STAMPER (PAUL) VS. NAPIER (DEREK)
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RENDERED: DECEMBER 3, 2010; 10:00 A.M.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
Commonwealth of Kentucky
Court of Appeals
NO. 2010-CA-000410-ME
PAUL STAMPER
v.
APPELLANT
APPEAL FROM ANDERSON CIRCUIT COURT
HONORABLE JOHN DAVID MYLES, JUDGE
ACTION NO. 09-CI-00463
DEREK NAPIER
APPELLEE
OPINION
AFFIRMING
** ** ** ** **
BEFORE: MOORE AND THOMPSON, JUDGES, LAMBERT,1 SENIOR
JUDGE.
MOORE, JUDGE: Paul Stamper appeals the Anderson Circuit Court’s (family
court division) order dismissing his petition for custody of his minor grandson,
Elijah Napier, who was ten years old at the time. After a careful review of the
record, we reluctantly affirm because the record evidence does not support the
required clear and convincing finding that the child’s father, Derek Napier, is unfit.
1
Senior Judge Joseph Lambert, sitting as Special Judge by assignment of the Chief Justice
pursuant to Section 110(5)(b) of the Kentucky Constitution and KRS 21.580.
I.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
As the facts of this case will illustrate, this is a classic example of the
best interests of the child colliding with a natural parent’s superior—and
constitutional—right to custody over a nonparent. In the absence of clear and
convincing evidence of unfitness, the latter principle will prevail. This rule of law
brings no satisfaction to the Court, particularly in the case at bar. The record
evidence is clear that Derek has taken little interest in fathering Elijah, but he has
done at least enough to keep his parental rights intact.
Derek and Elijah’s mother, Brenda, were married, but they separated
less than a year before Brenda was tragically killed in an automobile accident.
During the time they were separated, Elijah resided with Brenda. Brenda took
Elijah to visit Derek because Derek did not have means of transportation as he was
convicted of DUI in 2008. Elijah was with Derek at the time he was arrested.
Derek also had a 2003 conviction for public intoxication. Following Brenda’s
death, the child lived with Derek in his mother’s home. Stamper, Elijah’s maternal
grandfather, petitioned the family court for custody of Elijah, contending that
during Brenda and Derek’s separation, Derek
offered no financial support for either Brenda or the child. It
was [Stamper] who provided for the child financially, providing
a home for the child to live in, food for the child to eat, and all
of the child’s needs over and above what Brenda could afford.
Even during the time when Brenda and [Derek] were living
together, [Derek] offered no financial support to the family
whatsoever.
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A hearing was held on the matter, and the family court apparently
ruled from the bench and orally informed the parties that it was dismissing
Stamper’s petition.2 After Derek responded to Stamper’s motion to reconsider, the
family court entered a written order dismissing Stamper’s petition for custody. In
that order, the court stated that Derek
admitted to having had drug problems in the past but denied use
of any illegal drugs at the present time. . . . Derek agreed to
submit to a drug test the day of the hearing. The results of that
test, which were positive for benzodiazepines, marijuana
metabolites, and oxymorphone, were submitted for the record.
The family court also noted that a guardian ad litem (GAL) was appointed for
Elijah, and the GAL had filed a report acknowledging “that the best interest
standard might not apply in this case but nonetheless opined that it would be in
Elijah’s best interests to reside with his grandfather [Stamper].”
The family court noted that Stamper had withdrawn his assertion that
he was a de facto custodian but continued to allege that Derek was unfit to have
custody of Elijah. The court, after noting the types of evidence that had to be
produced to show Derek’s unfitness, pursuant to Davis v. Collinsworth, 771
S.W.2d 329, 330 (Ky. 1989), found as follows:
There is no evidence in the record that Derek inflicted or
allowed to be inflicted physical injury, emotional harm, or
sexual abuse a[g]ainst Eli[j]ah. As Elijah has continually been
cared for by one or the other of his parents without interruption,
there is no issue of abandonment. While there was testimony at
the hearing from [Stamper] and his son James that Derek has
suffered from depression, there was no expert testimony on this
issue. The testimony from [Stamper] and his son cannot be
2
There is no written order in the record before Stamper’s motion to reconsider the court’s
dismissal of his petition for custody.
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seen as rising to the level of clear and convincing evidence that
Derek suffers from an emotional or mental illness sufficient to
abrogate his superior right as a parent. Further, there is no
allegation that Elijah is not receiving essential care while in the
custody of his father.
[ ] The real issue in this case boils down to Derek’s drug use
and whether it rises to the level of moral delinquency and is of
such a nature as would support an involuntary termination of
parental rights under the Kentucky statutes. Clearly, Derek’s
testimony that he was drug free in the face of a positive drug
test taken the same day raises serious questions as to his
credibility and is certainly suggestive of . . . either moral
delinquency or lack of contact with reality. Further, the fact of
Derek’s drug use raises serious concerns about his ability
properly to parent Elijah. . . . While the Court has serious
concerns about Derek’s drug use and his willingness to lie
about it, these issues alone would not support involuntary
termination of his rights under Kentucky law. In the proper
setting, they might support a temporary removal of Elijah from
his father’s custody but all parties would thereafter be bound to
work to return Elijah to his father’s custody at the earliest time.
Therefore, the court dismissed Stamper’s petition for custody.
Stamper now appeals, contending that the family court erred in
concluding that there was no clear and convincing evidence that: (a) Derek had
inflicted or allowed to be inflicted emotional harm upon Elijah; (b) Derek was
morally delinquent; (c) Derek suffered from emotional or mental illness; and (d)
Derek had failed to provide essential care for Elijah.
II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We may “set aside the trial court’s findings when those findings are
clearly erroneous.” Vinson v. Sorrell, 136 S.W.3d 465, 470 (Ky. 2004). “To
determine whether findings are clearly erroneous, reviewing courts must focus on
whether those findings are supported by substantial evidence.” Id.
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“[S]ubstantial evidence” is [e]vidence that a reasonable
mind would accept as adequate to support a conclusion
and evidence that, when taken alone or in the light of all
the evidence, . . . has sufficient probative value to induce
conviction in the minds of reasonable men. Regardless
of conflicting evidence, the weight of the evidence, or the
fact that the reviewing court would have reached a
contrary finding, due regard shall be given to the
opportunity of the trial court to judge the credibility of
the witnesses because judging the credibility of witnesses
and weighing evidence are tasks within the exclusive
province of the trial court. Thus, [m]ere doubt as to the
correctness of [a] finding [will] not justify [its] reversal,
and appellate courts should not disturb trial court
findings that are supported by substantial evidence.
Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). Accordingly, the standard for Stamper to
prevail on appeal is very high.
III.
ANALYSIS
A. CLAIM REGARDING FAILURE TO FIND EMOTIONAL HARM
Stamper first alleges that the family court erred in concluding that
there was not clear and convincing evidence that Derek had inflicted or allowed to
be inflicted emotional harm upon Elijah. Regardless of whether it is in the child’s
best interest, the precedent and law that we are mandated to follow is clear that “a
natural parent is entitled to custody over a non-parent unless it is demonstrated that
the natural parent (1) is unsuitable to have custody, (2) is harmful to the child, (3)
has contracted to give his child away, or (4) is clearly estopped to claim custody.”
Forester v. Forester, 979 S.W.2d 928, 929 (Ky. App. 1998). “The United States
Supreme Court has recognized fundamental, basic and constitutionally protected
rights of parents to raise their own children; and, that an attack by third persons
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seeking to abrogate that right must show unfitness by ‘clear and convincing
evidence.’” Id. (quoting Santosky v. Kramer, 455 U.S. 745, 102 S.Ct. 1388, 71
L.Ed.2d 599 (1982)). “[A] natural parent’s superior right to the child’s care and
custody can be abrogated in an action involving a non-parent seeking custody
[only] by a showing of unfitness sufficient to support an involuntary termination of
parental rights.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
[T]he evidence necessary to show unfitness of a parent
when a third party seeks custody includes: (1) evidence
of inflicting or allowing to be inflicted physical injury,
emotional harm, or sexual abuse; (2) moral delinquency;
(3) abandonment; (4) emotional or mental illness; and (5)
failure, for reasons other than poverty alone, to provide
essential care for the children.
Id.
Stamper admits that there was no evidence that Derek inflicted or
allowed to be inflicted physical injury or sexual abuse upon Elijah. However, he
asserts that Derek inflicted emotional harm on Elijah when, following Brenda’s
death, Derek “promptly withdrew Elijah from his school, friends, family, and
everything that was familiar to Elijah, and cut off all visitation between Elijah and
Stamper.” Stamper also notes that the GAL opined Elijah was detrimentally
affected by not allowing visitation between Stamper and Elijah. Stamper contends
that he and one of his relatives testified at the hearing that Elijah had “a paralyzing
fear of the dark, of demons and of death and dying which has only become
exacerbated since Brenda’s death,” yet Derek had not provided Elijah with “grief
counseling or any other therapy which might assist him in dealing emotionally
-6-
with his mother’s death and the move from their home in Lawrenceburg to Derek’s
mother’s home in Irvine.” Finally, Stamper alleges that he and one of his relatives
“testified about acts of domestic violence committed by Derek against Brenda in
Elijah’s presence.”3
In the present case, the family court found that there was no evidence
of emotional harm to Elijah. There is some evidence in the record that a court
could find emotional harm, but this was a factual and credibility finding left to the
discretion of the family court. It is unfortunate that Elijah was moved into his
father’s home in another county, his school was changed, his visitation with his
grandfather was terminated, and he was provided no grief counseling following
Brenda’s death. If Derek has Elijah’s best interest at heart, logically it would
follow that he would make this seemingly difficult time in Elijah’s life as easy as
possible, which rationally would include maintaining a connection with Brenda’s
family and counseling. But, as the GAL, the family court and this Court have
noted supra, this case cannot be judged by the best interest standard. And, because
whether Elijah suffered emotional harm is a factual finding based on credibility,
we cannot find error on the family court’s part. We do pause to note that a
psychological evaluation on Elijah’s mental status does not appear in the record,
which may have given the family court more guidance on this issue.
3
Stamper cites an unpublished case, Knight v. Young, No. 2008-SC-00404-DG, 2010 WL
252246 *1 (Ky. Jan. 21, 2010) (unpublished), in support of his claims. However, we do not find
Knight to meet the criteria for citation to unpublished cases pursuant to CR 76.28(4)(c). Even if
we did, Knight does not compel the result Stamper seeks.
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Additionally, Stamper claims that Elijah was exposed to emotional
harm based on domestic violence while Derek and Brenda were married. Stamper
testified that late one evening when Elijah, Derek, and Brenda lived next door to
Stamper, Elijah came running out of his house yelling that Derek was going to kill
Brenda. The family court found that there was no evidence of emotional harm to
Elijah. Based on our restrictive standard of review, these findings are generally
within the exclusive province of the family court so long as they are not clearly
erroneous. Perhaps, the family court did not believe Stamper, and no records were
introduced to support that a police or other report was made regarding this
incident. Accordingly, on the record before us, we cannot say that the family
court’s determination regarding this claim was clearly erroneous.
B. CLAIM THAT DEREK WAS MORALLY DELINQUENT
Stamper next asserts that the family court erred in concluding that
there was no clear and convincing evidence that Derek was morally delinquent.
Regarding Derek’s positive drug test the day of the custody hearing, Derek’s
attorney explained to the circuit court during a subsequent hearing on Stamper’s
motion to reconsider that the oxycodone was in Derek’s system because he
allegedly had a prescription for it, although his attorney said that Derek did not
have any record of that. As for the marijuana that Derek tested positive for, his
attorney explained that Derek had a problem with marijuana. Certainly counsel’s
explanation for drugs in Derek’s system was not evidence for the court to consider.
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Concerning Derek’s alleged moral delinquency, the family court
wrote in its order that “Derek’s testimony that he was drug free in the face of a
positive drug test taken the same day raises serious questions as to his credibility
and is certainly suggestive of . . . either moral delinquency or lack of contact with
reality.” The court continued, noting that although it had “serious concerns about
Derek’s drug use and his willingness to lie about it, these issues alone would not
support involuntary termination of his rights under Kentucky law.”
We certainly do not condone Derek’s drug use and lying about his
drug use in court. Even so, we cannot find that the family court erred in its factual
determination that Derek’s actions did not constitute moral delinquency that would
render him legally unfit. We reluctantly must agree with the family court that drug
use alone would not support the involuntary termination of Derek’s parental rights.
C. CLAIM REGARDING EMOTIONAL OR MENTAL ILLNESS
Stamper next contends that the family court erred in concluding that
there was no clear and convincing evidence that Derek suffered from emotional or
mental illness. He contends that, in addition to his own testimony concerning
Derek’s history of emotional and mental illness, Derek himself testified that he had
suffered from severe depression in the past and that he had been prescribed
medication. Furthermore, Stamper notes that one of those medications was present
in Derek’s system on the day the drug test was performed.
Concerning Derek’s alleged emotional or mental illness, the family
court held that although Stamper and his son testified
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that Derek has suffered from depression, there was no expert
testimony on this issue. The testimony from [Stamper] and his
son cannot be seen as rising to the level of clear and convincing
evidence that Derek suffers from an emotional or mental illness
sufficient to abrogate his superior right as a parent.
This determination was clearly a credibility determination and without
expert testimony to lend a more solid foundation for Derek’s alleged emotional or
mental illness, the family court did not err in this determination.
D. CLAIM REGARDING ESSENTIAL CARE
Finally, Stamper alleges that the family court erred in concluding that
there was no clear and convincing evidence that Derek had failed to provide
essential care for Elijah. Stamper contends that Derek and Elijah share a bedroom
in Derek’s mother’s four-bedroom home, in which five other people reside, and
that Derek has no job and he survives only on student loans, survivorship benefits
from Brenda’s employment, Elijah’s social security4 benefits, and financial
assistance from his family. Stamper asserts that Derek failed to provide for
Elijah’s emotional needs because he did not provide grief counseling to Elijah after
Brenda’s death. He alleges that Derek failed to provide for Elijah’s educational
needs because Derek testified that he did not believe Elijah had any special
educational needs, even though Elijah received social security benefits due to his
developmental delays and Elijah’s counselor from the school he attended at the
time of Brenda’s death testified that Elijah should be in special education classes,
as he had been when he attended that school.
4
Derek testified that Elijah began receiving social security benefits when he was younger
because he had problems with his hearing that resulted in developmental delays.
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Derek testified that he was told by Elijah’s new school that Elijah,
who was in the third grade at the time of the hearing, was somewhat behind other
students in his class, but that by the end of the school year, he would be ready to
progress to the fourth grade. The family court found that there was “no allegation
that Elijah is not receiving essential care while in the custody of his father.”
There was no allegation that Derek had not provided Elijah with food,
clothing, or shelter. Additionally, Stamper failed to present any expert evidence
showing that Elijah required or even wanted grief counseling. Derek testified that
Elijah had spoken with his school counselor on more than one occasion, and that
Derek had told Elijah that if he wanted to speak with a grief counselor, he would
provide that for him, but Elijah turned down the offer. As for the allegation that
Elijah had special educational needs, it is reasonable to assume that his new school
would make that determination, and school employees informed Derek that Elijah
would be ready for fourth grade at the time he was scheduled to progress to that
grade. Consequently, the evidence was sufficient to show that Elijah’s essential
needs were being met by Derek.
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IV. CONCLUSION
Although we are affirming the circuit court’s order, we do so
reluctantly. We agree with the GAL that under the best interests of the child
standard, the result would be decidedly different. But that is not the standard we
are required to apply under the law.
We would also like to note that we find Derek’s behavior to be
disturbing, particularly in light of the tragedy of Brenda’s death. The fact that he
took Elijah out of his school and away from his friends, his teachers, and his
mother’s family (whom he had lived next door to for many years) immediately
after Brenda’s death, which was likely a time that he needed those people to help
maintain some “normalcy” in his life, although it may not have been sufficient for
the family court to make a factual finding of emotional harm, is something that this
Court finds highly troubling. Additionally, Derek’s act of lying to the court about
his drug use, only to have a positive drug test for marijuana later that day, causes
much concern. It is remarkable and sad that at a time when Derek was fighting to
maintain custody of Elijah that he chose to use marijuana and other drugs, for
which he failed to prove he had a doctor’s prescription. Additionally, Derek
testified that his monthly income is approximately $1,300.00, and of that amount,
about $680.00 is his survivorship benefit, and the rest is comprised of Elijah’s
survivorship and social security benefits. It appears that Derek lives off of Elijah,
benefits from Brenda’s death and others, rather than Derek earning a living to care
for Elijah. Derek also has a history of drug use and a criminal record that includes
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DUI, public intoxication controlled substances (excludes alcohol), and possession
of marijuana. Despite these numerous concerns we have, we are unfortunately
bound by a high standard of review, rigid criteria to prove unfitness and a record
that raises many concerns but fails to prove by clear and convincing evidence that
Derek’s superior rights as a natural parent can be severed due to unfitness as
legally defined. Reluctantly, the order of the Anderson Circuit Court is affirmed.
We certainly hope that Derek takes the opportunity to become the father that Elijah
needs and looks beyond his own selfish interests to the best interests of Elijah,
including allowing him to continue a meaningful relationship with Brenda’s
family.
LAMBERT, SENIOR JUDGE, CONCURS.
THOMPSON, JUDGE, DISSENTS.
BRIEF FOR APPELLANT:
BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:
S. Marie Hellard
Lawrenceburg, Kentucky
Joshua R. Kidd
Richmond, Kentucky
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