M.F., Pеtitioner and Appellee, v. J.F., Respondent, D.F. AND R.F., Intervenors and Appellants.
No. 20121010-CA
THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
October 18, 2013
2013 UT App 247
VOROS, Judge
Memorandum Decision; Fourth District Court, Provo Department; The Honorable Lynn W. Davis; No. 034401898; D.F. and R.F., Appellants Pro Se; Martin N. Olsen, Attorney for Appellee; Martha Pierce, Guardian ad Litem
Martin N. Olsen, Attorney for Appellee
Martha Pierce, Guardian ad Litem
JUDGE J. FREDERIC VOROS JR. authored this Memorandum Decision, in which SENIOR JUDGE RUSSELL W. BENCH concurred.1
JUDGE GREGORY K. ORME concurred in the result.
VOROS, Judge:
¶1 This is a divorce case. However, this appeal is brought by grandparents seeking to enforce a no-contact order issued by a juvenile court. The central question beforе us is whether the
¶2 M.F. (Mother) and J.F. (Father) filed for divorce in 2003 (the Divorce Case). In 2004, Father‘s parents (Grandparents) initiated a separate case in juvenile court (the Child Welfare Case) alleging that Mother abused or neglected their children. In January 2005, Mother and Grandparents attended a mediation session related to the Child Welfare Case and reached a thirteen-point stipulation. Points one and seven are relevant here: “1. The children will have no contact, direct or indirect, with [K.M.] or his family” and “7. The petition before the Juvenile Court will be dismissed.” Eight days later, the juvenile court issued an Order of Final Disposition, which incorрorated the stipulation and dismissed the Child Welfare Case.3
¶3 In 2011, Grandparents filed in the juvenile court a Motion for Order to Show Cause, seeking to enforce the no-contact provision of the stipulated order. The juvenile court ruled that it “laсk[ed] jurisdiction to hear the Order to Show Cause” because the Child Welfare Case “was dismissed by stipulation of the parties and
¶4 We also wrote that “[i]f Grandparents seek to pursue their claim that the no contact provisions were inappropriately modified or removed by the district court because Grandparents’ consеnt was not obtained, that claim must be presented to the district court where the modification occurred.” Id. Grandparents subsequently presented the claim to the district court by filing a Motion for Order to Show Cause (the Second OSC Motion) in the pending Divorce Case.4 They also filed another motion seeking to have a new case number assigned to their motion (the Renumbering Motion). After a hearing, the district court denied the Renumbering Motion and ruled that the no-contact provision, upon which the Second OSC Motion was based, was void and unenforceable and that, consequently, Grandparents lacked standing in the Divorce Case.
¶5 Grandparents contend that the district court erred by orally ruling at a hearing “one way on an issue” and then signing “а proposed order reversing itself the other way.” At the hearing, the district court indicated that it would rule that the no-contact provision was “void as it relates to this Court.” Grandparents’ counsel then asked the district court, “So you‘re not ruling [in a
¶6 Our case law is clear that where a court‘s oral ruling differs from a final written order, the latter controls.5 Evans v. State, 963 P.2d 177, 180 (Utah 1998). Here, Grandparents properly alerted the district court to the discrepancy by objecting to the proposed ordеr. Nevertheless, the district court signed the order. Therefore, the operative ruling is the written order: “[T]he no contact Order transferred to this Court from Juvenile Court in 2005 is void and unenforceable; consequently, the grandparents have no standing in the divorce action . . . .” Grandparents now appeal from this order.
¶7 As a threshold matter, the Guardian ad Litem contends that Grandparents lack standing.6 We review standing issues for correctness. In re Adoption of Baby E.Z., 2011 UT 38, ¶ 10, 266 P.3d 702. Standing is a threshold “jurisdictional requirement that must be satisfied before a court may entertain a contrоversy between two
¶8 Grandparents concede that they “did not have standing to intervene” in the Divorce Case. However, they argue that the district court “improperly denied [the Second OSC Motion] by forcing them to file in the divorce case” and then improperly denied thе Renumbering Motion. In essence, Grandparents contend that the district court‘s rulings prevented them from filing the Second OSC Motion as a separate case in which they would have had standing.
¶9 However, the basis for the district court‘s ruling was not that Grandparents were improper parties to the Divorce Case. Rather, the district court ruled that Grandparents lacked standing because the no-contact provision was “void and unenforceable.” According to the district court‘s apparent rationale, because the no-contact provision was void, no legally protectible interest was at stake. And because there was no “legally protectible interest in the controversy,” id., Grandparents lacked standing to enforce the provision.
¶10 We agree with the district court that thе juvenile court‘s order was void and unenforceable because the juvenile court lacked jurisdiction. “A court must have subject matter jurisdiction to have the power and authority to decide a controversy. Without subject matter jurisdiction а court cannot proceed.” Burns Chiropractic Clinic v. Allstate Ins. Co., 851 P.2d 1209, 1211 (Utah Ct. App. 1993). The juvenile courts “have limited jurisdiction. Their powers are limited to those specifically conferred by the statute.” In re B.B., 2004 UT 39, ¶ 13, 94 P.3d 252 (citations omitted). The scope of the juvenile court‘s jurisdiction is established in sectiоns 103 and 104 of the Juvenile Court Act. See
¶11 Under section 117 of the Juvenile Court Act, “[w]hen a minor is found to come within the provisions of Section 78A-6-103, the court shall so adjudicate.”
¶12 Based on the fоregoing, Grandparents, seeking dispositional orders protecting their grandchildren, properly petitioned the juvenile court to adjudicate the children as neglected, abused, or dependent. However, so far as the record before us shows, the children were never adjudicated as neglected, abused, or dependent under section 103(1)(c), and the juvenile court did not determine any alternative basis for exercising jurisdiction. On the contrary, it dismissed the case based on thе parties’ stipulation. As we have previously noted, “where the juvenile court makes a
¶13 Accordingly, when it dismissed the case, the juvenile court relinquished any jurisdiction it might have had, rеgardless of whether it had ever established the jurisdiction necessary to enter dispositional orders. And once “the jurisdiction of the juvenile court terminates, then so does the effect of its orders.” See Shedron-Easley v. Easley, 2011 UT App 42, ¶ 6, 248 P.3d 67 (per curiam). Here, the juvenile court did not adjudicate a basis for exercising jurisdiction over the children. As a result, it had authority only to dismiss the action and could not enter or enforce any other orders. See Varian-Eimac, Inc. v. Lamoreaux, 767 P.2d 569, 570 (Utah Ct. App. 1989).
¶14 “If a court acts beyond its authority those acts are null and void.” Id. Acсordingly, the district court correctly ruled that the no-contact provision was void. “It is fundamental that disobedience of an order of court which was issued without jurisdiction cannot be the basis of a finding and judgment for contempt.” Mellor v. Cook, 597 P.2d 882, 884 (Utah 1979). Therefore, becаuse the Second OSC Motion was predicated on the void no-contact provision, the district court properly denied that motion.
¶15 Grandparents further contend that a district court “does not have the authority to dismiss a legally an[d] lawfully obtаined order from a juvenile court.” However, the district court did not dismiss the order here. Instead, it ruled that the no-contact provision in the juvenile court‘s order was void—that is, the provision was of no legal effect and was never valid. See Black‘s Law Dictionary 1709 (9th ed. 2009) (dеfining “void” as “[o]f no legal effect” and noting that “void can be properly applied only to those provisions that are of no effect whatsoever“). As we explained above, that ruling was correct.
¶16 Grandparents also contеnd that the Guardian ad Litem “wants to ignore the 1200 years of common law that a signed
¶17 Affirmed.
VOROS, Judge
