L.B. (“thе mother”) appeals from a judgment of the Montgomery Juvenile Court (“the juvenile court”) holding her in contempt of previous orders of the juvenile court and otherwise enforcing its previous judgment, which made awards of custody, visitation, and child support with regard to B.A.B. (“the child”) upon the filing of a dependency petition filed by R.L.B. (“the father”). Because we conclude that the juvenile court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction, we dismiss the mother’s appeal.
Facts and Procedural History
On January 18, 2007, the father, who lived in Louisiana, filed a petition in the juvenile court seeking custody of the child; the father’s petition was docketed as case no. JU-07-27.01. The father alleged that the child was dependent because, he said, “[cjustody, visitation, and child support need to be established” for the child. The father asserted that a paternity case had been initiated in Louisiana and that a child-support сase had been initiated in Alabama. Specifically, he stated that he had signed an “Acknowledgment of Paternity” of the child in Louisiana in March 2006, that he had been allowed visitation with the child while the child had lived in Mobile, and that the mother had relocated to Montgomery with the child without notifying him of thе move. The father requested that he be awarded physical custody of the child and child support and that the child’s last name be changed to the father’s last name.
On March 7, 2007, the mother filed an answer to the father’s petition and a counterclaim seeking sole legal and physical custody of the child and an award of child support. The mother alleged that the child was born on December 31, 2005, and that the mother and the father had never been married to each other. She stated that a petition for a determination of the child’s paternity and for child support was pending in the Montgomery Circuit Court and requested that that case be consolidated with the father’s action. The mother asserted that the father had admitted to the paternity of the child in the case pending in the Montgomery Circuit Court and that that court had entered an order making a finding of paternity. The mother asserted that she had provided care for the child and that the child had lived with her since the child was born. She further asserted that the father had failed to visit the child despite an order of a Louisiana District Court allowing the father to have visitation with the child. On July 13, 2007, the mother filеd a petition for custody of the child, alleging that the child was dependent because the child’s custody was the subject of controversy; as evidence of the child’s dependency, however, the mother merely referred to her previously filed answer and counterclaim. The mother’s dependency petition was docketed as case no. JU-07-27.02.
On July 28, 2008, the mother filed a motion for a new trial, asserting a number of arguments with regard to the juvenile court’s judgment. The juvenile court purported to deny that motion on August 12, 2008; however, the mother’s motion had been denied by operation of law on August 11, 2008. See Rule 1(B), Ala. R. Juv. P. Neither party appealed from that judgment.
On July 14, 2009, the mother filed a petition in the juvenile court alleging that the child was dependent because he had been abandoned by the father. That petition was assigned case no. JU-07-27.03. In that petition, the mother alleged that the father did not see the child while the child was in Louisiana and that only the paternal grandmother had exercised visitation with the child. She requested that the juvenile court evaluate the visitation schedule and that the court address the health-insurance needs of the child. The father filed an answer to the mother’s petition, dеnying the allegations therein. He also filed a counterclaim in which he requested primary physical custody of the child. Finally, the father filed a petition for an order of contempt in which he asserted, among other things, that the mother was refusing to permit the father to visit the child.
The juvenile court entered a purported judgment in case no. JU-07-27.03 on October 21, 2009, finding the mother in willful contempt of the prior orders of the court, awarding the father visitation with the child from October 6, 2009, until October 30, 2009, and requiring the parties, following that visitation period, to resume abiding by the provisions of the prior visitation order. The mother filed her notice of appeal to this court on November 4, 2009.
Discussion
“Although neither party has raised the issue of jurisdiction, ‘[mjatters of jurisdiction are of such importance that a court may consider them ex mero motu.’ ” Nelson v. Nelson,
Juvenile courts are purely creatures of statute that have extremely limited jurisdiction. See Ex parte K.L.P.,
By failing to allege with specificity that the child was in need of supervision or to otherwise allege facts that, if proven, would establish the child’s dependency, the father, in turn, failed to properly invoke the jurisdiсtion of the juvenile court. The juvenile court proceeded, however, to hold status conferences on the motions made by the mother and the father and to enter various orders regarding visitation between the child and the father and to ultimately make a determination of custody, even asserting on the case-action-summary sheet at one point that the court “takes original jurisdiction over the custody determination.” We conclude that the juvenile court did not have the power to assume jurisdiction over the case or to make a custody determination.
Even assuming that the father’s dependency petition was sufficient to invoke the juvenile court’s jurisdiction, and we maintain that it was not, the juvenile court failed to address the allegation of dependency in any of its orders or judgments. There is no mention of dependency in the juvenile cоurt’s final judgment entered on July 17, 2008, yet the juvenile court proceeded to make an adjudication of the child’s custody. In K.C.G. v. S.J.R.,
“Once the dependency jurisdiction of a juvenile court has been properly invoked, the juvenile court has an imperative statutory duty to conduct an evidentiary hearing to determine the dependency of the child. Ex parte Linnell,484 So.2d 455 , 457 (Ala.Civ.App.1986) (‘[Pjursuant to § 12-15-65, [Ala.Code 1975,3 ] a hearing on the merits of the petition itself is required to determine if the children are, in fact, dependent....’); see also Ex parte W.H.,941 So.2d 290 , 299 (Ala.Civ.App.2006). If a juvenile court determines that the child is not dependent, the court must dismiss the dependency petition. Ala.Code 1975, former § 12-15-65(d). On the other hand, if, and only if, a juvenile court finds that the child is dependent, the court may then conduct proceedings to determine the custodial disposition of the child. Ala.Code 1975, former § 12-15-65. Ex parte K.S.G.,645 So.2d 297 (Ala.Civ.App.1992) (holding that juvenile court never assumed jurisdiction to determine issue оf custody of child when evidence revealed that there was no emergency situation rendering the child dependent as alleged in mother’s petition); Ex parte J.R.W., 630 So.2d 447 (Ala.Civ.App.1992) (holding that juvenile court that had never declared child dependent had no jurisdiction to enter order affecting visitation rights of father); J.W. v. W.D.J.,743 So.2d 467 , 469 (Ala.Civ.App.1999) (holding that once juvenile court found children dependent, it had exclusive jurisdiction to determine their custody); Ex parte W.H., supra (holding that juvenile court erred in transferring custody of allegedly dependent child without holding evidentiary hearing to ascertain dependency of child); C.D.S. v. K.S.S., [963 So.2d 125 (Ala.Civ.App.2007) ] (holding that juvenile court that dеtermined child was not dependent had no jurisdiction to thereafter determine custody of child); and E.H. v. N.L.,992 So.2d 740 (Ala.Civ.App.2008) (holding that, when evidence did not prove dependency of child as alleged in complaint, but revealed pure custody dispute, juvenile court was without jurisdiction to determine custody of child). As this court recently stated: “‘[I]n order to make a disposition of a child in the context of a dependency proceeding, the child must in fact be dependent at the time of that disposition.” ’ V.W. v. G.W.,990 So.2d 414 , 417 (Ala.Civ.App.2008) (quoting K.B. v. Cleburne County Dep’t of Human Res.,897 So.2d 379 , 389 (Ala.Civ.App.2004) (Murdock, J., concurring in the result)).
In K.C.G., the juvenile court had announced that it did not intend to treat the case аs a dependency action but that it intended to determine only the custody of the child; the juvenile court then entered a judgment in which it did not declare the child dependent, but merely awarded custody of the child to the child’s paternal grandmother based on the mother’s unfitness.
In the present case, the juvenile court likewise asserted its jurisdiction over the child’s custody. The record is devoid of any evidence tending to establish that the child was dependent, and the juvenile court failed to make any findings regarding the child’s dependency throughout the litigation. Moreover, as discussed above, we conclude that the father initially failed to properly allege dependency. Because both the mother and the father conceded that the father’s paternity of the child had been decided, whether by the court in Louisiana or by the Montgomery Circuit Court, the issue of the child’s custody was not “otherwise before the court” pursuant to former § 12-15-30(b)(l), Ala.Code 1975. As a result, the jurisdiction of the juvenile court was never invoked in case no. JU-07-27.01, and the juvenile court lacked the power to adjudicate the issues of custody, child support, and visitation.
Because the judgment entered in JU-07-27.01 is void, the juvenile court lacked jurisdiction to modify or enforce that judgment. Cf. McCarthy v. McCarthy,
APPEAL DISMISSED WITH INSTRUCTIONS TO THE JUVENILE COURT.
Notes
"3 Effective January 1, 2009, Ala.Code 1975, § 12-15-65, was amended and renumbered as Ala.Code 1975, § 12-15-129. See Act No. 2008-277, § 7, Ala. Acts 2008.”
. Although the juvenile court's final judgment entered on July 17, 2008, did not refer to case no. JU-07-27.02, we note that the mоther’s alleged dependency petition in that case likewise did not invoke the juvenile court’s jurisdiction and that each of the judgments and orders entered under that case number were also entered by the juvenile court without subject-matter jurisdiction.
. We note that the mother invoked the dependency jurisdiction of the juvenile court when she filed her 2009 petition, which was assigned case no. JU-07-27.03. That petition alleged that the child had become dependent due to the abandonment of the child by the father. However, the juvenile court impliedly found that the father had not abаndoned the child, thereby denying the dependency petition. At that point, the juvenile court was without jurisdiction to perform any judicial act other than dismissing the petition. See § 12-15-310(b), Ala.Code 1975 ("If the juvenile court finds that the allegations in the petition have not been proven by clear and convincing еvidence, the juvenile court shall dismiss the petition.”). However, the juvenile court purported to treat the mother’s petition as a petition for modification of the July 2008 judgment, which it could not do.
. Because we have determined that the juvenile court lacked jurisdiction in this case, the mother's argument, citing T.L.H. v. R.A.R.,
