Loftin v. Smith

Decision Date01 November 1991
PartiesKylea Gretchen Smith LOFTIN v. Aubrey and Jean SMITH. 2900326.
CourtAlabama Court of Civil Appeals

Harold Howell, Prattville, for appellant.

Wade H. Baxley of Ramsey, Baxley, McDougle & Collier, Dothan, for appellee.

ROBERTSON, Presiding Judge.

In September 1987, the Circuit Court of Houston County divorced Kylea Gretchen Smith and Phillip Wade Smith. The judgment of divorce incorporated an agreement of the parties in which the trial court awarded custody of the parties' three minor children to the mother, who is the appellant in this case, and awarded reasonable rights of visitation to the father.

In January 1988, the father petitioned for modification of the divorce judgment, alleging that he had not been allowed to exercise reasonable visitation and requesting that the trial court adopt a specific visitation schedule. The mother counterclaimed, requesting that the child support be increased, that a restraining order be issued to the father restraining him from harassing the mother, and that he be ordered to pay past due medical bills.

In July 1988, the trial court continued the hearing that it had scheduled on the petition for modification and the counterclaim for purposes of settlement. Subsequently, the father filed an amended petition for modification, and the father's parents, the appellees in this case, filed a motion to intervene in the action. In their motion to intervene, the grandparents requested that the court grant them visitation rights pursuant to § 30-3-4, Code 1975. The mother then filed a motion to dismiss the grandparents' petition to intervene, alleging that the trial court did not have jurisdiction to award them visitation separate and apart from their son's (the father's) visitation. The father's attorney then withdrew so that he could represent the grandparents as intervenors.

On May 18, 1989, the mother filed with the trial court a notice which stated that the father had executed a consent to adopt each of the parties' three minor children by the mother's new husband. She also filed copies of the consents to adoption. Then, during the last week in May, the mother and the grandparents entered into stipulation and agreement in which the grandparents were awarded certain visitation rights, and the trial court ratified said agreement. Subsequently, on June 21, 1989, without notice to the grandparents, the adoptions were granted by the Autauga County Probate Court.

On October 19, 1990, the mother and her new husband filed a petition to terminate the grandparents' visitation rights in the Circuit Court of Autauga County. On October 25, 1990, the grandparents filed a petition for rule nisi in the Circuit Court of Houston County, alleging that the mother had prevented them from exercising their visitation rights under their previous agreement and requesting that the court find the mother guilty of contempt.

On November 13, 1990, the grandparents filed a motion to transfer venue from Autauga County to Houston County. On December 19, 1990, the motion to transfer was granted. On February 28, 1991, the mother and her new husband filed a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction in the Circuit Court of Houston County.

Following a proceeding on the petition for rule nisi of the grandparents, the trial court found, among other things, that pursuant to § 30-3-5, Code 1975, the Circuit Court of Houston County did have jurisdiction of the action, that the grandparents had been granted visitation rights pursuant to the trial court's order dated May 26, 1989, and that the mother had failed to abide by the previous order granting visitation to the grandparents.

Consequently, the trial court ordered, among other things, that the petition to terminate the grandparents' visitation rights be denied, that the mother was in contempt of the trial court's order granting visitation to the grandparents, and that the mother could purge herself of contempt by complying with that visitation order.

The mother appeals.

First, she asserts that the Circuit Court of Houston County did not have jurisdiction to hear the petition for rule nisi on the question of visitation rights after the final decree of adoption was rendered in the Probate Court of Autauga County. The mother maintains that once the adoption decree was signed, the circuit court lost jurisdiction over the issue of visitation, and, unless the grandparents petitioned the adopting court for continuing visitation rights, visitation would be terminated.

Pursuant to § 26-10-5, Code 1975:

"(b) When the final order of adoption shall have been entered, the natural parents of the child, if living, shall be divested of all legal rights and obligations due from them to the child or from the child to them and the child shall be free from all legal obligations of obedience or otherwise to such parents. Provided, however, at the discretion of the court, visitation rights for the natural grandparents of the minor grandchildren may be maintained, or allowed upon petition of modification at any time after the final order of adoption." (Emphasis added.)

In Palmer v. Bolton, 574 So.2d 42, 43 (Ala.Civ.App.1990), a grandmother sought visitation rights with a grandchild who had been adopted by a stepparent in probate court. This court held in Palmer that the probate court was the only forum that had the legal authority to allow the grandmother to visit with her grandchild. However, in Ex parte Palmer, 574 So.2d 44, 45 (Ala.1990), our supreme court found that "[t]he legislative use of the term 'the court' [in § 26-10-5, Code 1975], could not have been intended to exclude the court of general jurisdiction." Thus, the case was remanded, and the circuit court was allowed to proceed on the grandmother's petition. Ex parte Palmer, 574 So.2d at 45.

We would point out that the supreme court, by way of footnote in Ex parte Palmer, stated that the mother in Palmer lived in the county where the grandmother had filed her action. In this case, the mother and the three children no longer live in Houston County. However, pursuant to § 30-3-5, Code 1975, for venue to be proper in Autauga County, the mother and the children had to have resided in Autauga County for three consecutive years preceding the date of the filing of the petition to terminate the grandparents' visitation rights. The record reflects that the children had not lived in Autauga County...

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3 cases
  • D.T. v. W.G.
    • United States
    • Alabama Court of Civil Appeals
    • 3 Marzo 2017
    ...best interest by noting that our review is limited to considering whether the probate court abused its discretion. Loftin v. Smith, 590 So.2d 323, 326 (Ala. Civ. App. 1991). Because the probate court took oral testimony, we are constrained by the ore tenus rule to presume that the factual f......
  • B.R.O. v. G.C.O.
    • United States
    • Alabama Court of Civil Appeals
    • 5 Agosto 1994
    ...a custody dispute between a parent and a grandparent, and no error was asserted or addressed regarding visitation. Loftin v. Smith, 590 So.2d 323 (Ala.Civ.App.1991), involved a petition to terminate grandparental visitation rights that had been granted by a modification of the parents' divo......
  • Weathers v. Compton
    • United States
    • Alabama Court of Civil Appeals
    • 6 Noviembre 1998
    ...with their grandchildren if the parents forbade such visitation. Ex parte Bronstein, 434 So.2d 780, 782 (Ala.1983); Loftin v. Smith, 590 So.2d 323, 325-26 (Ala.Civ.App. 1991); and Clark v. Leslie, 537 So.2d 25, 26 In 1980, the Alabama legislature enacted § 30-3-3, Ala.Code 1975, which abrog......

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