OPINION
Barbara Geibe appeals the district court’s denial, without an evidentiary hearing, of her petition for custody of her deceased husband’s 17-year-old daughter and visitation with her husband’s other children. We affirm.
FACTS
The marriage of Charles and respondent Ma Donna Geibe (Ma Donna) was dissolved in 1994. In 1995, Charles married appellant Barbara Geibe (Barbara). Charles died on January 23,1997.
Charles and Ma Donna had a daughter, F.G., born March 5, 1980, and two younger sons, C.J.G. and A.G. The parents agreed to joint legal custody at the time of the dissolution, but disputed physical custody. The court granted physical custody of all three children to Ma Donna and granted Charles visitation on alternate weekends, certain holidays, half of winter and spring school vacations, and six weeks during summer vacation. Barbara asserts that she acted as primary caretaker during these periods and that she developed a close relationship with all three children, who call her “Mom.”
Two months after Charles’s death, Barbara filed a petition seeking custody of F.G. and visitation with the boys (and with F.G. if denied custody) on approximately the schedule Charles had been granted. Barbara alleges by affidavit that since Charles’s death, Ma Donna has refused to permit the children to visit her or any of their paternal relatives. F.G.’s affidavit corroborates this claim, adding that her mother emotionally injured her by “verbally berating” her, regularly saying she was “too fat,” and insulting her with increasing regularity since the death of her father. She also claims that in 1997 her mother physically assaulted her for the first time, on one occasion pushing her onto a bed, slapping her, and pulling her hair.
Ma Donna’s affidavit characterizes the issue as a conflict between a headstrong 17-year-old and a religious, fairly strict mother, saying that F.G. found Barbara’s home an attractive alternative because of her more liberal lifestyle. She also indicates a belief that Barbara has promised F.G. a share of Charles’s life insurance proceeds for college if F.G. comes to live with her. Ma Donna denies ever insulting F.G. or calling her “too fat,” noting that she, as a school nurse, regularly deals with teenagers with eating disorders. She also denies any intent to cut the children off from their paternal relatives.
Ma Donna admits to a physical confrontation with F.G. shortly before Charles’s death, following 24 hours of arguments resulting from Ma Donna’s refusal to allow F.G. to attend a house party with boys and no parents present. Ma Donna alleges that after the refusal, F.G. snuck out of the house and went to the home of a paternal relative, returning home only after a deputy sheriff was called in. The next morning, F.G. refused to attend church. Ma Donna continues,
[F.G.] knows that in our house Sunday church participation is expected. She started to get angry with me and started using foul language. I grabbed her T-shirt on the shoulder and pulled her toward me, telling her that I didn’t appreciate her language. When the language continued, I covered her mouth with my hand. She bit me and pounded me several times on my upper arm. We struggled and she fell onto the bed on her side, continuing to swear at me. I’m embarrassed to say that I slapped her once on the buttocks. We were both upset and out of control. ⅞ ⅞ *To the best of my knowledge, I did not pull her hair.
The district court dismissed Barbara’s petition without an evidentiary hearing, determining that Barbara had failed to state a prima facie case of endangerment to F.G. as required by Minn.Stat. § 518.18(d) and that she was not entitled to common-law stepparent visitation rights. Barbara appeals, and Ma Donna seeks payment of her attorney fees on appeal. We affirm the district court’s decision and deny Ma Donna’s request for fees.
ISSUES
1. Did the district court err in finding that Barbara failed to establish a prima facie case of endangerment sufficient to require an evidentiary hearing on modification of custody?
2. Did the district court err in holding that Barbara is not entitled to stepparent visitation under Minnesota common law?
ANALYSIS
I. Custody modification
Under Minnesota law,
the court shall not modify a prior custody order unless it finds, upon the basis of facts * ⅜ * that have arisen since the prior order or that were unknown to the court at the time of the prior order, that a change has occurred in the circumstances of the child or the parties and that the modification is necessary to serve the best interests of the child. In applying these standards the court shall retain the custody arrangement established by the prior order unless:
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(iii) the child’s present environment endangers the child’s physical or emotional health or impairs the child’s emotional development and the harm likely to be caused by a change of environment is outweighed by the advantage of a change to the child.
Minn.Stat. § 518.18(d) (1996).
The party seeking a modification of custody must submit an affidavit asserting the facts on which the motion is based. Minn.Stat. § 518.185 (1996). The court must determine whether the petitioner has established a prima facie ease by alleging facts that, if true, would provide sufficient grounds for a modification.
Nice-Petersen v. Nice-Petersen,
If the moving party asserts facts sufficient to support a modification of custody, the court must hold an evidentiary hearing to determine the truth of the allegations.
Taflin v. Taflin,
A. Standard of review
In
Nice-Petersen,
the Minnesota Supreme Court concluded that “the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion on affidavits and in refusing to schedule an evidentiary hearing.”
Nice-Petersen,
Barbara relies on this court’s decision in
Ross,
B. Standards for custody modification
1. General standards
The moving party must establish four elements for a prima facie case: (1) a change in the circumstances of the child or custodian; (2) that a modification would serve the best interests of the child; (3) that the child’s present environment endangers her physical or emotional health or emotional development; and (4) that the harm to the child likely to be caused by the change of environment is outweighed by the advantage of change.
Abbott,
A change in circumstances must be significant and must have occurred since the original custody order; it cannot be a continuation of conditions existing prior to the order.
Roehrdanz v. Roehrdanz,
2. Effect of a teenaged child’s preference
A child’s preference has been found relevant to three of the four modification factors. A child’s strong preference to change residence after a custody decree can constitute a change in circumstances.
Eckman,
Where the child is a teenager, Minnesota courts have taken preferences into account in determining emotional endangerment. A line of decisions early in this century allowed teenagers to remain with the non-parents with whom they resided, noting the dubious practicality of ordering a teenager to live where she does not want to live and the independent damage to a child’s psyche from the “imaginary” wrong of having her preference overruled.
See, e.g., State ex rel. Feeley v. Williams,
Preferences may provide sufficient evidence for a district court, in its discretion, to order an evidentiary hearing, as in
Eck-man.
However, preferences alone do not provide sufficient evidence of endangerment to mandate a hearing.
See, e.g., Lundell v. Lundell,
C. Application of standard in this case
Barbara’s and F.G.’s affidavits state four grounds for modification: (1) F.G.’s preference, (2) Ma Donna’s refusal to permit contact with paternal relatives, (3) F.G.’s fight with Ma Donna in January 1997, and (4) emotional abuse by Ma Donna. We are required to accept these allegations as true,
see, e.g., Abbott,
1. Changed circumstances
All of F.G.’s allegations relate to conditions mentioned in the dissolution judgment. But although the original custody order mentioned that Ma Donna had kept her children from contact with her in-laws, there is no claim here that she did so between the final dissolution of the marriage and Charles’s death. Ma • Donna’s alleged resumption of her former practice of preventing F.G. from seeing her paternal relatives therefore qualifies as a change in circumstances. Moreover, although F.G. stated at one point during the dissolution process that she preferred to live with Charles, she changed her mind before the final custody order; thus, under Eckman, her new preference meets this requirement as well. F.G.’s allegations of physical and emotional abuse represent a closer case, as they amount to escalations of ongoing conflicts between F.G. and her mother. Because we find that F.G. has not established a sufficient case of endangerment to justify a modification of custody under the circumstances, we need not decide whether these escalations are significant enough in degree to meet the changed circumstances requirement.
2. Endangerment
As noted, a teenager’s choice by itself is generally not sufficient evidence of endangerment to require an evidentiary hearing. In
Ross,
The other injuries F.G. has alleged might, in combination with her preference, create a prima facie case of endangerment. This court has consistently held that emotional abuse alone may constitute sufficient endangerment.
See, e.g., Harkema v. Harkema,
While physical abuse obviously endangers a child, Ma Donna’s account of her January 1997 fight with F.G. is not inconsistent with F.G.’s charge (except for the allegation of hair-pulling). An alleged single incident of borderline abuse or neglect has been held not to constitute sufficient endangerment to warrant a custody modification.
See Smith,
This court has been inconsistent in categorizing a custodial parent’s efforts to isolate the child from relatives.
Compare Westphal,
3. Balance of harms
Minnesota law rests on a presumption that stability of custody is in a child’s best interests.
Westpkal,
In
Eckman,
this court upheld a transfer of custody based on a teenager’s preference when the teenager still resided with the custodial parent during the pendency of the modification proceeding.
Our conclusion is supported by the fact that this appeal was considered in September 1997, less than six months before F.G.’s eighteenth birthday. Whatever the effect on a child of long-term exposure to conditions such as those F.G. alleges, we question whether they could impact F.G.’s emotional development so severely in the short time remaining before F.G.’s majority as to justify the delay and expense of a hearing. We therefore hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion in finding that Barbara failed to demonstrate a prima facie case for modification of custody.
II. Visitation
Under Minnesota law, a child generally must have “resided in a household with” a non-parent for at least two years for the non-parent to gain a right to visitation. Minn.Stat. § 257.022, subd. 2b (1996). Barbara concedes that she has no rights under this statute, but rests her claim on
Simmons v. Simmons,
The district court noted, however, that the stepfather in
Simmons
was married to the custodial parent, rather than to the noncustodial parent, and concluded that Barbara had provided “insufficient proof’ that she stood in loco parentis to the children, which appears to be a determination of fact. Other states have held that, as a general matter, the determination of in loco parentis status is a fact question.
See, e.g., Drawbaugh v. Drawbaugh,
In loco parentis literally means “in the place of a parent.” The only definition of the term in Minnesota case law states:
“The term ‘in loco parentis,’ according to its generally accepted common-law meaning, refers to a person who has put himself in the situation of a lawful parent by assuming the obligations incident to the parental relation without going through the formalities necessary to legal adoption and embodies the two ideas of assuming the parental status and discharging the parental duties.”
London Guarantee,
242 Minn, at 215,
We find sound practical reasons to adopt the view that common residency is a prerequisite to in loco parentis status. If there is no co-residency requirement, the defining feature of an in loco parentis relationship under
London Guarantee
becomes mere intent to assume parental responsibilities. This would allow virtually any stepparent to qualify for in loco parentis status by bringing a claim for transfer of custody in the same petition as a visitation claim, effectively exempting stepparents from the two-year co-residency requirement of Minn.Stat. § 257.022, subd. 2b. Other factors that could limit the class of stepparents in loco parentis, such as the nature and closeness of the relationship and the extent to which the stepparent took on “parental” duties during visitation, are difficult for courts to evaluate. Moreover, the legislature has specifically enumerated the classes of people who may sue for visitation;
Simmons
added one class to the fist.
To support her contention that stepparents married to the noncustodial parent may stand in loco parentis to their stepchildren, Barbara relies on
Lundman v. McKown,
We therefore hold that, as a general matter, a stepparent who has resided with a child only during the child’s court-ordered visitation with the noncustodial parent is not in loco parentis for purposes of Simmons visitation. The important factor is not to which parent the stepparent was married, but the amount of time the stepparent spends in the performance of parental duties. Some states require that a stepparent intend to assume the parental role for an indefinite period of time in order to establish an in loco parentis relationship. See, e.g., Montell, 775 P.2d at 978. We need not decide now whether to adopt this requirement, but we believe that a stepparent would need to stand “in the place of a parent” for considerably more time than alternate weekends and six weeks during summer vacation to be within the Simmons exception to Minn.Stat. § 257.022, subd. 2b.
III. Attorney fees
Ma Donna requests attorney fees on appeal pursuant to Minn.Stat. § 549.21, subd. 2 (1996), which authorizes this court to grant attorney fees to a party if the adverse party has acted in bad faith or asserted a frivolous claim for the purpose of harassment and delay, and pursuant to Minn.Stat. § 518.14, subd. 1 (1996), which authorizes a grant of fees in family law actions where necessary for a party to assert its rights in good faith and where that party lacks the means to pay fees while the other party has sufficient means. Ma Donna has not provided sufficient proof of bad faith to satisfy section 549.21, and although we hold against Barbara, we do not find her claims frivolous. While Ma Donna has established a disparity in resources between Barbara and herself, she admits that she is uncertain of its extent, and we find that she has not demonstrated that a grant of fees is necessary for her to assert her rights on appeal. We therefore deny Ma Donna’s motion for attorney fees.
DECISION
For the reasons stated, we determine that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in dismissing Barbara’s petition for custody without an evidentiary hearing and that Barbara, as a stepparent who has only resided with her stepchildren during court-ordered visitation periods, has no common law right to seek visitation under Simmons.
Affirmed; motion for fees denied.
Notes
. In this state, the term in loco parentis has been used in determining eligibility of a stepparent for visitation,
Simmons,
