J.W. (“the paternal grandfather”) and S.W. (“the paternal grandmother”) (hereinafter collectively referred to as “the paternal grandparents”) appeal from a judgment entered by the Coffee Juvenile Court (“the juvenile court”) following the issuance of an opinion from this court in J.W. v. C.B.,
Procedural History
On July 21, 2008, the juvenile court adjudicated F.C.W. (“the child”) to be depen
After this court issued a certificate of judgment in J.W., the juvenile court entered a judgment on October 7, 2010, in which it stated that, based on this court’s decision in Ex parte T.C.,
Issue
On appeal, the paternal grandparents argue that the juvenile court erred in con-eluding that it did not have jurisdiction to consider the mother’s custody-modification action.
Standard of Review
The question presented on appeal is a question of law. Accordingly, this court will review the juvenile court’s judgment de novo, without giving any presumption of correctness to the juvenile court’s legal conclusions. See Ex parte Byrom,
Discussion
The juvenile court’s October 2010 judgment effectively dismissed the mother’s custody-modification action for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. See State v. Property at 2018 Rainbow Drive,
We acknowledge that the procedural history regarding the Baldwin Juvenile Court’s jurisdiction in Ex parte T.C. is not abundantly clear. In Ex parte T.C., this court divulged only that the father had been awarded primary physical custody of the children by the Baldwin Juvenile Court
In Ex parte T.C., we also stated that, by making substantive changes to the former Juvenile Justice Act, see former § 12-15-1 et seq., Ala.Code 1975, regarding a juvenile court’s retained and original jurisdiction, see § 12-15-114(a), Ala.Code 1975, “[t]he clear intent of the Legislature was to provide that the juvenile courts of this state should no longer be deciding custody disputes except insofar as their resolution is directly incidental to core juvenile-court jurisdiction (such as in original paternity actions, see Ala.Code 1975, § 26-17-104).” Id. at 630-31. Apparently, the juvenile-court judge in the present ease interpreted that part of our decision in Ex parte T.C. as holding that a juvenile court does not have subject-matter jurisdiction over a custody-modification petition unless the custody-modification petition also contains an allegation of dependency, i.e., a core basis for juvenile-court jurisdiction. We take this opportunity to clarify our decision in Ex parte T.C.
Pursuant to the AJJA, if a juvenile court has previously adjudicated a child to be dependent, delinquent, or in need of supervision, the juvenile court has continuing jurisdiction over that child until the child attains the age of 21 or until the juvenile court terminates its jurisdiction over the child. See § 12-15-117(a); and Ex parte L.N.K.,
Because the child in the present case had been previously adjudicated dependent by the juvenile court in July 2008, § 12-15-117(a) afforded the juvenile court continuing jurisdiction over the child until the child attained the age of 21 or until the juvenile court terminated its jurisdiction over the case involving the child before the child’s attainment of the age of 21. The record demonstrates that, at the time the mother filed her custody-modification petition in June 2009, the child had not yet attained the age of 21 and the juvenile court had not terminated its jurisdiction over the case involving the child. Accordingly, we conclude that the juvenile court had continuing jurisdiction over the child, and, thus, it had continuing jurisdiction to consider the mother’s custody-modification petition. Therefore, we conclude that the juvenile court erred in determining that it did not have subject-matter jurisdiction over the mother’s custody-modification petition.
REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.
Notes
. There is an indication in the record on appeal that the juvenile court actually adjudicated the child dependent on June 21, 2008. Regardless, it is undisputed that the juvenile court adjudicated the child dependent in 2008.
