Jerry and Pat Reece appeal the trial court’s dismissal of their application for guardianship of Brandon Reece, their thirteen-year-old mentally handicapped nephew. On appeal, Jerry and Pat Reece raise four points. They allege (1) that the trial court misapplied Missouri law by ruling that the best interests of Brandon could not be considered in determining whether to grant their application for guardianship; (2) that the trial court erred in sustaining the motion requesting dismissal of their application for guardianship filed by John Robert Reece (Bob), Brandon’s father, because Bob had failed to fulfill his duties as natural guardian by relying on others to care for his son; (3) that the trial court erred in denying Jerry and Pat’s guardianship application because, as a matter of law, Brandon’s natural father was unfit, unwilling and unable to fulfill his guardianship duties, and because, as a matter of law, the best interests of Brandon warranted the grant of guardianship to Jerry and Pat; and (4) that improper venue resulted from the transfer of the ease from Clay County to Cooper County. The order of the trial court dismissing the petition for appointment of guardian is reversed and remanded.
Approximately two weeks after his birth, Brandon and his parents, Bob and Julie Reece, were involved in a car accident. As a result of the collision, Julie was killed and Brandon was injured. Brandon’s injuries caused severe, permanent mental and physical disabilities. Due to brain damage, Brandon’s functional age is below the one-year level. Brandon is prone to daily seizures, suffers from a variety of respiratory problems and is unable to communicate verbally or walk without assistance. In addition, Brandon’s vision is impaired, and he is required to take a variety of medications.
After the accident, Bob claimed that he was unable to care for Brandon. When Brandon was nine months old, Bob voluntarily placed him in the physical custody of Jerry and Pat Reece, Brandon’s uncle and aunt. Jerry and Pat have continuously raised Brandon from that point forward. Bob testified that, after February 2, 1985, when he married his present wife, Ila, he would have been able to care for Brandon, but he declined to do so. Bob also indicated that he and Ila normally visited Brandon’s home three to four times a year. Prior to the filing of this petition, however, Bob had not seen Brandon for at least one year and had not visited Brandon’s home in as much as three years.
On February 16, 1993, Jerry and Pat filed an application in the Circuit Court of Clay County to acquire guardianship over Brandon. Shortly thereafter, on March 12, 1993, Brandon’s father filed his own application for guardianship. In addition, Bob filed a motion to change venue from Clay County, where Brandon lives with Jerry and Pat, to Cooper County, where Brandon’s conserva- *709 torship is pending and Bob resides. Bob’s motion was sustained by the trial court.
At the evidentiary hearing in the Cooper County Circuit Court, Probate Division, the trial court found that Bob was not a “loving father,” and that it would be “extremely cruel to remove this child from [Jerry and Pat] ..., especially at this late date in this child’s life.” The judge also stated that he did not think one could find better care than what Brandon is receiving through Jerry and Pat. Nonetheless, the court sustained Bob’s oral motion to dismiss the application at the close of the movant’s evidence, because the court claimed it was without the statutory authority to grant Jerry and Pat’s guardianship application.
In a court-tried case, “a motion to dismiss filed at the close of a plaintiffs case is treated ‘as a submission on the merits, requiring the court to determine credibility of the witnesses and to weigh the evidence.’ ”
Pasta House Co. v. Williams,
Because the issues raised in Jerry and Pat’s point two is dispositive of the case, this court will not address their remaining contentions, except those likely to arise on remand.
In point two, the crux of Jerry and Pat’s claim of error is that the trial court misapplied the law when it dismissed their application for appointment as Brandon’s guardians pursuant to § 475.030.4(2), RSMo 1986. 1 Section 475.030.4(2) authorizes the granting of letters of guardianship for a minor “[w]here the parents or the sole surviving parent of a minor are unwilling, unable or adjudged unfit to assume the duties of guardianship.” Jerry and Pat claim that the trial court erroneously applied the law when it determined that Bob had fulfilled his duties as natural guardian by merely placing Brandon in the home of his aunt and uncle.
The appointment of a guardian for a minor child is governed by three statutes, §§ 475.025, 475.030 and 475.045. Section 475.025 provides that the father and mother, or survivor, are natural guardians who have the custody and care of the person of their child, as well as responsibility for the child’s education. As indicated previously, under § 475.030, letters of guardianship may issue for a minor child when the child has no parent living, has parents who are unwilling, unable or unfit to assume the duties of guardianship or has parents whose parental rights have been terminated. Section •475.045 states that the parent or parents of a minor have first priority to be appointed guardian or conservator of the minor, except as provided in § 475.030. Section 475.045 is seemingly in conflict with the other two statutes because there is no need to grant parents priority for appointment as guardians since no guardian is to be appointed so long at least one parent is fulfilling the duties of a natural guardian.
“The primary rule of statutory construction is to ascertain the intent of the lawmakers from the language used, to give effect to that intent if possible, and to consider words used in the statute in their plain and ordinary meaning.”
Metro Auto Auction v. Director of Revenue,
When reading the three statutes in pari materia, letters of guardianship for a minor should not issue unless there is no parent available, willing or able to fulfill the parental role in caring for a child and providing for that child’s needs as natural guardian. It is only when no natural guardian is fulfilling the parental duties and obligations is the appointment of a statutory guardian necessary. Considering this statutory framework, we address whether the trial court misapplied the law in finding that Bob was not unwilling, unable and unfit to discharge his required duties as natural guardian of Brandon.
Bob’s obligations and responsibilities to care for Brandon, as his sole parent and natural guardian, are much greater than the statutory duties of a court-appointed guardian. Under § 475.025, parents have “the custody and care of their [children’s] persons and education.” Case law and other statutes define what rights and obligations a parent with “custody and care” assumes. See 5B John A. Borron, Jr., Missouri Practice: Probate Law and Practice §§ 1836-1840, 1847-1848 at 127-140, 151-54 (2d ed. 1992). The scope of Bob’s parental responsibilities, however, includes some duties which are comparable to those of a statutory guardian. A statutory guardian must provide for a ward’s “education, support and maintenance” pursuant to § 475.120.1.
One distinction between a natural guardian and a statutory guardian is that a parent’s duty to provide for a child is a personal obligation which cannot be satisfied when, by chance, another provides that service in the parent’s stead. For example, when parents are tried for criminal nonsupport of their children, “[t]he fact the minor child does not suffer deprivation of necessary food, clothing, lodging, medical or surgical attention,
or that such needs are being supplied by another,
does not abrogate the parent’s obligation under the statute.”
State v. Morovitz,
This is not to say that a parent cannot arrange for another to provide care and education for a child or that all care must be provided personally by a parent. Section 475.024, which permits a parent to execute a power of attorney delegating the parent’s powers regarding care and custody, indicates otherwise. Section 475.024, however, does not speak to the legal consequences of totally relinquishing the care and custody of a child to another, without just cause, for a period of years. One consequence may be the finding by a court, in a proceeding for the appointment of a guardian for a minor child, that the parent has exhibited an unwillingness, inability or unfitness to assume the parent’s duties as natural guardian for the child.
In the case at bar, the lower court held that:
[T]he facts of [Jerry and Pat’s] case don’t show by clear and convincing evidence that the natural father has not provided for the education, support, and maintenance of [Brandon]. On the contrary, the facts show that he has provided the same by letting this child live with Jerry and Pat Reece.
*711 The father has thus performed his duty as guardian. I did not say he has performed his duty as a father but merely as a guardian.
The court reasoned that, since Bob had left Brandon with his uncle and aunt, he had indirectly provided for Brandon’s education, support and maintenance, and, therefore, the court was compelled by law to find that Bob was not unwilling, unable or unfit to serve as Brandon’s natural guardian. We find this analysis, upon which the dismissal was based, to be a misapplication of the law.
To satisfy his obligations as natural guardian, Bob must have done more than place the custody of Brandon with Jerry and Pat twelve years ago. Pursuant to § 475.025, Bob must actively furnish Brandon with the care he requires. In the case of a disabled child such as Brandon, Bob’s duty to provide for “care” would include provision for the child’s medical and health needs.
See Tribune Pub. Co. v. Curators of Univ. of Mo.,
Bob relies on
Black v. Black,
Moreover, the trial court misapplied the law in determining the statute upon which to base Bob’s ability to act as Brandon’s guardian. Section 475.045.2 provides that the unfitness of a parent for the duties of guardianship or conservatorship of a minor “may be adjudged by the court after due notice and hearing.” Rather than proceed under this section, however, the trial court utilized § 475.110, which addresses the general grounds for removal of a guardian or conservator.
2
In so doing, the trial court was in error. The determination of a parent’s fitness as natural guardian is governed by § 475.045.2, rather than § 475.110, in that when several statutes address a particular subject, the most specific statutes supersedes the more general statute.
Kansas City Star,
Accordingly, Jerry and Pat’s application for guardianship over Brandon should not have been dismissed. Point two is sustained. Where the trial court sustains a motion to dismiss before the defendant has presented his or her evidence, the reviewing court should remand the cause for a new trial in which the entire case may be reheard.
Ortmeyer v. Bruemmer,
This court’s discussion is not complete, however, since venue is an issue which may recur in the new trial. This court will therefore address Jerry and Pat’s final point on appeal, that the Clay County Circuit Court erred when it transferred the case to Cooper County based on a lack of venue.
Jerry and Pat cite
State ex rel. Uptergrove v. Russell,
Although Jerry and Pat are correct when citing the general venue rule, none of their eases involve guardianships, conservatorship, or the special venue statutes which control in such situations. In guardianship eases, change of venue is governed by § 475.040. That statute reads, in pertinent part:
If it appears to the court ... at any time before the termination of the guardianship or conservatorship, that the proceeding was commenced in the wrong county ..., the court may order the proceeding with all papers, files and a transcript of the proceedings transferred to the probate division of the circuit court of another county. The court to which the transfer is made shall take jurisdiction of the case, place the transcript of record and proceed to the final settlement of the case as if the appointment originally had been made by it.
The first question, therefore, is whether the instant proceeding was “commenced in the wrong county.”
Section 475.035.3, governing venue for the appointment of a guardian, states:
If proceedings are commenced in more than one county, they shall be stayed except in the county where first commenced until final determination of venue in the county where first commenced. The proceeding is deemed commenced by the filing of a petition....
(emphasis added.) It seems clear that the probate judge of Clay County relied on this statute in determining that Cooper County was the forum of proper venue. In the Order Transferring Cause, the judge found:
4. That Brandon Reece, a minor, was subjected to the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court of Cooper County, Probate Division, at various times in the past, including proceedings regarding a guardianship of the person and the creation of a conservator-ship.
5. That the conservatorship of Brandon Reece continues to be supervised by the Probate Division of the Circuit Court of Cooper County, and that the jurisdiction for said conservatorship remains in Cooper County.
6. That certain evidence may be more readily available because of the schools, treating physicians, and custodial persons in Clay County, Missouri, but that because the Circuit Court of Cooper County had previously exercised jurisdiction with respect to the minor and has not transferred any jurisdiction to Clay County, Missouri, that the proper forum for this application for the appointment of a guardian rests in Cooper County, Missouri.
(Emphasis added.)
As the Clay County court noted, Cooper County had already acquired jurisdiction over guardianship matters relating to Brandon. 3 Guardianships are ongoing pro- *713 eeedings which do not end until particular events occur, such as the ward reaching the age of eighteen. See § 475.083, RSMo Cum. Supp.1993. Bob could not have waived venue in the current case, because earlier guardianship and conservatorship proceedings had already been commenced in Cooper County. Pursuant to § 475.035.3, then, Cooper County held jurisdiction in this matter, and the transfer of venue was appropriate. Whether Cooper County continues to be the proper county for venue for the guardianship and conservatorship proceedings under the provisions of § 475.040 is a matter for determination by the circuit court of Cooper County, not Clay County. Point denied.
The judgment is reversed and remanded in accordance with this opinion.
All concur.
Notes
. Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory refer-enees are found in RSMo 1986.
. For complete grounds upon which a guardian or conservator may be removed, § 475.110 directs the reader to § 473.140, a statute governing the removal of personal representatives.
. The original letters for guardianship of the estate were issued to Bob in a guardianship proceeding in Boone County, Missouri, the county where Bob and Brandon resided at the time of *713 the auto accident. Bob obtained a change of venue to Cooper County, Missouri, because he had moved to Cooper County and the lawsuit seeking damages for Brandon’s injuries and the wrongful death of Julie Reece was pending in Cooper County. Successor letters of conserva-torship were subsequently issued and the conser-vatorship remains pending in Cooper County.
