone call from Garcia and Beardsley refused to take the call. The district court issued an ex parte temporary OFP and scheduled a hearing on Beardsley‘s petition.
At the hearing on Beardsley‘s petition, which was held on March 16, 2006, Garcia did not challenge the issuance of the OFP but requested parenting time with D.G., who was 20 months old at the time. Garcia provided the district court with a recognition of parentage (ROP) in which he and Beardsley acknowledged that they are D.G.‘s biological parents, but the record indicates that Garcia‘s paternity of D.G. had not been adjudicated. Beardsley informed the court that although Garcia is not D.G.‘s biological father, he had “insisted on signing the birth certificate.” Beardsley said that she did not believe that D.G. would be safe with Garcia because of Garcia‘s “anger problems” and that she feared that Garcia would “threaten somebody else in front of [D.G.].”
Later in the day on March 16, the district court issued a 1-year OFP that prohibited Garcia from committing any acts of domestic abuse against Beardsley, entering Beardsley‘s residence, and contacting Beardsley by any means. The court made no finding that domestic abuse had occurred, and the OFP stated that Garcia had denied the allegations of the petition but had agreed to the issuance of the OFP. The court granted in part and denied in part Garcia‘s request for parenting time, awarding him parenting time with D.G. for 2 hours each weekend at a supervised facility.
Beardsley appealed the district court‘s grant of temporary parenting time to Garcia, arguing that
The object of statutory interpretation “is to ascertain and effectuate the intention of the legislature.”
The Domestic Abuse Act,
Beardsley argues that Garcia is excluded from the scope of section
A father whose paternity has been acknowledged in an ROP may commence an action to determine parenting time “pursuant to chapter 518 without an adjudication of parentage,” but “[u]ntil an order is entered granting custody to another, the mother has sole custody.”
If paternity has been recognized under section
257.75 [the ROP statute], the father may petition for rights of parenting time or custody in an independent action under section518.156 . * * * An action to determine custody and parenting time may be commenced pursuant to chapter 518 without an adjudication of parentage. These proceedings may not be combined with any proceeding under chapter 518B.
Relying on section
Beardsley also argues that the prohibition against combining a chapter 518 action to determine custody or parenting time with a domestic abuse proceeding, see
We also reject the dissent‘s conclusion that an ambiguity exists as to whether a district court has the statutory authority to award temporary parenting time in an OFP to an unadjudicated father whose paternity has been acknowledged in an ROP. Section
We especially reject the dissent‘s assertion that the silence of section
The statute at issue in Burkstrand was
We also recognized that statutory silence can create ambiguity in MBNA, where a taxpayer filed its refund claims for corporate franchise tax after the expiration of the refund filing period set forth in
In both Burkstrand and MBNA, the relevant statutes were completely silent on the contested issues—the consequence of a district court‘s failure to comply with the statutory time frame in Burkstrand and the effect of a nonconforming assessment on the refund filing period in MBNA. Section
Finally, we reject the dissent‘s contention that our decision “has the perverse consequence of rewarding acts of domestic violence.” The decision to award temporary parenting time in an OFP is within the discretion of the district court, which is required to give “primary consideration to the safety of the victim and the children.”
We have stated that “we will not read into a statute a provision that the legislature has omitted, either purposely or inadvertently.” Reiter v. Kiffmeyer, 721 N.W.2d 908, 911 (Minn.2006). Beardsley argues that we should effectively rewrite section
Affirmed.
MAGNUSON, C.J., not having been a member of this court at the time of the argument and submission, took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
MEYER, Justice (dissenting).
We are asked to determine whether a district court may award temporary parenting time to an unmarried father in an action brought against him for an order for protection under the Domestic Abuse Act, if that unmarried father has signed a recognition of parentage but has not previously obtained a court order granting him parenting time with the child who is the subject of the recognition of parentage. The majority concludes that the Domestic Abuse Act unambiguously gives a district court such authority. I respectfully dissent.
In this case, we are asked to interpret provisions from three statutes, the Domestic Abuse Act,
The Domestic Abuse Act provides protection to victims of domestic violence by giving them an expedited way in which to petition for and receive a court order prohibiting further acts of domestic abuse and providing immediate relief to a victim and his or her children. Burkstrand, 632 N.W.2d at 209; see also Baker v. Baker, 494 N.W.2d 282, 285 (Minn.1992) (superseded in part by statute in Burkstrand, 632 N.W.2d 206). The court order is called an order for protection.
The Parentage Act “provides the exclusive [statutory] basis for standing to bring an action to determine paternity.” Witso v. Overby, 627 N.W.2d 63, 65-66 (Minn. 2001). Under the Parentage Act, a biological mother of a child who was not married to the child‘s father when the child was born or conceived has sole custody of the child until specific court proceedings are held that determine custody issues.
Unmarried fathers, however, can file a court action under the Parentage Act and ask to be adjudicated the father of a particular child.
In 1993, the legislature created the Recognition-of-Parentage Statute (ROP).1 Act of May 27, 1993, 1st Spec. Sess., ch. 1, art. 6, § 40, 1993 Minn. Laws 3021, 3288-90 (codified at
The law provides a mechanism for a ROP father to obtain either custody of, or parenting time with, his child. The ROP statute states that a ROP is “a basis for bringing an action to award custody or parenting time to either parent” and that “[a]n action to determine custody and parenting time may be commenced pursuant to chapter 518 without an adjudication of parentage.”
[i]f paternity has been recognized under section
257.75 , the father may petition for rights of parenting time or custody in an independent action under section518.156 . * * * The provisions of chapter 518 apply with respect to the granting of custody and parenting time. * * * These proceedings may not be combined with any proceeding under chapter 518B [the Domestic Abuse Act].
Through the Parentage Act and the ROP statute, the legislature has made the decision to treat unmarried fathers differently than married fathers when it comes to the issues of custody and parenting time. It is not the purview of this court, but the policy decision of the legislature, that unmarried mothers have sole custody of their children absent a court order granting custody or parenting time rights to the father. Unlike a married father, whatever “custodial right” the unmarried father may have does not exist until a court becomes involved and determines those rights pursuant to either the Parentage Act or the ROP statute. See Morey v. Peppin, 375 N.W.2d 19, 23 (Minn.1985) (noting that the Parentage Act “preserves the common law right to custody in the mother and absence of any legal right to custody in the putative father pending the establishment of paternity“). Simply put, the legislature has decided that a father who does not marry the mother of his children has no right to custody of, or parenting time with, his children absent a court order awarding him such rights.
I disagree with the majority‘s conclusion that the Domestic Abuse Act unambiguously allows a district court to award parenting time to a ROP father who has no preexisting right to custody of, or parenting time with, a child as part of an order for protection proceeding brought against him. The operative language of the Domestic Abuse Act states that “[u]pon notice and hearing, the court may * * * establish temporary parenting time with regard to minor children of the parties on a basis which gives primary consideration to the safety of the victim and the children.”3
subd. 6(a)(4). The majority, relying on language from the Parentage Act, concludes that D.G. is a “minor child” of Garcia and Beardsley because of the ROP. But in making this determination, the majority ignores key language from the ROP statute.
The majority begins by citing language from the ROP statute stating that a ROP “has the force and effect of a judgment or order determining the existence of the parent and child relationship under section
A ROP father has no right to custody of, or parenting time with, his child simply because he signed a ROP. While a ROP is “determinative for all other purposes related to the existence of the parent and child relationship,” it is not so when it comes to custody and parenting time; a ROP merely provides “a basis for bringing an action to award custody or parenting time to either parent.”
In addition, the Parentage Act and the ROP statute provide a path for a ROP father to obtain parenting time with the child who is the subject of the ROP. The father “may petition” for parenting time in an independent action pursuant to chapter 518.
The majority concludes that the prohibition against combining a petition for parenting time brought by a ROP father under chapter 518 with a proceeding under the Domestic Abuse Act, chapter 518B, has no bearing on the outcome of this case because Garcia never sought or received a parenting time order under chapter 518. I disagree.
I believe that the proceeding that cannot be combined with an order for protection proceeding is a ROP father‘s request to obtain parenting time in the first place, whether it is through an independent action or attempted request for such relief in an order for protection proceeding. To interpret this language as the majority does allows a ROP father to achieve, through an indirect means, that which he is expressly prohibited from doing. And “[i]t is to be presumed that the legislature did not intend the absurd result of permitting by indirection that which it has prohibited by direct provision.” Gale v. Comm‘r of Taxation, 228 Minn. 345, 349, 37 N.W.2d 711, 715 (Minn.1949).
I conclude that when the provision in the Domestic Abuse Act regarding a district court‘s authority to “establish temporary parenting time” is read in conjunction with relevant provisions in the Parentage Act and the ROP statute, an ambiguity exists with respect to a district court‘s authority to grant a ROP father‘s request for parenting time when an order for protection action has been brought against him but where he has not previously brought an action to effectuate his right to parenting time. Because I find that the language in the Domestic Abuse Act and the ROP statute is ambiguous with respect to whether the district court has the authority to award temporary parenting time in this case, I must ascertain the legislature‘s intent.
The purpose of the Domestic Abuse Act is to provide victims of domestic abuse and their children with quick relief from the courts to help protect them from acts of family violence. State v. Errington, 310 N.W.2d 681, 682 (Minn.1981). The Domestic Abuse Act has been amended numerous times since it was enacted. Each time it was expanded to provide additional protection by broadening either the definition of a “family or household member” who can seek protection under the act, or the definition of domestic abuse.4 In addition, from time to time it was amended to provide wider relief to victims or to make it
Further, allowing a ROP father to use an order for protection proceeding as a vehicle for effectuating his right to parenting time has the perverse consequence of rewarding acts of domestic violence. If he wants parenting time, a ROP father who has not been accused of committing domestic violence has to file a petition with the court, under
In an order for protection proceeding, however, a ROP father can make an oral request for and be awarded parenting time at the hearing on the order for protection.
If a ROP father is allowed to use an order for protection proceeding to effectuate his right to parenting time, a ROP father could effectuate his right to parenting time more quickly and by making a much lower showing than a ROP father who has petitioned for parenting time under chapter 518. And he would be able to do this solely because of the fact that he has committed acts of domestic violence. It is contrary to the purpose of the Domestic Abuse Act to reward abusive behavior by granting abusive fathers additional rights that nonabusive fathers do not have.
When the purpose of the Domestic Abuse Act is considered, along with the consequences of adopting Garcia‘s interpretation, I conclude that the legislature did not intend to allow ROP fathers to use an order for protection proceeding as an alternative route to activating their rights to parenting time. I conclude that a district court cannot award temporary parenting time in an order for protection proceeding brought against a ROP father if that father does not have a prior court order awarding him parenting time with the child who is the subject of the ROP. In the instant case, while Garcia and Beardsley signed a ROP with respect to D.G., Garcia had not petitioned a court and received an order entitling him to parenting time with D.G. prior to the district court issuing the order for protection against Garcia in March 2006. As a result, I would conclude that the district court did not have the authority to award temporary parenting time to Garcia in the March 2006 order for protection.
ANDERSON, PAUL H., Justice (dissenting).
I join in the dissent of Justice Meyer.
G. BARRY ANDERSON
Associate Justice
