In re CAW
Docket No. 122790
Supreme Court of Michigan
Argued March 13, 2003 (Calendar No. 13). Decided July 23, 2003.
469 MICH 192
In an opinion by Justice TAYLOR, joined by Chief Justice CORRIGAN, and Justices YOUNG and MARKMAN, the Supreme Court held:
A child has a father if the child‘s mother was married at any time during gestation unless the court determines by judicial notice or otherwise, pursuant to
1. In this case, Heier did not have standing to intervene in the child protective proceeding under the juvenile code because CAW had a married mother and father during the gestation period, and the family division of the circuit court never found that CAW was
2. The matter must be remanded to the Court of Appeals for consideration of constitutional issues raised by Heier.
Justice WEAVER, concurring, stated that the putative father does not have standing to intervene in this child protective proceeding because there is no previous determination by the circuit court that CAW was born out of wedlock. The statutes addressing the provision of notice of child protective proceedings,
Justice KELLY, concurring in part and dissenting in part, stated that the majority‘s reliance on
The public policy considerations underlying the Paternity Act do not underlie child protective proceedings. The policy underlying the Paternity Act is to ensure that all children are provided with support and education. However, the policy underlying termination of parental rights proceedings is to assure a child of care, guidance, and control conducive to his welfare and the interest of the state. Rigid application of the presumption of legitimacy rule in termination proceedings frustrates a finding of what care is most conducive to a child‘s welfare by preventing a biological parent from being considered, even if that parent is fit, willing, and able to care for the child.
Reversed and remanded.
Justice CAVANAGH, dissenting, stated that nothing in the statutes or court rules compels the conclusion that a putative father must first establish paternity in a separate legal proceeding before being allowed an opportunity to intervene in a child protective proceeding. A court making a paternity or custody determination has the authority to inquire about a child‘s putative father or parent in fact. Without that authority, the court would be deprived of the means
PARTIES — CHILD PROTECTIVE PROCEEDINGS — STANDING — PUTATIVE FATHER.
A putative father is entitled to participate in child protective proceedings only if, at any time during the pendency of the proceeding the court determines that the minor has no father as defined in
Michael A. Cox, Attorney General, Thomas L. Casey, Solicitor General, and Chantal B. Fennessey, Assistant Attorney General, for the petitioner-appellant.
Dinning & Greve, P.L.C. (by Ronald H. Greve), for appellee Heier.
Amicus Curiae:
Allen & Leapheart, PLC (by Charlotte L. Allen), William E. Ladd, and Paul Holland, for the Children‘s Law Section of the State Bar of Michigan.
TAYLOR, J. This Court granted leave to appeal limited to the issue whether a putative father has standing to intervene in a child protective proceeding under the juvenile code1 in which the child involved has a legal father. The Court of Appeals determined that the putative father had standing. We reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals and hold that the putative father did not have standing to intervene. We remand to the Court of Appeals to consider appellee‘s remaining issues.
I
A child protective petition alleging abuse and neglect, brought pursuant to
Accepting the petition‘s assertion that Heier‘s address was unknown, the court, to give Heier notice of the child protective proceedings scheduled for August 19, 1998, issued an order for alternative service by publication.3
At the August 19, 1998, hearing, at which Heier did not appear, the court decided that the children should remain in foster care. Later, at a pretrial conference on September 3, 1998, Rivard and Weber asserted that Rivard was the father of all three children. The court, after questioning Rivard and Weber, accepted this as fact and the petition was amended accordingly, including deleting any further reference to Heier. From this point on, the court and the parties in all proceedings referred to Rivard as the children‘s father.
In December 1999, well over a year later, progress toward reunification of the family was unsatisfactory. A petition was filed by the Family Independence Agency to terminate Rivard and Weber‘s parental
On January 25, 2001, Weber appealed the termination adjudication to the Court of Appeals.5 At the same time, Heier filed a motion in the trial court seeking to intervene in the child protective proceeding concerning CAW. Heier alleged that he was the biological father of CAW and had standing on that basis. He also argued, in essence, that the trial court had failed to provide him with adequate notice of the child protective proceedings and that he was entitled to notice pursuant to the United States Constitution regardless of whether the statutes or court rules gave him standing. In asserting that claim, he gave the court factual information regarding his relationship with the child both before and during the child protective proceedings in support of his constitutional claims.
The trial court denied Heier‘s motion to intervene on the ground that Heier lacked standing because CAW had a legal father. The court reasoned:
It is clear that you cannot have a legal father and a punitive [sic] father. In this case we did have a legal father. [CAW] was born—conceived and born during the marriage between Miss Weber and Mr. Rivard. There has never been any dispute whether he was or was not the legal father. . . .
[It had been determined that (Rivard) was the legal father, and once that determination was made all proceedings were geared toward (Rivard‘s) rights to all three children.]
On appeal, Heier argued, and the Court of Appeals agreed, that the termination of Rivard‘s legal rights at the conclusion of the child protective proceeding was effectively a finding “by judicial notice or otherwise” that CAW was not the issue of the marriage. A divided panel of the Court of Appeals, agreeing only that it was troubling that the law should be interpreted to mean that Heier had no opportunity to establish his paternity, reversed the order of the trial court. The majority held that there was standing under the juvenile code for putative fathers. 253 Mich App 629, 631; 659 NW2d 657 (2002). It reasoned that even though “Rivard may still meet one or several of the definitions listed for ‘father’ in
We granted leave to appeal limited to the issue whether a putative father has standing to intervene in a child protective proceeding under the juvenile code in which the subject child has a legal father.
II
This is a question involving the construction of a statute, which we review de novo. Robertson v. DaimlerChrysler Corp., 465 Mich 732, 739; 641 NW2d 567 (2002).
III
In this matter, Larry Heier, claiming paternity of CAW, sought to intervene in child protective proceedings brought pursuant to
As relevant here,
(A) . . . When used in this subchapter, unless the context otherwise indicates:
(1) “Child born out of wedlock” means a child conceived and born to a woman who is unmarried from the conception to the birth of the child, or a child determined by judi-
cial notice or otherwise to have been conceived or born during a marriage but who is not the issue of that marriage. * * *
(4) “Father” means:
(a) a man married to the mother at any time from a minor‘s conception to the minor‘s birth unless the minor is determined to be a child born out of wedlock[.]
The essence of this rule is that a child has a father if the child‘s mother is married at any time during gestation unless the court determines “by judicial notice or otherwise” that the child was not “the issue of the marriage.”
In this case, CAW had a married mother and father, Deborah Ann Weber and Robert Rivard, during the gestation period. Moreover, no finding was ever made by the court that CAW was not the issue of the marriage. The termination of Rivard‘s parental rights was not a determination that CAW was not the issue of the marriage and, thus, that Rivard was no longer his father; rather, it was only a determination that Rivard‘s legal rights were terminated. Thus, the requirements of the court rule to give Heier, a putative father, standing were not met.
Finally, in the Court of Appeals opinion, as well as the dissent, there is much angst about the perceived unfairness of not allowing Heier the opportunity to establish paternity. We are more comfortable with the law as currently written. There is much that benefits society and, in particular, the children of our state, by a legal regime that presumes the legitimacy of children born during a marriage. See Serafin v. Serafin, 401 Mich 629, 636; 258 NW2d 461 (1977). It is likely that these values, rather than failure to consider the plight of putative fathers who wish to invade mar-
IV
We reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals because the circuit court properly denied Heier‘s motion to intervene. We remand to the Court of Appeals to address Heier‘s constitutional issues.
CORRIGAN, C.J., and YOUNG and MARKMAN, JJ., concurred with TAYLOR, J.
WEAVER, J. (concurring). I concur in the majority‘s reversal of the decision of the Court of Appeals. Larry Heier, the putative father, does not have standing to intervene in this child protective proceeding because there is no previous determination by the circuit court that CAW was born out of wedlock. I write separately because the majority‘s statement that it is “more comfortable with the law as currently written,” ante at 199, lacks any force in the resolution of this case. Consideration and rejection of the Court of Appeals reasoning provides a better approach to, and context for, understanding why a putative father does not have standing to intervene in a child protective proceeding unless the circuit court has previously determined that the child was born out of wedlock.
The juvenile-code provisions addressing child protective proceedings do not list putative fathers among the individuals who must be served with notice.1 The Michigan Court Rules, however, do afford the court the discretion under defined circumstances to order that notice be served on a putative father. MCR
A threshold requirement of
a child conceived and born to a woman who is unmarried from the conception to the birth of the child, or a child determined by judicial notice or otherwise to have been conceived or born during a marriage but who is not the issue of that marriage.
This Court has not addressed the standing of a putative father in light of this court rule.
In Girard v. Wagenmaker, 437 Mich 231, 242-243; 470 NW2d 372 (1991), however, this Court interpreted a similarly worded definition of “child born out of wedlock” to determine whether, and when, a putative father had standing to file a complaint pursuant to
“[H]as determined” is the present perfect tense of the verb “determine.” The present perfect tense generally “indicates action that was started in the past and has recently been completed or is continuing up to the present time” . . . .
Girard held that, under the plain terms of the Paternity Act, a putative father did not have standing “to establish paternity of a child born while the mother was legally married to another man without a prior determination that the mother‘s husband is not the father.” Girard, supra at 235. Girard grounded its literal reading of the statute in the fact that it comported with “the traditional preference for respecting the presumed legitimacy of a child born during marriage.” Id. at 246, citing Serafin v. Serafin, 401 Mich 629, 636; 258 NW2d 461 (1977).
The majority of the Court of Appeals attempted to distinguish Girard, concluding that the definition of “child born out of wedlock” in
The provision that the determination may be made by judicial notice does not affect when the determination must be made in order to permit standing. Moreover, the use of the past tense makes even clearer the fact that the determination must be made by the court before a putative father may be accorded standing in a child protective proceeding. Because Weber was married to Rivard from the time of conception to the birth of CAW, and because CAW was not “determined by judicial notice or otherwise to have been conceived or born during a marriage but . . . not the issue of that marriage” pursuant to
For these reasons, I concur in the result of the majority opinion. I also concur in the remand to the Court of Appeals to address Heier‘s argument that the standing requirements deny him due process of law by depriving him of an alleged established parental relationship with CAW.
KELLY, J. (concurring in part and dissenting in part). I agree with the result reached by the majority in this case. However, I disagree with the majority‘s
I. MCR 5.921(D) PER SE DOES NOT ADDRESS STANDING
The majority spends little time analyzing
In interpreting and applying court rules, we apply the standard rules of statutory construction. Accordingly, our primary purpose is to accurately interpret the meaning of the language of a rule. Grievance Administrator v. Underwood, 462 Mich 188, 193-194; 612 NW2d 116 (2000).
Notably, the text of
In general, notice is not required for persons who merely have an interest that might be affected by the outcome of the case. Rather, a person is allowed to intervene if (1) he timely claims an interest that is related to the subject of the proceedings, (2) the disposition of the action may impair his ability to protect his interest, and (3) his interest is inadequately represented by the existing parties.
II. THE MAJORITY‘S POLICY ARGUMENT IS ILL-CONCEIVED
Although the majority rests its holding primarily on the notion that Mr. Heier‘s claims are barred by
The public policy objective of the Paternity Act is to ensure that all children are provided with support and education. Crego v. Coleman, 463 Mich 248, 269; 615 NW2d 218 (2000), citing Whybra v. Gustafson, 365 Mich 396, 400; 112 NW2d 503 (1961). The objective would be frustrated if a “legal” father were able to abandon his duty of support as the result of unfounded allegations of paternity. Hence, before an action can be sustained under the Paternity Act, a determination must be made that the child in question was born out of wedlock,
By contrast, the purpose of termination proceedings under the juvenile code is to assure a child of care, guidance, and control conducive to his welfare and the interest of the state.
Similarly, the majority‘s reliance on our opinion in Serafin v. Serafin2 is unsuited to this case. Serafin did not address the statutes or court rules at issue here. Instead, it held that Lord Mansfield‘s Rule, a common-law rule of evidence, was no longer viable in Michigan.
It is true that Serafin observed that children remain “guarded by [a] still viable and strong . . . presumption of legitimacy” that can be rebutted only by clear and convincing evidence. Serafin, 401 Mich 636, citing Maxwell v. Maxwell, 15 Mich App 607, 617; 167 NW2d 114 (1969). Yet, Serafin goes on to rebuke a too dogged pursuit of the presumption of legitimacy rule:
“If the function of a court is to find the truth of a matter so that justice might be done, then a rule which absolutely excludes the best possible evidence of a matter in issue rather than allow it to be weighed by the trier of fact must necessarily lead to injustice. Further, when a court voluntarily blindfolds itself to what every citizen can see, the public must justifiably question the administration of law to just that extent.” [Serafin, supra at 635-636, quoting Davis v. Davis, 507 SW2d 841, 847 (Tex Civ App, 1974), rev‘d on other grounds 521 SW2d 603 (1975).]
In accordance with that rationale, I do not agree that the presumption of legitimacy rule has persuasive force in this case. Certainly, the majority would
Similarly, the policy cannot be advanced on the basis that it furthers the goals expressed in the juvenile code. Rigid application of the presumption of legitimacy would frustrate the code‘s preference for placing a child with his parent, if the parent is willing and able to care for him. For example, if Heier were a fit biological parent of CAW, rigid application of the presumption relied on by the majority would prevent the court from placing CAW with him.
III. RESOLUTION
Ultimately, the question here is whether the circuit court was correct in denying Mr. Heier‘s petition to intervene. The answer comes from a comprehensive reading of the relevant court rules.
(A) Scope. The rules in this subchapter, in subchapter 1.100 and in rule 5.113, govern practice and procedure in the family division of the circuit court in all cases filed under the Juvenile Code. Other Michigan Court Rules apply to such juvenile cases in the family division of the circuit court only when this subchapter specifically provides.
(B) Application. Unless the context otherwise indicates:
(1)
MCR 5.901 -5.927, 5.980 and 5.991-5.993 apply to delinquency proceedings and child protective proceedings;* * *
(4)
MCR 5.961 -5.974 apply only to child protective proceedings[.]
None of these provisions permits intervention in child protective proceedings. Nor does any of them reference another court rule that permits it. But, in the end, Mr. Heier can identify no court rule under which he could intervene and, as a consequence, the trial court was required to deny his motion.
IV. CONCLUSION
While, applying the court rules, the trial court did not err in denying Mr. Heier‘s motion to intervene in the child protective proceedings, I am troubled by the result.
I believe our court rules should be amended to allow a putative father to intervene in a child protective proceeding if he is able to raise a legitimate question about paternity.3 DNA testing now can determine paternity with relative ease, speed, and accuracy. The juvenile code presumes that a child‘s interests are best served when he is in the care of a fit parent. These considerations support a rule change and would give putative fathers the opportunity for a fair hearing in the future.
CAVANAGH, J. (dissenting). Because I disagree with the majority‘s conclusion that our court rule deprives the putative father of standing to intervene, I must respectfully dissent. I would hold, for the reasons
As stated in my Girard dissent, nothing in our statutes or court rules compels the conclusion that a putative father must first establish paternity in a separate legal proceeding. To so hold perpetuates the errors caused by the majority‘s position in Girard, while denying parents the right to develop and maintain relationships with their children.
Though my position in Girard adequately rebuffs the majority‘s decision today, one need not focus exclusively on the rights of the putative father; the child‘s rights also demand this result.1 Courts making paternity and custody determinations have the authority to inquire about a child‘s putative father or parent in fact. Without it, a court would be deprived of the means necessary to ensure that a child‘s best interests and due-process rights are protected.
Few would disagree that an extremely self-reflective and understanding legal father could process feelings of rejection, anger, or betrayal while continuing
For these reasons, I must respectfully dissent.
Notes
Fortunately, the time has long past when children in our society were considered the property of their parents. Slowly, but finally, when it comes to children even the law has rid itself of the Dred Scott mentality that a human being can be considered a piece of property “belonging” to another human being. To hold that a child is the property of his parents is to deny the humanity of the child. Thus, in the present case we start with the premise that . . . [the child] “belongs” to no one but himself.
401 Mich 629; 258 NW2d 461 (1977).The court may take initial testimony on the tentative identity and address of the natural father. If the court finds probable cause to believe that an identifiable person is the natural father of the minor, the court shall direct that notice be served on that person . . . .
(1) Whose parent or other person legally responsible for the care and maintenance of the juvenile, when able to do so, neglects or refuses to provide proper or necessary support, education, medical, surgical, or other care necessary for his or her health or morals, who is subject to a substantial risk of harm to his or her mental well-being, who is abandoned by his or her parents, guardian, or other custodian, or who is without proper custody or guardianship . . . .
* * *
(2) Whose home or environment, by reason of neglect, cruelty, drunkenness, criminality, or depravity on the part of a parent, guardian, nonparent adult, or other custodian, is an unfit place for the juvenile to live in.
