In the Matter of the Paternity of B.C., M.B. and N.S. v. J.C. ( 2014 )


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  • FOR PUBLICATION
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                        ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:
    ROBERT E. SHIVE                                JOHN S. CAPPER, IV
    Hollingsworth & Zivitz, P.C.                   Capper Tulley & Reimondo
    Carmel, Indiana                                Crawfordsville, Indiana
    May 22 2014, 10:37 am
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    IN THE MATTER OF THE PATERNITY                 )
    OF B.C.,                                       )
    )
    M.B. and N.S.,                                 )
    )
    Appellants,                            )
    )
    vs.                             )     No. 54A01-1309-JP-398
    )
    J.C.,                                          )
    )
    Appellee.                              )
    APPEAL FROM THE MONTGOMERY CIRCUIT COURT
    The Honorable Harry A. Siamas, Judge
    Cause No. 54C01-1212-JP-319
    May 22, 2014
    OPINION - FOR PUBLICATION
    BROWN, Judge
    M.B. and N.S. appeal the Montgomery Circuit Court’s denial of their motion to
    correct error following an order on custody and parenting time in a paternity action filed
    by J.C., and the Marion Superior Court’s denial of their motions to correct error
    following the dismissal of their guardianship and adoption action. M.B. and N.S. raise
    three issues which we consolidate and restate as whether the Montgomery Circuit Court
    or the Marion Superior Court had jurisdiction to determine the custody of B.C. We
    reverse and remand.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    B.C. was born on August 25, 2010. On March 5, 2012, M.B. and his significant
    other N.S. (collectively, the “Guardians”), then caregivers of B.C., filed a Verified
    Petition for Appointment of Guardianship over B.C. in the Marion Superior Court,
    Probate Division, under cause number 49D08-1203-GU-8868.1 The Guardians alleged
    that M.B. was B.C.’s maternal grandfather, that there was no father listed on the child’s
    birth certificate, and that the Guardians did not know the identity of B.C.’s biological
    father.2 The Guardians also alleged that Mother had a history of arrests, that Mother had
    signed a temporary guardianship agreement, and that B.C. had resided with the Guardians
    for the majority of his life after having been left in their care by the mother. On July 31,
    2012, the Marion Superior Court, Probate Division, approved an agreed entry on
    guardianship which appointed M.B. and N.S. as guardians over B.C.
    1
    The Guardians’ petition referred to B.C. as B.B. which corresponds to the initials of his name on
    his birth certificate. On appeal, both parties use the initials B.C. to refer to the child.
    2
    The Guardians alleged that M.B. was the “paternal grandfather” and that they did not know
    “who the biological father of the minor child is.” Appellant’s Appendix at 16-17. Further, the Child
    Guardian Consent Form signed by B.C.’s mother and M.B. reveals that the mother and M.B. share the
    same last name. Based upon the petition and the Child Guardian Consent Form, we conclude that the
    Guardians were attempting to allege that M.B. was the maternal grandfather.
    2
    On December 19, 2012, J.C. filed a Verified Petition to Establish Paternity,
    Custody, Support, and Parenting Time in the Montgomery Circuit Court.                      The
    chronological case summary indicates that the case was pending on the juvenile docket of
    the Montgomery Circuit Court. On December 20, 2012, the Montgomery Circuit Court
    approved an agreed paternity order submitted by J.C. and B.C.’s mother, A.C.
    (“Mother”), finding that J.C. was the biological father of B.C.
    On February 12, 2013, J.C. filed a Verified Motion to Dismiss the guardianship in
    the Marion Superior Court, Probate Division. J.C. alleged that the guardianship was no
    longer needed and that the Guardians had refused him any visitation or contact with B.C.
    and advised him that should he come to their property he would be arrested for trespass.
    On February 25, 2013, the Guardians filed a Verified Motion to Intervene, Set Aside the
    Agreed Paternity Order, and Request for DNA Testing in the Montgomery Circuit Court.
    The Guardians alleged that J.C. was not the biological father of B.C. and that “this matter
    might be better off with all issue [sic] combined before the Marion Superior Court
    Probate Division, as that is the appropriate county of residence of the minor child and has
    been in excess of six (6) months.” Appellants’ Appendix at 32.
    On May 13, 2013, the Montgomery Circuit Court entered an order granting the
    Guardians’ motion to intervene, denying their motion to set aside the paternity judgment,
    and denying their request for DNA testing.
    On May 20, 2013, the Guardians filed a Verified Petition for Adoption in the
    Marion Superior Court, Probate Division, under cause number 49D08-1305-AD-23417.3
    3
    The Guardians’ petition for adoption was filed before the same trial court judge as the
    guardianship proceeding.
    3
    On June 13, 2013, J.C. filed a Petition to Establish Custody in the Montgomery Circuit
    Court. On June 20, 2013, the Guardians filed a Motion for Consolidation and Transfer to
    Marion Superior Court, Probate Division, in the Montgomery Circuit Court.                 The
    Guardians alleged that “this paternity action should be transferred and consolidated with
    the guardianship proceeding in the Marion County Superior Court, Probate Division,
    under Cause No. 49D08-1203-GU-008868.” 
    Id. at 48.
    On June 21, 2013, J.C. filed an objection to the Guardians’ motion for
    consolidation and transfer in the Montgomery Circuit Court.            That same day, the
    Montgomery Circuit Court held a hearing. At the beginning, the court referred to the
    Guardians’ motion for consolidation and transfer to Marion Superior Court, Probate
    Division, and asked the parties if there was anything else they wanted to address before it
    made a decision. The Guardians’ attorney stated: “Our theory of course is, was that
    there’s already subject matter jurisdiction with an order placing the care and custody of
    that child with [the Guardians] and an order from this court would create two orders to
    the same effect and that’s why we have asked for the motion to be granted . . . .”
    Transcript at 4. After arguments by the parties in which the Guardians’ attorney did not
    mention the adoption petition, the court stated:
    The statutes give the court direction and in looking at this [sic] two statutes
    [Ind. Code § 31-30-1-1] and companion statute [Ind. Code § 29-3-2-1] at
    least in this court’s mind establishes that this court has jurisdiction over any
    custody issue and that that continues even in the face of another court
    having established a guardianship. The guardianship court decides a
    different issue than the juvenile court does. The juvenile court is concerned
    with custody, child support, parenting time, those types of issues involving
    a child. The guardianship court is not really determining issues of custody
    it determines whether or not a person needs to be protected because they’re
    incapacitated and in this case the incapacity would be the minority of the
    4
    child and then whether that continues given the circumstances.
    Guardianships as everyone here knows can last for a month, six months or
    years depending on whether a person continues to have an incapacity that
    requires in each particular case for the guardian to, a guardian to continue
    to exercise the guardianship over the ward. So I, but I think it’s clear from
    our statutes, statutory scheme that the juvenile court is not deprived by a
    guardianship court and specifically just the opposite and this court does
    have jurisdiction and continues to have jurisdiction over the matter so the
    court’s going to deny the motion to consolidate and transfer. I don’t think
    the guardianship court can exercise the juvenile jurisdiction and in any
    event that motion will be denied.
    
    Id. at 7-8.
    After hearing evidence, including that the Guardians had filed a petition to
    adopt B.C.,4 the court continued the hearing to July 2, 2013.
    On July 2, 2013, during cross-examination, M.B. testified that he and N.S. had
    instituted adoption proceedings of B.C. The attempt to adopt B.C. was also mentioned
    during the questioning of D.G., B.C.’s maternal grandmother. Specifically, the following
    exchange occurred during the cross-examination of D.G.:
    Q.        Was it your fear and [M.B.’s] fear that if [Mother] or [J.C.] started
    visiting that they may connect with the child and the two of you, the
    two families are trying to keep the child away?
    A.        No.
    Q.        Well you know they’re trying to adopt the child don’t you?
    4
    During the redirect examination of J.C. by J.C.’s counsel, the following exchange occurred:
    Q.        In fact while this has all been pending they just filed a petition to try to adopt this
    child didn’t they?
    A.        Yes.
    Q.        They gave you notice.
    A.        Yes.
    Transcript at 55.
    5
    A.        Yes.
    Q.        And actually legally cut off all your rights too you know.
    A.        Legally yes.
    
    Id. at 159.
    On redirect examination by the Guardians’ counsel, the following exchange
    occurred:
    Q.        As [J.C.’s counsel] pointed out if the adoption that isn’t before us
    today went through that would cut off your rights as grandmother is
    that correct?
    A.        I’m not aware of what the legalities are.
    
    Id. at 160.
    On July 3, 2013, J.C. filed an Objection to Petition for Adoption and Motion to
    Dismiss Adoption in the Marion Superior Court. On July 5, 2013, the Montgomery
    Circuit Court entered an order finding by clear and convincing evidence that the
    Guardians should retain physical custody of B.C. at the time, that J.C. and M.B. share
    joint legal custody of B.C., that J.C. should have parenting time with B.C., and that
    Mother, who had been incarcerated since February 2013, should have parenting time
    upon her release from incarceration. In August 2013, the Guardians filed a motion to
    correct error in the Montgomery Circuit Court, which the court later denied.5
    On July 22, 2013, the Guardians filed a brief on the issue of jurisdiction in the
    Marion Superior Court under the guardianship cause number and argued that the
    Montgomery Circuit Court should have relinquished jurisdiction upon the Guardians’
    motion or, if not then, upon the filing of the Petition for Adoption, both of which
    5
    The record does not contain a copy of the motion to correct error.
    6
    occurred before any final order was entered in Montgomery Circuit Court as to the
    custody of B.C. J.C. and the Guardian ad Litem (“GAL”) also filed briefs that same day.
    On July 25, 2013, the GAL filed a Motion to Consolidate Paternity and
    Guardianship Proceedings and Request to Send Montgomery Circuit Court File to
    Marion Superior Court, Probate Division, in the Marion Superior Court. The GAL
    requested that the Marion Superior Court consolidate the paternity action with the
    guardianship action because the Marion Probate Court took initial cognizance of the
    matter of the custody of B.C. and because J.C. agreed to submit himself to the Marion
    Probate Court’s jurisdiction.
    On August 6, 2013, the Marion Superior Court, Probate Division, granted J.C.’s
    motion to dismiss and ordered that the guardianship of B.C. be dismissed. That same
    day, the Marion Superior Court, Probate Division, dismissed the verified petition for
    adoption. In August 2013, the Guardians filed a motion to correct error in the Marion
    Superior Court, Probate Division, which the court later denied on September 24, 2013.6
    The Guardians filed notices of appeal from the paternity order in Montgomery
    Circuit Court and the guardianship and adoption orders in the Marion Superior Court, and
    the appeals were consolidated.
    DISCUSSION
    The issue is whether the Montgomery Circuit Court or the Marion Superior Court
    had jurisdiction to determine the custody of B.C. The Guardians cite Ind. Code § 31-19-
    2-14 for the proposition that the filing of the adoption petition requires all actions related
    6
    The record does not contain a copy of the motion to correct error.
    7
    to the care and custody of B.C. to be transferred to the Marion Superior Court, Probate
    Division.   The Guardians argue that given the establishment of proper venue and
    exclusive jurisdiction in the Marion Superior Court, Probate Division, the Montgomery
    Circuit Court should have relinquished jurisdiction upon their motion or, if not then, upon
    the filing of the petition for adoption, both of which occurred before any final order was
    entered in the Montgomery Circuit Court as to the custody of B.C. The Guardians also
    argue that even assuming that the Montgomery Circuit Court held exclusive jurisdiction
    over the paternity of B.C., then the order establishing J.C. as B.C.’s legal father would be
    proper but that would not necessarily vest jurisdiction over the issue of care and custody
    of B.C. in that court because the guardianship court remains first in time with an order in
    place. The Guardians assert that there are now two conflicting orders regarding custody
    and parenting time. The Guardians further claim that the Marion Superior Court erred in
    dismissing the adoption petition because it failed to hold a hearing pursuant to Ind. Code
    §§ 31-19-10-5 and -6. The Guardians also cite Ind. Code § 31-19-11-5 and maintain that
    the Marion Superior Court erred when it dismissed the adoption petition without
    determining who should have custody of B.C. The Guardians further assert that the
    Marion Superior Court erred in dismissing the guardianship without holding a hearing.
    J.C. argues that the Montgomery Circuit Court properly retained its exclusive
    jurisdiction over the paternity proceeding. J.C. contends that the Marion Superior Court,
    Probate Division, could not have exclusive jurisdiction over the matter of the paternity
    and custody of B.C. because it was a probate court and not a juvenile court as required by
    Ind. Code § 31-30-1-1(3).      J.C. also argues that the Guardians failed to notify the
    8
    Montgomery Circuit Court of the adoption proceedings and did not preserve their
    objection for appeal. J.C. also asserts that, even if the Guardians had properly preserved
    this matter at trial, Ind. Code § 31-19-2-14(a) is not strictly applicable to this situation
    where a paternity action was filed before the filing of an adoption action.
    With respect to the dismissal of the adoption proceeding, J.C. notes that a hearing
    was held on his motion to contest adoption on July 8, 2013. J.C. also alleges that the
    Guardians never formally notified the Marion Superior Court of the statutory
    requirements of Ind. Code § 31-19-10-5.          He contends that a full hearing was not
    necessary to determine custody of the minor child following the dismissal of the adoption
    proceeding and that a determination of who should have custody of B.C. was unnecessary
    because the Marion Superior Court in the adoption proceeding had been made aware of
    the order of the Montgomery Circuit Court.         J.C. also argues that the guardianship
    proceeding was properly dismissed as neither detailed findings nor a hearing were
    necessary to terminate the proceeding.
    In their reply brief, the Guardians argue that the assertion that the Montgomery
    Circuit Court was unaware of the adoption proceedings is not supported by the record and
    that the lack of subject matter jurisdiction is an issue that cannot be waived. The
    Guardians also argue that the Marion Superior Court was on notice of its jurisdiction over
    the adoption and should have granted the motion consolidating all outstanding cases
    under the adoption case. They again allege that no hearing occurred on July 8, 2013, and
    that counsel were merely called into the court’s chambers for an “off-record attorney’s
    conference” in which the court instructed counsel to submit briefs on the issue of
    9
    jurisdiction and motions to dismiss guardianship and petition for adoption. Appellants’
    Reply Brief at 5.
    This case requires us to interpret the relevant statutory provisions addressing
    jurisdiction. When interpreting a statute, we independently review a statute’s meaning
    and apply it to the facts of the case under review. Bolin v. Wingert, 
    764 N.E.2d 201
    , 204
    (Ind. 2002). If a statute is unambiguous, we must give the statute its clear and plain
    meaning.    
    Id. A statute
    is unambiguous if it is not susceptible to more than one
    interpretation. Elmer Buchta Trucking, Inc. v. Stanley, 
    744 N.E.2d 939
    , 942 (Ind. 2001).
    If a statute is susceptible to multiple interpretations, we must try to ascertain the
    legislature’s intent and interpret the statute so as to effectuate that intent. 
    Bolin, 764 N.E.2d at 204
    . We presume the legislature intended logical application of the language
    used in the statute, so as to avoid unjust or absurd results. 
    Id. A statute
    should be
    examined as a whole, avoiding excessive reliance upon a strict literal meaning or the
    selective reading of individual words. Mayes v. Second Injury Fund, 
    888 N.E.2d 773
    ,
    776 (Ind. 2008).
    We also observe that the question of a court’s jurisdiction is a question of law, and
    we afford no deference to the trial court’s conclusion. Reynolds v. Dewees, 
    797 N.E.2d 798
    , 800 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003). Rather, appellate courts independently evaluate issues of
    law. 
    Id. To render
    a valid judgment, a court must have both subject matter jurisdiction
    and personal jurisdiction. Buckalew v. Buckalew, 
    754 N.E.2d 896
    , 898 (Ind. 2001). An
    Indiana court obtains subject matter jurisdiction only through the Indiana Constitution or
    a statute. Parkview Hosp., Inc. v. Geico Gen. Ins. Co., 
    977 N.E.2d 369
    , 372 (Ind. Ct.
    
    10 Ohio App. 2012
    ), trans. denied.            The question of subject matter jurisdiction entails a
    determination of whether a court has jurisdiction over the general class of actions to
    which a particular case belongs. K.S. v. State, 
    849 N.E.2d 538
    , 542 (Ind. 2006) (citing
    Troxel v. Troxel, 
    737 N.E.2d 745
    , 749 (Ind. 2000), reh’g denied). When a court lacks
    subject matter jurisdiction, its actions are void ab initio and have no effect whatsoever.
    
    Troxel, 737 N.E.2d at 749
    .
    We initially address whether the Marion Superior Court, Probate Division, had
    jurisdiction over the Guardians’ March 5, 2012 petition for appointment of guardianship.
    Generally, all nonstandard superior courts have “original and concurrent jurisdiction in
    all civil cases . . . .” Ind. Code § 33-29-1.5-2(1). Ind. Code Title 29 governs probate, and
    Ind. Code § 29-3-2-1(a)(1) provides that Indiana courts having probate jurisdiction have
    jurisdiction over “[t]he business affairs, physical person, and property of every
    incapacitated person and minor residing in Indiana.” Ind. Code § 29-3-2-1(b) sets out
    exceptions to the general rule that probate courts have jurisdiction over guardianship
    actions but these exceptions did not apply at the time the Guardians filed their petition or
    when the court entered its July 31, 2012 order because at the time that the Guardians filed
    their petition for guardianship on March 5, 2012, and at the time the Marion Superior
    Court, Probate Division, entered its July 31, 2012, order approving the agreed entry on
    guardianship, J.C. had not yet filed his verified petition to establish paternity.7
    7
    Ind. Code § 29-3-2-1(b) provides: “Except as provided in subsections (c) through (e), the court
    has exclusive original jurisdiction with respect to an individual who is not an adult (as defined in IC 29-
    3.5-1-2(1)) over all matters concerning the following: (1) Guardians. (2) Protective proceedings under IC
    29-3-4.” Subsections (c) and (d) provide:
    11
    Accordingly, the Marion Superior Court had jurisdiction to enter its July 31, 2012 order
    appointing the Guardians as guardians over B.C.
    The question becomes whether the Montgomery Circuit Court was authorized to
    adjudicate an issue that was already pending before another court when it entered its
    order establishing paternity. See In re Marriage of Huss, 
    888 N.E.2d 1238
    , 1241 (Ind.
    2008) (“The determinative issue, however, is not whether the dissolution court failed to
    honor a judgment of a sister court, but whether the paternity court was authorized to
    adjudicate a custody issue that was already pending before another court.”). In Huss, the
    Indiana Supreme Court held:
    The applicable principles are stated in In re Paternity of Fox, 
    514 N.E.2d 638
    (Ind. Ct. App. 1987), trans. denied:
    It is well settled that two courts of concurrent
    jurisdiction cannot deal with the same subject matter at the
    same time. Once jurisdiction over the parties and the subject
    matter has been secured, it is retained to the exclusion of
    other courts of equal competence until the case is resolved,
    and the rule applies where the subject matter before the
    separate courts is the same, but the actions are in different
    forms. Exclusive jurisdiction over a particular cause of action
    (c)     A juvenile court has exclusive original jurisdiction over matters relating to the
    following:
    (1)      Minors described in IC 31-30-1-1.
    (2)      Matters related to guardians of the person and guardianships of
    the person described in IC 31-30-1-1(10).
    (d)     Except as provided in subsection (c), courts with child custody jurisdiction under:
    (1)      IC 31-14-10;
    (2)      IC 31-17-2-1; or
    (3)      IC 31-21-5 (or IC 31-17-3-3 before its repeal);
    have original and continuing jurisdiction over custody matters relating to minors.
    Ind. Code § 29-3-2-1.
    12
    vests when the complaint or other equivalent pleading or
    document is 
    filed. 514 N.E.2d at 641
    (internal citations 
    omitted). 888 N.E.2d at 1241
    .
    The paternity action began on December 19, 2012, when J.C. filed a Verified
    Petition to Establish Paternity, Custody, Support, and Parenting Time in the Montgomery
    Circuit Court.   As noted earlier, this action was pending in the juvenile docket of the
    Montgomery Circuit Court. The next day, the Montgomery Circuit Court approved an
    agreed paternity order finding that J.C. was B.C.’s biological father. Generally, “[a]ll
    circuit courts have: (1) original and concurrent jurisdiction in all civil cases and in all
    criminal cases . . . .” Ind. Code § 33-28-1-2. Ind. Code § 31-30-1-1(3) governs juvenile
    court jurisdiction and provides: “A juvenile court has exclusive original jurisdiction,
    except as provided in sections 9, 10, 12, and 13 of this chapter, in the following: . . . (3)
    Proceedings concerning the paternity of a child under IC 31-14.” The Montgomery
    Circuit Court had jurisdiction to enter the agreed paternity order on December 20, 2012,
    which established that J.C. was B.C.’s biological father. See In re Adoption of A.N.S.,
    
    741 N.E.2d 780
    , 784 (Ind. Ct. App. 2001) (holding that when an adoption and paternity
    action are both pending, paternity necessarily must be determined prior to completion of
    the adoption proceedings (citing Ind. Code §§ 31-14-21-1 through 31-14-21-9.2, and Ind.
    Code §§ 31-19-1-1)). We cannot say that the issue of whether J.C. was B.C.’s father was
    an issue pending before the Marion Superior Court.
    We next turn to whether the Montgomery Circuit Court was authorized to
    adjudicate an issue that was already pending before another court when it entered its July
    13
    5, 2013 order finding that the Guardians should retain physical custody of B.C. at the
    time, that J.C. and M.B. share joint legal custody of B.C., that J.C. should have parenting
    time with B.C., and that Mother should have parenting time upon her release from
    incarceration.   The guardianship, paternity, and adoption proceedings all relate to
    custody. Because the subject of child custody was properly before the Marion Superior
    Court due to the guardianship action, we conclude that the Montgomery Circuit Court
    was precluded from making a custody determination in the subsequently filed paternity
    action. See 
    Huss, 888 N.E.2d at 1241
    (“Because the subject of child custody was first
    properly before the Adams Circuit Court in the dissolution proceeding, we conclude that
    the Wells Circuit Court was precluded from making a custody determination regarding
    the same child in the subsequently filed paternity action.”).
    Even assuming that the guardianship could have been consolidated with the
    paternity action in the Montgomery Circuit Court, the filing of the petition for adoption in
    the Marion Superior Court supports the result that the Marion Superior Court and not the
    Montgomery Circuit Court had jurisdiction. Ind. Code § 31-19-2-14(a) provides:
    If a petition for adoption and a petition to establish paternity are pending at
    the same time for a child sought to be adopted, the court in which the
    petition for adoption has been filed has exclusive jurisdiction over the child,
    and the paternity proceeding must be consolidated with the adoption
    proceeding.
    Because Ind. Code § 31-19-2-14 governs the exclusive jurisdiction when a petition
    for adoption and a petition to establish paternity are pending at the same time, we find
    that Ind. Code § 31-19-2-14 controls rather than Ind. Code § 31-30-1-1(3). See U.S.
    Steel Corp. v. N. Ind. Pub. Serv. Co., 
    951 N.E.2d 542
    , 560 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011) (“When
    14
    two statutes cover the same subject and one does so in general terms while the other does
    so in specific terms, the more specific statute should be applied.”), reh’g denied, trans.
    denied.
    To the extent that J.C. argues that the Guardians waived this issue, we do not find
    this argument persuasive. While the Guardians did not cite Ind. Code § 31-19-2-14 to the
    Montgomery Circuit Court, they did request a transfer of the case to the Marion Superior
    Court, albeit to the guardianship proceedings, and the evidence presented at the hearing
    in the Montgomery Circuit Court included mention of the adoption petition filed by the
    Guardians. Moreover, Ind. Code § 31-19-2-14 which the Guardians cited in their brief on
    the issue of jurisdiction filed in the Marion Superior Court provides that the court in
    which the petition for adoption has been filed has exclusive jurisdiction over the child.
    See Sanchez v. Thanos, 
    780 N.E.2d 1203
    , 1206 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003) (“Because the
    Bankruptcy Court had ‘exclusive jurisdiction’ over all of Sanchez’s property upon the
    filing of the bankruptcy petition, the Lake Superior Court lost subject matter jurisdiction
    over the cash bond.”).
    The Indiana Supreme Court addressed Ind. Code § 31-19-2-14(a) in In re
    Adoption of Unborn Child of B.W., 
    908 N.E.2d 586
    (Ind. 2009). In that case, the Court
    addressed whether the biological father’s consent to the adoption of his child was
    irrevocably implied when he failed to file a motion to contest in the adoption court but
    did take concurrent steps to establish paternity and preserve and assert his parental rights
    in another 
    court. 908 N.E.2d at 586-587
    . The Court held that the adoption statute creates
    a statutory proceeding unknown at common law and under well-established principles,
    15
    the Court must strictly construe the statute in favor of the rights of biological parents. 
    Id. at 592.
    The Court then addressed Ind. Code § 31-19-2-14(a) as follows:
    This interpretation finds additional support inasmuch as “[t]he
    adoption statutes contemplate concurrent jurisdiction by paternity and
    adoption courts.” In re Adoption of A.N.S., 
    741 N.E.2d 780
    , 784 (Ind. Ct.
    App. 2001). Where a putative father opts under § 31-19-9-12(1) to file a
    paternity petition, the statute anticipates situations where an adoption
    petition is concurrently pending. In that circumstance, “the court in which
    the petition for adoption has been filed has exclusive jurisdiction over the
    child, and the paternity proceeding must be consolidated with the adoption
    proceeding.” Ind. Code § 31-19-2-14(a) (emphasis added). This common-
    sense requirement understands that such concurrent actions are best
    resolved in one forum—resolution of paternity is a generally necessary
    prerequisite to completion of adoption proceedings since a legally proven
    biological father’s consent to an adoption is required.
    
    Id. at 592-593.
    J.C. argues that the Court in B.W. found Ind. Code § 31-19-2-14(a) to be
    applicable to situations where a putative father files a paternity petition as a means of
    objecting to an adoption action. J.C. also argues that Ind. Code § 31-19-2-14(a) is not
    applicable to this situation because the paternity action was filed before the filing of an
    adoption action. In their reply brief, the Guardians contend that Ind. Code § 31-19-2-
    14(a) is applicable to situations such as presented in this case, where there are multiple
    causes of action and the risk of conflicting orders.
    Ind. Code § 31-19-2-14 does not limit its applicability to situations in which an
    adoption petition is filed prior to the filing of the paternity action. Although paternity had
    already been established at the time the Guardians filed their petition for adoption, the
    paternity action remained alive. See In re V.C., 
    867 N.E.2d 167
    , 171 (Ind. Ct. App.
    2007) (noting that father filed a petition in the paternity action to modify custody of
    16
    child); In re 
    A.N.S., 741 N.E.2d at 785
    n.6 (noting that the paternity court “disposed of
    all matters brought before it by the parties, but retains jurisdiction to the extent the
    judgment demands, e.g., the court could modify custody, child support, and visitation”).
    Because the petition for adoption and the paternity action were pending at the
    same time, the court in which the petition for adoption had been filed had exclusive
    jurisdiction over the custody of B.C. See Ind. Code § 31-19-2-14; see also Ind. Code §
    31-14-21-13 (“Upon notice that a court in which an adoption is pending has assumed
    jurisdiction of a paternity action under IC 31-19-2-14, the court in which the paternity
    action was pending shall stay all proceedings in the paternity action until further order
    from the court in which the adoption is pending.”).         Accordingly, the Montgomery
    Circuit Court could not properly exercise jurisdiction to enter its July 5, 2013 order as the
    Marion Superior Court had exclusive jurisdiction over the custody of B.C., and the
    Marion Superior Court erred when it dismissed the guardianship and adoption
    proceedings. We reverse the Montgomery Circuit Court’s July 5, 2013 order and remand
    with instructions for the Marion Superior Court to comply with all provisions of Ind.
    Code §§ 31-19 and 29-3.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the Montgomery Circuit Court’s July 5,
    2013 order, the Marion Superior Court’s August 6, 2013 order dismissing the
    guardianship, and the Marion Superior Court’s August 6, 2013 order dismissing the
    Guardian’s petition for adoption, and remand for proceedings consistent with this
    opinion.
    17
    Reversed and remanded.
    VAIDIK, C.J., and NAJAM, J., concur.
    18