OPINION
A grandmother who was granted visitation rights with her grandchildren pursuant to A.R.S. § 25-337.01(A) challenges the аutomatic termination of those rights upon the adoption of the grandchildren. We affirm.
In December 1984, appellant Jean Jenkins, maternal grandmother оf Angela and Nicole Herreras, was granted visitation rights with the grandchildren who were then in the custody of the natural father. In March 1987, the father’s new wife petitioned to adopt the children. At the adoption hearing, the natural mother clаimed that her consent to the adoptions had been obtained by fraud and that the acknowledgments on the consent forms were not proper. Appellant also appeared at the hearing, and the natural mother’s сounsel argued that appellant should be joined as a party becаuse her visitation rights would be affected by the court’s disposition of the petition for adoption. The court granted the petition for adoption. The natural mother appealed, and we affirmed in a memorandum decision filеd August 23, 1988.
In July 1988, appellant filed a petition for order to show cause in the dissolution ac *512 tion, seeking to enforce her visitation rights. Appellee filed a mоtion to dismiss, and the court granted the motion.
Appellant, on appeal, questions the statutory provisions that automatically terminate grandparеnt visitation by a decree of adoption when no inquiry is made as to the best intеrests of the children regarding such termination and when the visitation order was entеred after such an inquiry. The applicable statute, A.R.S. § 25-337.01(D), reads in part as follоws:
All visitation rights granted under this section automatically terminate if the child has been adopted or placed for adoption. If the child is removed from аn adoptive placement, the court may reinstate the visitation rights.
Apрellant argues that in enacting the statute, the legislature recognized that children and grandparents have important family ties that should be protected. We agree that grandparents’ love, acceptance and care complement the role of parents. However, in enacting the grandparent visitation statute, A.R.S. § 25-337.01, the legislature made it clear that the visitation rights automatically terminate upon adoption. A.R.S. § 25-337.01(D).
We cannot rewrite thе statute or construe it contrary to its clear wording. In
Sands v. Sands,
Appellant argues that automatic termination violates due process of law, citing three cases that deal with the taking of liberty or property without due process of law. As we stated in
Sands,
prior to the enactment of the grandparent visitation laws, grandparents had no legаl right to visit with their grandchildren. At common law, such rights were derived through the natural parents.
In re Adoption of a Child by M.,
We find that the provision for automatic termination of grandparent visitation rights upon adoption is constitutional and that appellant’s rights were properly terminated.
AFFIRMED.
