Ronald McCallum appeals the trial court’s dismissal of his amended petition to vacate an adoption order. Allegedly entered without his knowledge, that order authorized the adoption of his child by the biological mother’s husband. In the trial court, McCallum claimed the mother committed extrinsic fraud during the adoption proceeding by misleading the court into believing McCallum could not be located and thus could be given constructive notice by publication service. Without ruling on the factual merits of McCallum’s claim, the trial court dismissed the amended petition on the ground that Code § 63.2-1216 barred the claim as untimely. We reverse and remand the case for farther factfinding by the trial court consistent with this opinion.
I.
In July 1999, the trial court entered a final adoption order permitting the husband (Gilberto Salazar, Jr.) of the child’s mother (Kathleen Salazar) to adopt her then four-year-old child. The order recited that McCallum, the noncustodial, biological father of the child, received only constructive notice of the adoption proceeding by order of publication. The court proceeded by publication notice in reliance on a report by the Department of Social Services that recited the mother’s representation that she did not know MeCallum’s whereabouts.
Five years later, McCallum filed a petition to vacate the final adoption order as void. In his petition, McCallum alleged that the child’s mother perpetrated a fraud on the court by deliberately misrepresenting that she did not know his whereabouts. McCallum also claimed he knew nothing about the adoption until October 2002.
The Salazars filed a demurrer and a separate special plea seeking a dismissal of the petition under Code § 63.2-1216, which requires all such petitions to be filed within six months of the final adoption order. The trial court granted the demurrer but did not specifically address the special plea. In response, McCallum filed an amended petition that included additional allegations concerning his efforts at maintaining a relationship with the child prior to the adoption. Raising again the time bar of Code § 63.2-1216, the Salazars filed a demurrer and a separate special plea to the amended petition. The trial court entered an order overruling the second demurrer and granting leave to the Salazars to file responsive pleadings within twenty-one days. Once again, however, the order did not address the pending special plea.
At trial, McCallum asked the court to find the Salazars in default for not filing an answer to the amended petition. After the Salazars pointed out that their special plea was still pending, the court denied the default request. McCallum then presented evidence in support of his claim that Kathleen Salazar committed extrinsic fraud that prevented him from receiving actual notice of the adoption proceeding. McCallum also offered
At the close of McCallum’s case in chief, the trial court reviewed “the evidence in the light most favorable to the father” and found that McCallum first discovered the alleged fraud in October 2002. The trial court then found that “even if—and the court doesn’t find—even if the mother had committed actual fraud, extrinsic or intrinsic,” McCallum filed his initial petition to vacate more than six months after first learning of the alleged fraud. 1 Relying on Code § 63.2-1216’s statutory bar, the trial court granted the Salazars’ motion to strike and dismissed the amended petition.
II.
On appeal, McCallum raises two issues.
2
He first argues that the trial court erred in not holding the Salazars in
default and thereafter treating as conceded all factual allegations in the amended petition to vacate. Second, McCallum contends the trial court’s application of Code § 63.2-1216’s time bar at the motion to strike stage cannot be reconciled with
F.E. v. G.F.M.,
A. Responsive Pleadings & Defaults
[2-4] McCallum claims that the Salazars were in default by not filing a responsive pleading after the trial court overruled their demurrer. This argument overlooks the fact that their special plea to the amended petition was still pending at the time of trial. Under Virginia law, a special “plea, whether at law or in equity, is a discrete form of defensive pleading.”
Nelms v. Nelms,
B. The Six-Month Bar of Code § 63.2-1216
F.E.
held that “nothing in Code § 63.1-237 [now Code § 63.2-1216] implies that the statute of limitation is to begin
running on the date on which the fraud was or should have been discovered.”
F.E.,
The trial court erred in holding that Code § 63.2-1216 barred claims filed more than six months from the discovery of
III.
The trial court correctly refused to find the Salazars in default and to treat the allegations in McCallum’s amended petition as conclusively admitted. The trial court, however, erred in dismissing McCallum’s amended petition on the ground that Code § 63.2-1216 barred claims filed more than six months after discovery of the alleged fraud. For these reasons, we reverse and remand the case for further factfinding consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. Clarifying this ruling, McCallum's counsel confirmed that the trial court had "made no finding as to whether there was extrinsic fraud or not” based on the evidence presented.
. In his questions presented, McCallum’s appellate brief also asserts that the trial court erroneously sustained an objection to evidence of
settlement discussions between the parties a few months before the
ore terms
hearing in the trial court. McCallum’s argument section of his brief, however, includes only a single sentence mentioning this point. Rule 5A:20(e) requires an appellant’s brief to include, among other things, the "principles of law, the argument, and the authorities relating to each question presented.” "Statements unsupported by ‘argument, authority, or citations to the record' do not merit appellate consideration.”
Boyd v. County of Henrico,
.
See also Cooper Industries v. Melendez,
.
See also O’Neill v. Cole,
. This requirement speaks not of a "potential relationship,” but an "already-established” parent-child relationship in which the biological parent has demonstrated his or her "full commitment to the responsibilities of parenthood.”
F.E.,
