Appellant seeks to have this court define the rights of a father when the mother of his unborn child has decided to have a clinical abortion. We dismiss the appeal as moot.
Because the procedural posture of this appeal dictates its disposition, we begin our analysis with a brief summary of the procedural history of the case.
In March 1988, appellant Michael Jon Reynolds filed for divorce from respondent Jennifer Franks Reynolds, his wife of seventeen months. The parties had one child and were expecting another in August or September of 1988. In his divorce complaint, appellant alleged that respondent intended to abort their unborn child, and moved ex parte for a temporary restraining order to prevent the abortion. Appellant represented that the pregnancy posed no extraordinary risks to respondent’s health, and sought custody of the unborn child. The district court granted the temporary order and it was served on respondent on the day she was scheduled to undergo the abortion.
Respondent counterclaimed. Because she was still within the first trimester of pregnancy, respondent argued that the restraining order violated her constitutionally protected right to privacy under
Roe v.
*1045
Wade,
Following hearing and argument, the district court declined to grant a preliminary injunction and dismissed the temporary restraining order then in effect. Appellant immediately applied to this court for a temporary restraining order and an interlocutory appeal. We granted the temporary restraining order and set the matter for hearing. Shortly after the order was issued, but before it could be served, respondent underwent the abortion. The hearing in this court was then vacated and appellant’s petition for an interlocutory appeal was denied. We concluded that an interlocutory appeal was inappropriate under the circumstances. See R.Utah Ct.App. 5(d).
Appellant subsequently asked the district court to certify the abortion order as a final, appealable judgment under rule 54(b) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure, and to bifurcate the remainder of the case. The district court granted the motion and certified the issue for appeal. The remainder of the case, consisting of the divorce action, was eventually settled, and a judgment of divorce was entered.
Meanwhile, appellant appealed the abortion issue certified under rule 54(b). Respondent moved to dismiss the appeal on two grounds: (1) the case was not properly certified as final for purposes of appeal, and (2) the appeal was untimely filed. Under the unique circumstances of the case, we determined that the procedural requirements for certification had been satisfied and that the denial of the preliminary injunction conclusively resolved a distinct claim, to Wit, appellant’s claim for “custody of the fetus.” On the basis of the two narrow grounds asserted in support of respondent’s motion to dismiss, we denied the motion.
Respondent did not, and still does not, argue that the appeal fails to present a justiciable issue for resolution. Yet appellant seeks judicial relief which now cannot possibly affect the rights of the litigants. Respondent’s pregnancy was medically terminated even before the notice of appeal was filed. Since then, the divorce action has concluded, and there is no remaining controversy between the parties. The issue presented for review is therefore moot.
See Burkett v. Schwendiman,
Because of a longstanding judicial policy in Utah to avoid advisory opinions, we do not generally consider mooted questions on appeal.
Merhish v. H.A. Folsom & Assocs.,
The function of appellate courts, like that of courts generally, is not to give opinions on merely abstract or theoretical matters, but only to decide actual controversies injuriously affecting the rights of some party to the litigation, and it has been held that questions or cases which have become moot or academic are not a proper subject to review.
McRae v. Jackson,
Appellant cites
In re J.P.,
[A] court [may] litigate an issue which, although technically moot as to a particular litigant at the time of appeal, is of wide concern, affects the public interest, is likely to recur in a similar manner, and, because of the brief time any one person is affected, would otherwise likely escape judicial review....
Id.
at 1371 (quoting
Wickham v. Fisher,
In addition to those cases “capable of repetition, yet evading review,”
see Southern Pac. Terminal Co. v. ICC,
However, whether we reach the merits of a mooted issue in any particular case rests within our discretion.
McRae,
This appeal derives not from a declaratory judgment, but from a complaint for divorce. Cf
. Baird,
Appeal dismissed sua sponte. 1
Notes
. The procedure to be followed when a matter has become moot and then an order is erroneously entered is to vacate the order and remand for dismissal.
See Merhish,
