Andrea Griffin appeals a decision of the trial court granting her estranged husband weekly visitation with her son — a child fathered by another man while the Griffins were separated. On appeal, she argues that (i) the trial court incorrectly applied the legal standard governing visitation with a non-parent, and (ii) under a correct application of the standard, the evidence does not justify awarding visitation over her parental objection. Agreeing with both contentions, we reverse the trial court’s visitation order.
I.
Andrea Griffin (wife) and Elbert Griffin (husband) married in 1996 and separated in September 1997. During the separation, wife became sexually involved with Michael Groh. Wife continued, however, to have sexual relations with husband during this period of separation. In October 1997, wife learned that she was pregnant and informed husband that he was the father. In December 1997, husband was injured in an automobile accident and spent six to seven weeks in the hospital. Upon husband’s discharge from the hospital, wife returned to the marital home to care for him. Husband suffered extensive injuries, leaving him with significant physical and mental impairments. During this period of recupera *80 tion, however, the couple did not reconcile or express any joint interest in saving the marriage.
Wife gave birth to a boy on June 25, 1998. Husband believed at that time, based on what wife had told him, that he was the child’s father. As a result, husband treated the child as his own and participated in his early development. In September 1999, wife and her son moved in with her mother. Wife agreed to allow husband weekly visitation with the child. In December 1999, however, a court-ordered paternity test established that Michael Groh was the child’s father. Upon learning the results of the paternity test, wife denied husband any further weekly visitation with her son.
In August 2000, over wife’s objection, the juvenile and domestic relations district court awarded husband temporary visitation rights with the child despite the results of the paternity test. In June 2001, the JDR court expanded the visitation schedule and made its order final. The final order stated that the JDR court applied the best-interests test codified in Code § 20-124.3. Wife appealed to the circuit court on the ground that, as a non-parent, husband could not obtain visitation rights over her son on a mere showing of best interests. In February 2002, the circuit court held a hearing concerning the visitation issue. The child’s biological father, Michael Groh, appeared and testified that he paid child support, but did not intend to foster a relationship with the child.
Wife called Dr. Patricia Martin, a clinical psychologist, as an expert witness. Dr. Martin testified that the best interests of the child would be served by ending husband’s visitation. Dr. Martin concluded that, given the animosity between them, wife and husband were not “able to co-parent effectively.” Dr. Martin noted wife’s legitimate concerns over her son’s “safety” when he was with husband as well as husband’s “history of drinking.” In addition, Dr. Martin testified, husband’s psychological tests revealed “dysfunctional personality characteristics.” Husband engaged in chronic disparagement of wife in her son’s presence and displayed an attitude of “revenge” stemming from a sense of betrayal by wife.
*81 The child was “obviously aware” of the hostility between husband and wife, Dr. Martin observed. She explained that this level of antagonism, even between parents, was cause for alarm:
One of the most significant findings in family research concerns the serious hazard posed to the psychological health and develop[ment] of children by continued exposure to high conflict between the parents, whether in the contexts of an intact marriage or as part of ongoing post-divorce antagonism.
It only compounded things, Dr. Martin concluded, for such hostility to exist between a mother and a non-parent seeking to play the role of a defacto father.
Husband called Wendy Carroll, a family counselor, as an expert witness. Carroll testified that she thought it would be “very hard” on the child if visitation with husband did not continue. The child referred to husband as “Daddy,” Carroll pointed out, and had obvious affection for him. Carroll also found it significant that “Mr. Griffin vehemently and consistently state[s] that he views himself as [the child’s] father.”
Although she did not apply any “formal criteria,” Carroll concluded that under “attachment theory” the child had developed an emotional tie to husband. Severing that tie, Carroll believed, would likely cause the child to consider himself “bad” and “unlovable” and to grieve over the loss. As a result, Carroll opined, it “could be” emotionally hurtful for the child if visitation ended. All in all, Carroll concluded, it would be in the child’s best interests for husband to have visitation rights. 1
The trial court ruled for husband, stating that the “best interests” of the child would be served by ordering visitation over the mother’s objection and that not doing so would be *82 “detrimental” to the child. The court advised husband to read Wednesdays And Every Other Weekend, a book “which talks about non-custodial parents and what’s best for the child.” The court’s final order required wife to make the child available for visitation by husband on Wednesday afternoons and every other weekend (from Friday night until Sunday evening). The order also provided that husband “shall not consume alcoholic beverages while the child is in his care.”
Wife filed this appeal, seeking a reversal of the visitation order. Before oral argument, wife filed a motion to remand the case to the trial court alleging that on March 30, 2003, husband had been in another automobile accident — this time with her son as a passenger. Police officers arrested husband for driving under the influence and endangering the child’s life. By order entered April 15, 2003, we denied wife’s request for a plenary remand of the case, but nonetheless granted leave for her to seek from the trial court either a reconsideration or stay of the visitation order based upon changed circumstances. In the meantime, we ordered this appeal to go forward.
II.
As the United States Supreme Court has observed, the “liberty interest at issue in this case — the interest of parents in the care, custody, and control of their children — is perhaps the oldest of the fundamental liberty interests recognized by this Court.”
Troxel v. Granville,
*83
Troxel
expressly declined to rule that all “nonparental visitation statutes violate the Due Process Clause as a
per se
matter.”
Id.
at 73,
[f]or the constitutional requirement to be satisfied, before visitation can be ordered over the objection of the child’s parents, a court must find an actual harm to the child’s health or welfare without such visitation.
Williams,
Custody and visitation disputes between two fit parents involve one parent’s fundamental right pitted against the other parent’s fundamental right. The discretion afforded trial courts under the best-interests test, Code § 20-124.3, reflects a finely balanced judicial response to this parental deadlock. A very different kind of legal contest, however, exists in a dispute between a fit parent and a non-parent. In this latter situation, the best-interests test should be applied only if the trial court first finds “an actual harm to the child’s health or welfare without such visitation.”
Id.
(quoting
Williams,
We disagree with husband that our reasoning conflicts with
Dotson v. Hylton,
We are equally unpersuaded by husband’s suggestion that wife has no constitutionally protected rights as a parent because she and the child’s father cannot be considered an “intact family.”
2
Troxel
involved an unmarried, single mother. " Nothing in
Troxel
implies that the legal superiority of a fit parent’s rights over those of a non-parent turns on whether the parent is married, separated, divorced, or widowed. A single mother has no less constitutional right to parent her son than a married mother. ‘We, therefore, reject any argument that single parents are entitled to less constitutional liberty in decisions concerning the care, custody, and control of their children.”
Wickham v. Byrne,
Because it exists as a means of expressing the compelling state interests necessary to overcome the constitutional parental rights recognized in
Troxel,
the actual-harm standard must be understood as conceptually different from, and significantly weightier than, the best-interests test. As we made clear in
Williams,
the actual-harm test cannot be satisfied by a showing that “it would be ‘better,’ ‘desirable,’ or ‘beneficial’ for a child” to have visitation with a non-parent.
Williams,
Absent a showing of actual harm to the child, the constitutional liberty interests of fit parents “take precedence over the ‘best interests’ of the child.”
Id.
As a result, “a court may not impose its subjective notions of ‘best interests of the child’ ” in derogation of parental rights protected by the Constitution.
Id. A
“vague generalization about the positive influence” of non-parent visitation cannot satisfy the actual-harm requirement.
In re Herbst,
In addition, Code § 20-124.2(B) requires a showing of “clear and convincing evidence” before visitation may be awarded to a non-parent. This erects a “more stringent standard” than a mere “preponderance of the evidence.”
Congdon v. Congdon,
In this case, the trial court collapsed the two legal standards together — not only in the decisionmaking sequence, but in the substance of the decision as well. In effect, the trial court’s reasoning treated the actual-harm requirement as simply a restatement of the best-interests test. To justify a finding of actual harm under the clear and convincing burden of proof, the evidence must establish more than the obvious observation that the child would benefit from the continuing emotional attachment with the non-parent. No doubt losing such a relationship would cause some measure of sadness and a sense of loss which, in theory, “could be” emotionally harmful. But
*86
that is not what we meant by
“actual
harm to the child’s health or welfare.”
Williams,
The-evidence in this case, at its best, goes no further than supporting the inference that the child would grieve the loss of the emotional attachment he has for his mother’s estranged husband and “could be” emotionally hurt if visitation with him ended. While that might satisfy a trial court’s “subjective notions of ‘best interest of the child,’ ”
Williams,
III.
In sum, we hold that the trial court applied an incorrect legal standard to the non-parent visitation award and that, under the correct standard, the evidence does not support a finding by clear and convincing evidence of actual harm to the child’s health or welfare. For this reason, we reverse and vacate the trial court’s visitation order. 4
Reversed and vacated.
Notes
. Wife also contends that the trial court erred by admitting the testimony of Wendy Carroll because she was unqualified to address the psychological aspects of "attachment theory” and that, in any event, the topic was an improper subject for expert opinion in the first place. Our reasoning assumes, without deciding, that Carroll’s testimony was admissible.
. In
Dotson,
. Given our holding, we need not address whether husband qualifies as a "[p]erson with a legitimate interest” under Code § 20-124.1.
Cf. Kogon v. Ulerick,
. We also deny husband’s motion for attorney’s fees.
