In re the CUSTODY OF G.J.
Charles Jenkins, Appellant-Petitioner,
v.
Pamela (Jenkins) Godbey, Appellee-Respondent.
Court of Appeals of Indiana.
*758 R. Perry Shipman, Fowler, IN, Attorney for Appellant.
Randall L. Vonderheide, Vonderheide & Knecht, P.C., Lafayette, IN, Attorney for Appellee.
*757 OPINION
BARNES, Judge.
Case Summary
Charles Jenkins appeals the trial court's dismissal of his petition seeking to obtain custody of G.J., his niece and the daughter of Pamela Godbey. We reverse and remand.
Issue
The sole restated issue before us is whether Jenkins had standing to seek custody of G.J. by filing a petition under Indiana Code Section 31-17-2-3(2).
Facts
Godbey was married to Jenkins' brother, Warren Jenkins, and the couple had G.J. in 1999. Gоdbey and Warren later filed for divorce; before the dissolution proceedings were final, however, Warren died. It would appear that within a matter of weeks of Warren's death, Godbey married Paul Godbey and brought G.J. into that marriage.[1] Jenkins then filed a "Petition for Custody" of G.J., which alleged that Paul Godbey was a convicted child molester who also colleсted child pornography, that a court order in the dissolution action between Godbey and Warren had prohibited Godbey from allowing G.J. to have any *759 contact with Paul Godbey, and that Godbey had in the past lost custody of other children to the Tippecanoe County Office of Family and Children. App. p. 1. The petition also asserted that Jenkins was entitled to file the petition for custody pursuant to Indiana Code Section 31-17-2-3(2).[2]
On the morning that a final hearing was set to take place on Jenkins' petition, Godbey moved to dismiss "for the reason that Charles Jenkins has no standing to pursue custody in this cause." App. p. 4. The trial court granted the motion, concluding that Indiana Code Section 31-17-2-3 was "relative only to dissolutions of marriage. And I believe that he would properly file under the guardianship statute." Tr. p. 8. Jenkins now appeals.
Analysis
Godbey claims that Jenkins did not have standing to seek custody of G.J. by proceeding under the child custody statutes contained in Indiana Code Chapter 31-17-2, but instead "it would appear that a guardianship petition is Charles' remedy." Appellee's Br. p. 2. "The main purpose of standing is to insure that the party before the court has a substantive right to enforce the claim that is being made in the litigation." Schulz v. State,
It is somewhat surprising, given the large volume of cases dealing with child custody disputes between a parent and a third party that have arisen in various contexts in this state, that no Indiana appellate court has ever directly addressed or answered the question before us: what is the meaning, relevance, and scope of subsection (2) of Indiana Code Section 31-17-2-3? That section in its entirety reads:
A child custody proceeding is commenced in the court by:
(1) a parent by filing a petition under IC XX-XX-X-X [governing commencement of dissolution actions], IC XX-XX-X-X [governing commencement of legal separation actions], or IC XX-XX-X-X [governing commencement of child support actions]; or
(2) a person other than a parent by filing a petition seeking a determination of custody of the child.
We are finally called upon today to interpret this subsection.[3]
*760 The interpretation of a statute is a question of law. Indiana Family & Social Services Admin. v. Radigan,
On its face, Section 31-17-2-3 does not appear to be ambiguous: the plain language of the statute allows the parents of a child to file a child custody petition in conjunction with a petition for divorce, legal separation, or child support, "or" any person "other than a parent" to file a child custody petition, apparently at any time and without limitation. Other parts of Title 31, "Family Law," and cases in this area, however, have rendered the section ambiguous.
To begin with, Indiana Code Section 31-9-2-13 defines " `Child', for purposes of ... IC 31-17, [as] a child or children of both parties to the marriage." Cases from this court and our supreme court have construed the predecessor to this section, in conjunction with the predecessor to Section 31-17-2-3,[4] as meaning that a court in a dissolution action has no jurisdiction to award custody of a child to one who is not the child's parent, such as a stepparent or grandparent, because the child is not a "child" according to the statutory definition. A stepchild or grandchild is not a "child ... of both parties to the marriage." See Russell v. Russell,
Recently, we concluded that the absolute bar against a trial court awarding custody of a child to a third party in the course of a dissolution action was removed by the 1999 de fаcto custodian amendments to the child custody statutes. These amendments clarify that where a party meets the definition of a de facto custodian under Indiana Code Section 31-9-2-35.5, he or she has standing to pursue custody of a child and indeed must be made a party to a marital dissolution or paternity action custody proceeding.[6]See In re L.L. & J.L.,
We were not called upon in Nunn to address whether a third party or non-parent of a child may have standing to pursue custody of a child in a direct proceeding that is not ancillary to a divorce, legal separation, or child support proceeding, pursuant to Indiana Code Section 31-17-2-3(2). Godbey contends, however, in reliance upon Nunn that because there is no claim in Jenkins' petition that he was a de facto custodian of G.J., he was not entitled to file a direct third party child custody action under Indiana Code Section 31-17-2-3(2). After careful consideration, we disagree that a party must claim to be a de facto custodian in order to pursue custody of a child under that section in an independent cause of action.
First and foremost, we conclude that Godbey's construction of the statute would render it effectively meaningless or place words in the statute that are not currently there. Again, Section 31-17-2-3(2) allows "a person other than a parent" to commence a child custody proceeding. If the legislature had intended to allow only de facto custоdians to file a direct child custody action, it would have been a simple matter to amend Section 31-17-2-3(2) at the time the de facto custodian statutes were added in 1999 to expressly provide that a de facto custodian, rather than "a person other than a parent," could file a child custody petition. The fact that the de facto custodian statutes were only added in 1999, while the language in Section 31-17-2-3(2) existed well before then, also indicates that "a person other than a parent" is not limited to de facto custodians. Otherwise, Section 31-17-2-3(2) would have had no meaning or effect whatsoever prior to 1999, and we presume that the *762 legislature does not enact useless provisions.
We also observe that the placement of Section 31-17-2-3(2) suggеsts that it is relevant not just to dissolution proceedings. The full name of the title, article, and chapter under which this section falls is "Family Law: Custody and Visitation RightsActions for Child Custody and Modification of Child Custody Orders." There is no mention of marital dissolution, which has its own article, number 15, "Dissolution of Marriage and Legal Separation." The only explicit reference to dissolution of mаrriage in Section 31-17-2-3 is in subsection (1), which provides that a child's parent may petition for child custody in conjunction with a marital dissolution, legal separation, or child support petition. There is no such reference or limitation in subsection (2).
We must also address the definition of "child" found in Indiana Code Section 31-9-2-13(a), which expressly applies to Indiana Codе Article 31-17 and provides that a " `Child' ... means a child or children of both parties to the marriage." In the context of custody proceedings incidental to a marital dissolution, this term has been defined to mean only the biological or adopted children of both parties in the dissolution action. See Russell,
This still leaves unresolved the meaning of Section 31-17-2-3(2) and its provision allowing a person "other than a parent" to pursue custody of a child. Obviously, a child with respect to a person "other than a parent" is not a "child" as Section 31-9-2-13(a) or as Russell defines that word. But if a trial court lacks jurisdiction at all times to award custody of a child to someone other than a parent under Chapter 31-17-2, Section 31-17-2-3(2) would appear to be entirely meaningless: why would a person "other than a parent" be given express permission to commence a child custоdy proceeding "by filing a petition seeking a determination of custody of the child" if, in fact, that person could not actually be awarded custody? Such a construction of the statute would be absurd and would effectively amount to ignoring the existence and plain language of Section 31-17-2-3(2). We are compelled to conclude that Section 31-17-2-3(2) meаns what it says: any person "other than a parent" may seek custody of a child by initiating an independent cause of action for custody that is not incidental to a marital dissolution, legal separation, or child support action. This does not conflict with Russell, which did not address the predecessor to Section 31-17-2-3(2) and solely dealt with a child custody proceeding that was incidental to a marital dissolution action.
Furthermore, we believe that allowing a third party to seek custody of a child by filing a direct cause of action for custody of a child pursuant to the child custody statutes of Indiana Code Chapter 31-17-2 is wholly consistent with Indiana public policy.[7] That policy has long recognized that if a parent is unfit or otherwise unable to care for a child, it may be in the child's best interests to be placed in the custody of a third party. See, e.g., Gilchrist *763 v. Gilchrist,
The difficulty is that many cases have addressed third party versus natural parent child custody disputes while not being explicit about the proper forum or proceeding for such a contest. Many cases have arisen in the context of a third party's petition for guardianship of a child under the probate code or a parent's challenge to the third party's continued guardianship. See, e.g., id. at 285. Others have addressed a parent's petition for a writ of habeas corpus as a means to obtain custody of a child from a third party. See, e.g., Kissinger v. Shoemaker,
In In re L.L. & J.L., we made the observation that "a guardianship proceeding [under the probate code] is, in essence, a child custody proceeding" that required a significant amount of analysis beyond what was minimally required by the guardianship statutes.
Certainly, Godbey has not cited nor are we aware of any case stating that a third party who wishes to obtain custody of a child must seek a guardianship under the probate code rather than seeking custody directly under the family law code. Indeed, it frankly would seem to make more sense to file an action that is truly a child custody action under the child custody statutes set forth in the family law code. It also appears to place form over substance to insist that a third party who wishes to obtain custody of a child must proceed under the guardianship statutes, where the law governing either type of proceeding will overlap significantly and especially where the plain language of Indiana Code Section 31-17-2-3(2) provides third parties with the option of directly *764 filing a child custody petition under the family law code. Therefore, we conclude that Jenkins had standing to file a direct action for custody of G.J. under that section, as set forth in his petition filed with the trial court.
Conclusion
Indiana Code Section 31-17-2-3(2) provides third parties with the option to pursue custody of a child in a direct cause of action. We reverse the dismissal of Jenkins' petition seeking custody of G.J. pursuant to that section and remand for consideration of whether he is entitled to custody of his niece under the law governing third party-natural parent custody disputes.
Reversed and remanded.
DARDEN, J., and MAY, J., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Jenkins' petition was filed on April 25, 2002. It alleged that Warren died on February 4, 2002, and that Godbey had already remarried.
[2] Jenkins' petition was not incidental to the dissolution action between Warren and Godbey because that cause of action terminated upon Wаrren's death. See Fitzgerald v. Travelers Ins. Co.,
[3] We seem to have questioned whether a third party could directly seek custody of a child under the predecessor to Section 31-17-2-3(2) in In re McGuire,
[4] The family lаw statutes were entirely recodified in 1997. The predecessor to the current Section 31-17-2-3 was Indiana Code Section 31-1-11.5-20(a) which, identical to the current provision, allowed "a person, other than a parent" to commence a child custody proceeding "by filing a petition seeking a determination of custody of the child."
[5] The McCarroll court did not mention or explicitly overrule Moody, Fox, or Lord. To the extent Moody, Fox, and Lord directly conflict with McCarroll, however, they must have been implicitly overruled.
[6] We observe that we usеd the word "clarify" when describing the effect of the de facto custodian statutes on a third party's ability to seek custody of a child, thus suggesting that such ability implicitly existed before the statutes were enacted.
[7] The paternity statutes also contain provisions relating to child custody but no separate provisions for initiating a child custody proceeding. Rather, custody is awarded "in the initial determination" if there is a finding that a man is the child's biological father in the underlying paternity action. Ind.Code § 31-14-10-1.
