In Re the Guardianship of the Person of Doe

786 P.2d 519 | Haw. App. | 1990

786 P.2d 519 (1990)

In the Matter of the GUARDIANSHIP of the Person of John DOE, a Minor.

No. 13759.

Intermediate Court of Appeals of Hawaii.

February 2, 1990.

*520 Lawrence D. McCreery, on the briefs, Kapaa, Kauai, for paternal grandmother and paternal stepgrandfather of child, petitioners-appellants.

Karen Marie Kapelson, Simi Valley, Cal., pro se.

Before BURNS, C.J., and HEEN and TANAKA, JJ.

BURNS, Chief Judge.

Petitioners, the paternal grandmother (PGM) and the paternal stepgrandfather (PSGF) of John Doe (Child), appeal the family court's March 17, 1989 Order Granting Temporary Guardianship (March 17, 1989 Order). Notwithstanding its title, the March 17, 1989 Order completed the adjudication of the guardianship proceeding and, therefore, is an appealable final order. We vacate the March 17, 1989 Order and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

The chronology of relevant events is as follows:

Date                    Event
May 26, 1986            Child's father (Father) and mother (Mother) (collectively,
                        "Parents") were married in California.
December 16, 1986       Child was born in California.
December 31, 1987       According to Father, because they were having financial and
                        marital problems, Parents gave temporary physical custody
                        of Child to PGM and PSGF, who live in the County of Kauai,
                        but who were then visiting in California.
January 3, 1988         PGM and PSGF returned to Kauai with Child.
Post-January 3, 1988    Father moved to Kauai.
Pre-November 16, 1988
November 16, 1988       PGM and PSGF filed, in Kauai, a Petition for Appointment
                        of Guardians of the Person of Minor (November 16, 1988
                        Petition), FC-G 88-0009, seeking their appointment as
                        guardians of Child's person, alleging that "[s]uch appointment
                        is necessary because [Child's] parents are unable to
                        care for or support the child, and they have given physical
                        custody of [Child] to [PGM and PSGF]." Record at 2.
December 8, 1988        Father and Child's paternal grandfather filed consents to the
                        November 16, 1988 Petition and waivers of further notice.
December 12, 1988       PGM, PSGF, and Parents stipulated to order (December 12,
                        1988 Stipulated Order). It states in relevant part:
                           1. An investigation and report shall be made by the
                           staff of the Family Court of the Fifth Circuit, and the
                           corresponding agency in the State of California where
                           [Mother] resides.
                           2. [PGM and PSGF] shall have temporary physical
                           custody of [Child] pending completion of the aforesaid
                           study and until further order of this Court.
                                                  * * *

*521
                           4. None of the parties shall remove the [Child] from
                           the County of Kauai, until further order of this Court.
                        Record at 18.
December 13, 1988       In California, Mother filed a petition for divorce from Father.
January 30, 1989        January 18, 1989 California social study of Mother was filed.
January 31, 1989        Father filed UCCJ (Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction) 89-0001
                        in Kauai.
February 7, 1989        Daryl Y. Dobashi was appointed as Child's Guardian Ad
                        Litem.
March 16, 1989          Supplemental California social study of Mother was filed.
March 17, 1989          The family court entered an "Order Granting Temporary
                        Guardianship". It states in relevant part:
                             The primary concern of this Court is the best interest
                           of [Child]. The Court also believes that the main objective
                           herein should be to build and maintain a safe
                           environment for the [C]hild, and to return the [Child] to
                           his natural parents or parent as soon as feasible.
                                                  * * *
                             The Court finds that [PGM and PSGF], who are the paternal
                           grandmother and her husband, respectively,
                           are fit and proper persons to be guardians, and that
                           [Child], has resided with [PGM and PSGF] since January
                           1, 1988 in a stable and wholesome home. The
                           Court, however, makes no finding as to the circumstances
                           of [PGM and PSGF's] obtaining physical custody
                           of [Child] from the [Parents], those factual circumstances
                           being disputed by the parties.
                             This Court therefore defers to the jurisdiction of the
                           Superior Court, Ventura County, State of California,
                           where [Mother] has filed a divorce action, to determine:
                             1. The circumstances of [PGM and PSGF's] obtaining
                           physical custody of the [Child];
                             2. The fitness of [Mother] as a proposed custodial
                           parent;
                             3. The determination of permanent or temporary
                           custody of the [Child].
                                                   * * *
                             IT IS THEREFORE HEREBY ORDERED that the
                           Petition for Appointment of Guardians is granted insofar
                           as the [PGM and PSGF] are hereby appointed
                           temporary guardians of [Child], until such time as the
                           California Superior Court resolves the issue of temporary
                           or permanent custody of the [Child] in the divorce
                           action pending in that State.
                                                  * * *
                           If necessary, Child Psychologist Dianne Girard shall
                           examine the [Child] to make recommendations as to
                           how this Court may order the return or transfer of the
                           minor child to the natural parent(s) with the least negative
                           effects on the [Child.]
                        Record at 89-92.
April 5, 1989           PGM and PSGF filed a notice of appeal.
April 17, 1989          Father withdrew his December 8, 1988 waiver and consent.

*522
October 30, 1989        According to Mother, the California divorce decree was
                        entered.
February 26, 1990       According to Father, the custody issue in the California
                        divorce case is set for hearing on this date.

In this appeal, PGM and PSGF contend that the family court erred when it failed to grant their November 16, 1988 Petition. We conclude that the family court erred when it (1) appointed PGM and PSGF as temporary guardians for more than ninety days; (2) failed to decide whether the November 16, 1988 Petition was a petition for guardianship of the person or a petition for an award of Child's legal and physical custody or both; and (3) declined to decide the merits of the November 16, 1988 Petition.

I.

When the family court refused to assume jurisdiction over the major issues raised in the November 16, 1988 Petition and deferred to the California court's jurisdiction in the California divorce case involving only Parents as parties, it effectively denied PGM and PSGF's November 16, 1988 Petition. Therefore, notwithstanding its misleading title, the March 17, 1989 Order is an appealable final order. See Gomes v. Heirs of Kauwe, 52 Haw. 126, 472 P.2d 119 (1970).

II.

Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) § 560:5-207(c) (1985) states: "If necessary, the family court may appoint a temporary guardian of the person, with the status of an ordinary guardian of the person of a minor, but the authority of such temporary guardian shall not last longer than ninety days."

Consequently, we sua sponte conclude that the March 17, 1989 appointment of PGM and PSGF as temporary guardians terminated on the ninety-first day thereafter.

III.

Upon a review of HRS chapters 571 (Family Courts), 577 (Children), 580 (Annulment, Divorce, Separation), 583 (Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Act), and 587 (Child Protective Act), we conclude that HRS chapter 560:5 (Protection of Persons Under Disability and Their Property) does not govern child custody disputes. However, nothing in the law precludes a petition for the award of legal and physical custody of a child or the award of physical custody and guardianship of the child's person.

The record reveals that PGM and PSGF desired to be awarded Child's legal and physical custody. That being so, the November 16, 1988 Petition should have been expressly based on HRS §§ 571-11(3), -46 (Supp. 1989). The material facts alleged in support of the November 16, 1988 Petition are PGM's and PSGF's physical custody of Child with the consent of Parents and Parents' inability to care for or support Child. In other words, PGM and PSGF implicitly concede that if they are not entitled to Child's physical custody they are not entitled to guardianship of Child's person.

HRS § 577-3 (1985) states, in relevant part, that "[t]he father and mother of an unmarried minor child are jointly the natural guardians of the child's person and property." HRS § 577-7(a) (1985) states, in relevant part, that "[p]arents or, in case they are both deceased, guardians, legally appointed, ... shall have the right, at all times, to recover the physical custody of their children by habeas corpus".

On the subject of child custody, we recently stated that "HRS § 571-46(1) accords priority to the child's parents. HRS Chapter 587 accords priority to the child's family as defined in HRS § 587-2[.]" In the Interest of Jane Doe, born on June 4, 1987, ___ Haw. App. ___, ___, 784 P.2d 873 (1989). In other words, *523 in a contest between the mother and the paternal grandmother for a child's custody, the mother must prevail absent a valid finding that she is not a fit and proper person or has a home that is not stable and wholesome.

In the absence of a valid court order to the contrary, Father and Mother are equally entitled to Child's custody. See Fujikane v. Fujikane, 61 Haw. 352, 604 P.2d 43 (1979). Consequently, if Father and/or Mother requests the physical custody of Child from PGM and PSGF, the request must be granted unless PGM and PSGF, desiring to continue physical custody, allege in good faith that both Father and Mother are not fit and proper persons and/or have homes that are not stable and wholesome.

CONCLUSION

Accordingly, we vacate the March 17, 1989 Order Granting Temporary Guardianship and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

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