Plaintiff and defendant are the biological parents of a child born in 1989. This action for custody and support, the first and only such action brought by either party, was filed in August 1996. The child was then living with defendant.
Plaintiff filed an amended complaint in which he requested an ex parte emergency order granting him custody of the child pendente lite. Following a hearing on 3 January 1997, at which defendant was not present, the trial court awarded plaintiff with temporary, exclusive custody of the child pending a full hearing on the custody issue. The facts justifying the award of temporary custody are not relevant to our disposition of this appeal.
Following a second hearing on 10 January 1997, which both parties attended, the trial judge issued an order that continued the earlier order for temporary custody and established defendant’s visi *852 tation rights. Thereafter, the child apparently resided with plaintiffs sister, because on 7 February another order was entered stating that “[t]he minor child shall continue to reside with the sister of the Plaintiff. . . until further orders of this Court.”
A full hearing on the issue of permanent custody occurred on 3 June 1997, after which the trial court entered a custody order containing the following conclusion of law: “That given the history, it would be in the child’s best interest and further, that the Court has not been shown a substantial reason to change custody, that custody continue with the mother, the defendant.” The temporary custody order was dissolved, and custody of the child was, in the word of the trial judge, “returned” to defendant. Plaintiff appeals. Because we cannot tell whether the trial court applied the correct standard when it decided the issue of permanent custody, we remand the case.
In one sense, all child custody orders are “temporary”: they are subject to modification,
see, e.g.,
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-13.7(a) (1995), and they terminate once the child reaches the age of majority,
see
N.C. Gen. Stat. §§ 50-13.1 through 50-13.3 (Cum. Supp. 1997), N.C. Gen. Stat. § 48A-2 (1984). Yet a distinction is drawn in our statutes,
see
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-13.5(d)(2) and (3) (1995), and in our case law,
see, e.g., Story v. Story,
A permanent custody order establishes a party’s present right to custody of a child and that party’s right to retain custody indefinitely.
See, e.g., In re Custody of Griffin,
In contrast, temporary custody orders establish a party’s right to custody of a child pending the resolution of a claim for permanent
*853
custody — that is, pending the issuance of a permanent custody order.
See Dunlap v. Dunlap,
When a court for the first time decides the issue of permanent custody, it must determine which party to the dispute will “best promote the interest and welfare of the child.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-13.2(a) (Cum. Supp. 1997);
see Price v. Howard,
In contrast, once a permanent custody order has been issued, such order may be modified or vacated only upon a showing of substantially changed circumstances affecting the welfare of the child. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-13.7(a) (1995);
Pulliam,
*854 In this case, the trial judge decided the issue of permanent custody at a time when no prior permanent custody order was in effect. He was therefore obligated to consider all the evidence and determine which party would best promote the interest and welfare of the child, but he was not required to find changed circumstances of any kind. Just as defendant had no burden to prove changed circumstances to modify the temporary custody order, plaintiff was not required to prove changed circumstances to justify entry of a permanent custody order that would alter the child’s living arrangements prior to this lawsuit.
The permanent custody order suggests the trial court may have believed, incorrectly, that plaintiff had the burden to establish changed circumstances at the permanent custody hearing. We remand the case for the trial court to reevaluate the evidence based on the “best interest of the child” standard. Our disposition of plaintiff’s appeal makes it unnecessary for us to address the other issues raised in plaintiff’s brief.
Although defendant filed a notice of appeal in this case, she did not file a brief. Her appeal is therefore dismissed.
Appeal of defendant dismissed; case remanded.
