Basciano v. Foster ( 2022 )


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  • John Basciano v. William R. Foster, et ux.
    No. 1978, Sept. Term 2021
    Opinion by Leahy, J.
    Family Law > Child Custody > De Facto Parenthood > Absence of Consent to
    Formation and Establishment of Parent-Like Relationship with Child
    Applying the principles and teachings imparted in Conover v. Conover, 
    450 Md. 51
     (2016),
    and E.N. v. T.R., 
    474 Md. 346
     (2021), we hold that where a child’s existing legal parents
    both do not consent to the formation of a parent-like relationship between the child and a
    third party, the third party has failed, under the first factor of the H.S.H.-K. test adopted in
    Conover, to establish a de facto parent relationship. See E.N. v. T.R., 474 Md. at 401 (“Read
    to its logical conclusion, to satisfy the first factor, where there are two legal parents, both
    parents must knowingly participate in consenting to and fostering the third party’s
    formation of a parent-like relationship with a child.”).
    Family Law > Child Custody > De Facto Parenthood > Absence of Consent to
    Formation and Establishment of Parent-Like Relationship with Child > Unfitness or
    Exceptional Circumstances
    The first factor of the H.S.H.-K. test requires that “the biological or adoptive parent
    consented to, and fostered, the petitioner’s formation and establishment of a parent-like
    relationship with the child.” Conover v. Conover, 
    450 Md. 51
    , 74 (2016) (quoting In re
    Custody of H.S.H.-K., 
    533 N.W.2d 419
    , 421 (Wis. 1995)). The third party, however, may
    obtain custody of the child after establishing that the parents are either unfit or that
    exceptional circumstances exist such that continued custody with the parents would be
    detrimental to the child’s best interest. E.N. v. T.R., 
    474 Md. 346
    , 372 (2021) (describing
    requirement for third-party standing in a custody case); Ross v. Hoffman, 
    280 Md. 172
    ,
    178-79 (1977) (holding that the presumption of custody with a parent may be overcome if
    “(a) the parent is unfit to have custody, or (b) if there are such exceptional circumstances
    as make such custody detrimental to the best interest of the child”). Once a party has
    demonstrated unfitness or exceptional circumstances, the court can proceed to the best
    interests of the child analysis, and there is no need to show de facto parentage in order for
    the third party to have standing.
    Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County
    Case No. C-02-FM-20-001874
    CHILD ACCESS
    REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 1978
    September Term, 2021
    ______________________________________
    JOHN BASCIANO
    v.
    WILLIAM R. FOSTER, ET UX.
    ______________________________________
    Kehoe,
    Leahy,
    Friedman,
    JJ.
    ______________________________________
    Opinion by Leahy, J.
    ______________________________________
    Filed: November 1, 2022
    *Ripken, Laura S., J., did not participate in the
    Court’s decision to designate this opinion for
    Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal
    Materials Act
    publication pursuant to Md. Rule 8-605.1.
    (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.
    2022-11-01 15:55-04:00
    Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk
    In Conover v. Conover, the Court of Appeals first recognized de facto parenthood
    as “a viable means to establish standing to contest custody or visitation.” 
    450 Md. 51
    , 59
    (2016). Judge Adkins, writing for the Court, profoundly acknowledged that “[c]hild
    custody and visitation decisions are among the most serious and complex decisions a court
    must make, with grave implications for all parties.” 
    Id. at 54
    .
    Appellant John Basciano (“Father”) appeals from an order of the Circuit Court for
    Anne Arundel County establishing the appellees, Colleen Foster and William R. Foster
    (collectively, the “Fosters”), as de facto parents. The Fosters are the maternal grandparents
    of the only child between Father and their daughter, Katie Lynn Foster (“Mother”).1 The
    court granted Father and the Fosters joint legal custody of the minor child with tie-breaking
    authority to the Fosters, and primary physical custody to the Fosters. In the first of three
    issues raised in this appeal, we review whether the circuit court abused its discretion in
    finding that, despite the absence of consent by either of the child’s parents, “exceptional
    circumstances” warranted granting the child’s maternal grandparents de facto parenthood
    status under the test enunciated by the Court of Appeals in Conover.
    Applying the holdings and the principles imparted in Conover and the Court’s more
    recent opinion in E.N. v. T.R., 
    474 Md. 346
     (2021), we hold that where a child’s existing
    legal parents both do not consent to the formation of a parent-like relationship between the
    child and a third party, the third party has failed to establish a de facto parent relationship.
    1
    Mother last participated in the proceedings in the circuit court at the scheduling
    conference in February 2021. Her whereabouts were unknown at the time of the trial, and
    she is not a party to this appeal.
    Because neither Father nor Mother consented to the development of a parent-like
    relationship, de facto parenthood cannot be conferred on the Fosters under the first factor
    of the H.S.H.-K.2 test adopted in Conover. See E.N., 474 Md. at 401 (“Read to its logical
    conclusion, to satisfy the first factor, where there are two legal parents, both parents must
    knowingly participate in consenting to and fostering the third party’s formation of a parent-
    like relationship with a child.”).       We further conclude, however, that based on the
    circumstances in this case, the circuit court did not abuse its discretion in finding
    exceptional circumstances sufficient to award the Fosters third-party custody of their
    grandchild.3
    BACKGROUND
    Father and Mother, who never were married to each other, are the biological parents
    of their only child, C., who was born in January 2020.
    On or about July 22, 2020, the Fosters were contacted by the Maryland Department
    of Human Services and were informed that Mother and Father had overdosed on heroin
    while caring for C., who was just six months old. Drugs and drug paraphernalia were found
    in several areas of the apartment.
    C. was placed in the care of the Fosters, and the Anne Arundel Department of Social
    Services executed a safety plan. The Safety Plan reflected that C. “will remain in the care
    of maternal grandparents . . . due to parental drug use.” It instructed that any visitation
    2
    In re Custody of H.S.H.-K., 
    533 N.W.2d 419
    , 421 (Wis. 1995).
    3
    To protect the identity of the child, we refer to him as “C.” throughout this opinion.
    2
    from Mother and Father “be supervised at all times” by the Fosters. The Safety Plan was
    signed by both the assessor and Mr. Foster. While Father was present when the Safety
    Plan was discussed, the Plan does not bear his signature. Both Mother and Father were
    arrested and charged with drug offenses and child endangerment.
    Emergency Complaint for Custody
    The Fosters filed a complaint for custody and motion for emergency and ex parte
    relief on July 27, 2020, and Mr. Foster appeared for an emergency hearing before a
    magistrate that same day.
    At the hearing, Mr. Foster testified that, on the night of July 22, 2020, he was
    contacted by someone at the Maryland Department of Human Services, who informed him
    that his daughter had overdosed on heroin. Father also overdosed the prior night in the
    same apartment. Mr. Foster rushed to the apartment to pick up C. so that he would not be
    placed in foster care.
    Mr. Foster explained that, after Mother had been sober for 11 months, the Fosters
    got Mother an apartment “on her own just a couple of days before this incident” and were
    unaware that Father “was in the area or in the apartment.” Mr. Foster opined that Father is
    “a present danger to both my daughter and the baby. And every time he shows up, we have
    these kind of problems. So we had no idea that [Father] was involved until the police called
    us.”
    The magistrate found that extraordinary circumstances existed and recommended
    granting temporary custody of C. to the Fosters on July 27, 2020. Specifically, the
    magistrate found:
    3
    The Plaintiffs (maternal grandparents) were given physical custody of the
    infant minor child when the Defendant (mother) overdosed on heroin and
    was taken to the hospital on Thursday night. The mother’s current drug abuse
    makes her incapable of caring for the child. The Defendant (father)
    overdosed on Wednesday night, after checking himself out of a drug
    treatment program. It is believed that the father supplied the mother with her
    drugs.
    A circuit court judge entered an order ratifying the magistrate’s findings and
    recommendations that same day. The court’s order also directed the Fosters to serve the
    complaint for custody and summons on Mother and Father.
    Father and Mother were served with process on August 14 and 20, respectively.
    Father then filed an answer to the complaint on October 2, 2020. He alleged that he did
    not supply drugs to Mother and was “getting help for [his] addiction” by completing a “30-
    day rehab” and participating in an outpatient program. Mother answered the complaint on
    January 6, 2021.
    After Father’s counsel entered an appearance, Father filed an amended answer.
    Among other things, he alleged that, “after the overdose incident on July 23, 2020, [Father]
    immediately sought the proper help and treatment necessary to live a sober life in order to
    be the best parent he can be for the minor child. [Father] has continued in his treatment
    and will likewise continue such treatments and therapies for the foreseeable future.” Father
    requested that the court award him “sole physical and legal custody of the minor child” or,
    in the alternative, “determine a graduated access plan between the [Fosters], [Father], and
    the minor child where the end result awards primary physical custody to [Father].”
    4
    Parenting Plan
    On May 25, 2021, the Fosters and Father “reached a temporary agreement regarding
    access” with C., titled “Parenting Plan – Overnight Visitation Stipulation.” At the time,
    Father was living with his parents. The Parenting Plan, signed by Father and his parents
    and approved by the Fosters, required Father, among other things, to maintain “active
    membership in a state certified drug recovery program” and provide documentation of this
    status to the Fosters every 30 days. The Plan required Father to submit to a hair follicle
    drug test and undergo a urinalysis every seven days and provide those results to the Fosters.
    The Plan further required Father to “continue with psychotherapy and/or medication
    management [], follow recommended treatment, and comply with prescription medication
    requirements.”    Every 21 days, Father was obligated to provide a letter from his
    psychotherapist or “medication management doctor” stating whether he is following
    recommended treatment and “is a present risk to harm himself or third persons.”
    Father’s parents, the Bascianos, agreed to report Father’s “behavior honestly and
    accurately prior to and during overnight visitation” and to “request that [Father]
    immediately vaca[te] their residence if drug intoxication and/or mental health episodes are
    witnessed or even suspected.” They also agreed to supervise C., and that “at no time shall
    [Father] or any third party be left alone unsupervised” with C.
    The court ratified the parties’ agreement into a pendente lite order regarding
    visitation on the same day.
    5
    Custody Evaluation
    On May 26, 2021, the court ordered a custody evaluation. As explained below, the
    court-appointed custody evaluator appeared at the custody hearing and presented her
    findings and recommendations. Her report was admitted into evidence.
    Merits Trial
    The case proceeded to a one-day trial on December 15, 2021.
    The Fosters’ Case-in-Chief
    Following opening arguments, counsel for the Fosters called Heather Szymanski, a
    special educator with the Anne Arundel County Public Schools. Ms. Szymanski was
    assigned to work with C. twice a month through the Infants and Toddlers Program and
    focused on “building basic play skills and social interaction and communication.” She
    explained that she had “definite concerns of autism and his social interaction” and that
    “communication would be the biggest concern[] right now.” Ms. Szymanski recommended
    that C. move to a “more intensive program” focused on autism. Because the program was
    weekly, C. would not be able to attend the program during weeks that he was with Father
    and his parents in New Jersey.
    Ms. Szymanski then testified that C. was “showing a five[-]month development” in
    communication at his initial testing when he was actually 16-months old. According to
    Ms. Szymanski, it was “extremely important for [C.] to receive services and to get the type
    of services that he needs” because, to a child who may have autism, such services make “a
    huge difference for what the outcome looks like . . . when they start kindergarten.” On
    cross-examination, Ms. Szymanski did not have enough knowledge of New Jersey’s
    6
    programs to opine whether they were similar to Maryland’s but agreed that the coaching
    model employed at the County was “widely accepted.”
    Next, Father called his primary care physician, Andrew Johnston.4 Dr. Johnston
    testified that he had treated Father since February 2020. Dr. Johnston explained that Father
    had been drug tested every month since August of 2021 and that he had not seen any
    positive results for marijuana, opioids, fentanyl, heroin, meth or PCP.           On cross-
    examination, Dr. Johnston confirmed that he was not aware of the number of overdoses
    that Father had since he learned that Mother was pregnant with C. or if Father had abused
    his prescribed medication.
    After Dr. Johnston’s testimony concluded, the Fosters resumed their case-in-chief
    and called Anita Tucker, the custody evaluator. After testifying that she did not have
    concerns about the Fosters’ fitness to care for C., Ms. Tucker summarized the
    recommendations from her report:
    I recommended that Mr. and Mrs. Foster continue to have primary physical
    custody and that [Father] have a graduated schedule with more time with
    [C.], which I believe should start sometime after [C.] was due to have an
    updated treatment plan from Infants and Toddlers. So based on his - - [C.]’s
    progress with his therapy and doing therapy with the Fosters and with the
    Bascianos whenever they had him. . . . And then also contingent on [Father]’s
    participating in - - that he participate in [C.]’s therapy sessions and that he
    continue[] his participation in the 12 Step program, his medication assisted
    therapy, his individual therapy, and then either monthly urinalysis or a hair
    follicle test every 90 days.
    4
    The court allowed Father to call this witness during the Fosters’ case-in-chief
    because he was testifying virtually on Zoom.
    7
    Ms. Tucker explained that she recommended the Fosters have final decision-making
    authority, in part, because C. “was staying with the Fosters more of the time and his
    pediatrician, the Infants and Toddlers people were all down here.” Ms. Tucker further
    recommended that primary physical custody should remain with the Fosters because “that
    was the status quo and [she] thought they should stick with the status quo at least until [C.]
    moved on further in his therapy and they were able to give some indication about is this
    working.” Ms. Tucker could not opine whether the Bascianos would report if Father
    relapsed. Finally, Ms. Tucker testified that C. is “primarily” attached to Ms. Foster.
    On cross-examination, when asked whether her concerns about Father having
    custody of C. would be ameliorated if Father remained sober, Ms. Tucker replied:
    [Y]es, they would be lessened about him having either a shared 50/50
    custody schedule or them moving toward him having primary physical
    custody. . . . But at the time I wrote the report I felt the Fosters should still
    have the primary physical custody but the intention was not that they retain
    it forever, . . . certainly over time he could be the primary custodian with the
    Fosters still obviously involved, because I believe that they are very much
    attached to him and [C.] is very much attached to them and I don’t believe
    that they should just be eliminated from his life.
    On re-direct examination, Ms. Tucker opined, even if Father “was still on track,”
    that “there still need[ed] to be a gradual transition.” Ms. Tucker further testified that if C.
    is “going to live with [Father], that [Father] should be living with his parents.”
    Christopher Foster testified next.5 He is the son of the Fosters and Mother’s older
    brother. Christopher related that Ms. Foster cared for his children for a couple of years,
    5
    Because Mr. Christopher Foster shares a last name with Mother and the Fosters,
    we refer to him by his first name in order to avoid confusion. In doing so, we mean no
    disrespect.
    8
    and that both Mr. and Ms. Foster were fit to care for C. He was not in contact with Mother
    and did not know anyone in the family who knew her whereabouts. According to
    Christopher, Mother was at his house a “lot when she was pregnant,” and he saw her “for
    a brief time” after she gave birth to C.
    Christopher opined that, based on his personal knowledge, neither Father nor
    Mother were fit to be the sole custodial provider for C. In particular, Christopher was not
    sure that Father was “over” his addiction. He further explained that he was worried about
    domestic abuse between Father and Mother and witnessed bruises on Mother but was not
    aware of any incidents when Mother actually accused Mr. Foster of physical violence.
    Ms. Foster then took the stand, and, among other things, explained that ever since
    the parties began alternating weeks with C., C. had difficulty returning to his sleep schedule
    upon his return. Ms. Foster also noticed that C. had bitten his nails “halfway down his little
    fingers” due to separation anxiety. She said that a consistent sleep schedule was “extremely
    important” for a child with C.’s developmental delays because he could not “ask for his
    needs” but “need[ed] someone who knows his cares.” When this consistency was lacking,
    Ms. Foster testified, C. was “suffering.”
    Ms. Foster further explained that, while she had no problem communicating with
    Father, all of her communications regarding C. were with Ms. Basciano. In short, she
    summarized that she had not been co-parenting with Father but with his mother. Although
    Ms. Foster was “very proud of how far [Father] ha[d] c[o]me since July 20th,” she “would
    like to see at least another year where everything stays the same and progress keeps going
    forward, in order that [her] grandson is never exposed to that kind of horrific ordeal again.”
    9
    Concerning Mother and Father’s relationship, Ms. Foster confirmed that she received calls
    relating to “very erratic behavior” and reports of physical violence but had not “witnessed
    the actual abuse itself.”
    Finally, Mr. Foster testified, and began by expressing his concern that Father had
    had additional overdoses after the July 2020 incident. Specifically, Mr. Foster referenced
    that both Mother and Father were “on the streets of Camden for a couple of weeks” in
    August 2020. Mr. Foster further testified to concerns regarding Father’s medications and
    compliance with the Parenting Plan.
    Mr. Foster testified that on July 23, 2020, he signed the Safety Plan and that the
    representative from Child Protective Services “had both [Mother and Father] sign it.” Mr.
    Foster concluded his direct testimony by seeking a “return to [visitation for Father] every
    other weekend” because “it seemed to work better for [C.]”
    Father’s Case-in-Chief
    Father called his employer, Tadita Covington, manager at Planet Fitness. She
    related that Father had worked for her at Planet Fitness since January 2021—approximately
    11 months—and she described him as an “outstanding employee.” She explained his
    dedication to study and pass the test for his trainer certificate, as well as his desire to
    become a manger. She said she was “so proud of him” because he had come “a long way,”
    and noted that Father was “an amazing asset honestly to our club.” She claimed that he
    brought “positivity,” and that he was “always happy.” Ms. Covington described Father as
    “reliable” and a great coach.
    10
    Ms. Basciano, Father’s mother, testified next that C. and Father “have a lot of fun”
    and that Father also cared for C., gave him baths, fed him, and changed his diaper. She
    described their routine with C. and noted that she and Ms. Foster were “in constant contact”
    and cooperated very well with each other about what worked best. According to Ms.
    Basciano, Father participated in pick up and drop off as long as his work schedule allowed
    it. She related that, during one seven-day period while the Bascianos and Father were on
    vacation with C., Father “did everything.” She opined that Father “wants to be there for
    [C.] and be responsible” and “just loves it.” Ms. Basciano testified that Father was
    determined to remain sober and wanted to be “the dad that he’s supposed to be.”
    Finally, Father testified. He began by clarifying that he was in “recovery” but not
    fully “recovered.” He established a “routine throughout [his] recovery,” which included a
    “12 step meeting,” “church every Sunday,” therapy, and “simply spending time with [his]
    family.” He explained that in the past when he tried to get sober, he “never had a
    motivation to stay sober” and felt that he “was a failure” and would “never do anything
    with [his] life.” Father claimed that he and C. had “built a very, very strong bond” and that
    C. “knows that I’m dad.” He admitted that he had concerns about C.’s speech delay and
    potential autism. Father did not have concerns about the Fosters’ care for C., but expressed
    that he felt “as though they have attacked me as the father” and that “nothing will ever be
    good enough to them.” He requested that C. live with him and that he raise his son.
    At the conclusion of Father’s testimony, the court heard closing arguments and took
    the matter under advisement.
    11
    Ruling
    The parties reconvened before the circuit court on January 18, 2022 to receive the
    court’s ruling. After accepting Mr. Foster’s proffer regarding his annual income, the court
    delivered a lengthy ruling from the bench.        At the outset, the court recognized the
    “fundamental right” of parents to “direct and govern the care, custody, and control of their
    children.” The circuit court then noted that de facto parenthood does not contravene these
    principles and proceeded to analyze each of the factors from the four-part test first adopted
    in Conover v. Conover, 
    450 Md. 51
    , 85 (2016):
    The first [factor], the legal parent must consent to and foster the
    relationship between the third party and the child. [C.] was placed in the
    Foster’s care by Child Protective Services in July of 2020 after [Father] and
    [Mother] overdosed on heroin with [C.] in their care. Immediately following
    the incident, the Fosters sought and were awarded emergency custody of
    [C.]. The Court of Appeals had held that both legal parents must consent to
    a third party de facto parent relationship unless non-consenting parent is unfit
    or exceptional circumstances exist.
    Here, [Mother] has been battling drug addiction, her current
    whereabouts are unknown and living conditions are unknown, and she has
    not been involved in [C.]’s life since he was, approximately, six months old.
    The Court finds that she is not a fit parent to care for [C.] at this time.
    [Father] argues that the Fosters cannot meet their burden to establish
    the first prong, consent, because [C.] was placed in their care by DSS, and
    they received custody after seeking court intervention. This Court disagrees.
    I find that the Fosters are able to prove this prong because exceptional
    circumstances exist.
    At the time that [C.] was placed in the Foster[s’] care, [Father]
    overdosed on heroin while [C.] was in his and the [Mother]’s care. [C.] was
    just six months old at the time that the Fosters assumed daily parenting
    responsibilities.
    [Father] began receiving substance abuse treatment in the later part of
    2020, and was not able to provide a stable environment for the baby. [Father]
    relinquished all parenting responsibility to the Fosters until May of 2021
    while he focused on his recovery and demonstrated very little parenting
    responsibility for [C.] during that time. [Father] has been sober since August
    9th, 2020.
    12
    While this [c]ourt applauds [Father]’s efforts and successes that he
    has made while he was in treatment and continues to make, this [c]ourt also
    recognizes that this period of time allowed the Fosters to bond with [C.] as
    parents.
    The Fosters are primarily responsible for all aspects of [C.]’s daily
    care and long-term care. Even [Father], through his conduct, recognizes this
    dynamic. [Father] refers to the Foster[s]’ decision-making regarding
    decisions that impact [C.]’s welfare.
    One example of many is that he became aware that the Fosters had
    made arrangements to address [C.]’s developmental delays . . . with a
    pediatrician and Anne Arundel County Infant and Toddlers. Even though
    the program is for parents, he deferred . . . to their decision-making regarding
    [C.]’s involvement in the program.
    The Court finds that [de facto] parenthood of [C.] was established by
    the Fosters through exceptional circumstances, therefore they were able to
    meet the first prong. Having found that the first prong has been met, I will
    make my findings regarding the remaining prongs, although I will note that
    they were largely uncontested.
    The second prong is that the third party must have lived with the child.
    Here[,] the Fosters and [C.] have lived together in the same household since
    July 2020.
    Three, the third party must perform parental functions for the child to
    a significant degree. The Fosters have taken on real parenting responsibilities
    and taken them over since July 2020, including being primarily responsible
    for [C.]’s care, education, development, and contribute towards his financial
    support without any expectation of any financial contribution.
    The role encompasses all aspects of parenthood, including
    researching, enrolling, and participating in Anne Arundel County’s Infant
    and Toddlers Program/Parent Child Learning Series with [C.].
    The fourth prong is that a parent/child bond must be forged. This
    [c]ourt finds that the evidence indicates that the Fosters and [C.] have formed
    a parent/child bond relationship. [C.] has relied on the Fosters as his primary
    caretakers for most of his young life. After review of the facts, I’ve
    concluded that the Fosters have met their burden of proving that they are de
    facto parents.
    Having concluded that the Fosters are de facto parents of C., the court then turned
    to analyze the custody factors set forth in Montgomery County Department of Social
    Services v. Sanders, 
    38 Md. App. 406
    , 420 (1977) and Taylor v. Taylor, 
    306 Md. 290
    , 304-
    11 (1986). The court found, among other things, that the Fosters are “fit parents” and “have
    13
    provided a stable and loving home for [C.].” While there were “reasonable grounds” to
    believe that C. “has been neglected by [Father],” the court found that the “neglect is not
    likely to occur again.” The court noted that Father has “completely turned his life around
    . . . taking more parental responsibility and . . . taking active steps to receive treatment.”
    While the court did “have some concerns that he has yet to demonstrate an ability to care
    for [C.] without the assistance of his parents, those concerns do not amount to him being
    unfit.”
    Regarding the “age, health, and sex of the child,” the court found that C. “has
    significant communication and social developmental delays” and was receiving services
    for developmental delays through Anne Arundel County, for which he was eligible only if
    he resided in the County at least half the time. The court specifically found that it was in
    C.’s “best interest to receive early intervention services that specialize in developmental
    delays.” The court had concerns with Father’s “ability to maintain a stable home for [C.],
    because he is heavily reliant on the family and is at the beginning stages of being self-
    sufficient.” The court referenced “concerns” that Father “has had minimal involvement in
    pediatrician appointments” and “treatment strategies” and concluded that it had
    “significant concerns that extended time . . . without [support] services would have a
    detrimental impact on [C.]’s wellbeing.”
    Concerning the willingness of the parents to share custody, the court noted that the
    parties agreed that C. should eventually be in Father’s care, but the Fosters believed it was
    too early in Father’s recovery to assume the role of primary caretaker. Given C.’s “needs
    for his suspected autism and a need for consistent services,” the court found that the week
    14
    on/week off schedule was “not in his best interest on a long-term basis.” Although C. and
    the Fosters had a “parent/child relationship,” the court observed that Father is “at the
    beginning stages of having a parent/child relationship.”
    The court concluded: “After consideration of all the factors, the [c]ourt has
    determined that it is in the best interest of [C.] to grant primary physical custody to the
    Fosters and to have joint legal custody [between Father and the Fosters] . . . with the Fosters
    having final decision-making authority.” The court then outlined an access schedule, under
    which Father had visitation every third week of the month, although Father’s visitation
    with C. was to be supervised until he provided a negative hair follicle test “at his expense.”
    After complying with this directive, Father would have “increased access for the holidays.”
    Mother was granted supervised access at the Fosters’ discretion.
    Finally, the court awarded child support to the Fosters in the amount of $338 per
    month. The judge memorialized her ruling in a written order that was entered on February
    10, 2022. Father noted a timely appeal and presents three questions for our review:
    1. “Did the trial court err when it conflated the test for a de facto parent
    relationship with ‘exceptional circumstances’?”
    2. “Did the trial court err and/or abuse its discretion when it found that
    ‘exceptional circumstances’ existed which were sufficient to confer parental
    status on the maternal grandparents?”
    3. “Did the trial court abuse its discretion when it entered an order under which
    [Father] cannot increase his time with the child, absent consent or a change
    in circumstances?”
    15
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    As directed by Maryland Rule 8-131(c), when an action has been tried without a
    jury, we apply the clearly erroneous standard of review to the trial court’s factual findings
    and review the court’s decision for legal error. Maryland decisional law adjusts and fine
    tunes this general standard to accommodate our review of the diverse cases that come
    before our appellate courts.   In child custody disputes, for example, the best interests of
    the child “guides the trial court in its determination, and in our review” and “is always
    determinative.” Santo v. Santo, 
    448 Md. 620
    , 626 (2016) (quoting Ross v. Hoffman, 
    280 Md. 172
    , 178 (1977)). The Court of Appeals articulated the standard of review an appellate
    court should apply in reviewing a custody determination in Santo v. Santo:
    We review a trial court’s custody determination for abuse of
    discretion. This standard of review accounts for the trial court’s unique
    opportunity to observe the demeanor and the credibility of the parties and the
    witnesses.
    Though a deferential standard, abuse of discretion may arise when no
    reasonable person would take the view adopted by the trial court or when the
    court acts without reference to any guiding rules or principles. Such an abuse
    may also occur when the court’s ruling is clearly against the logic and effect
    of facts and inferences before the court or when the ruling is violative of fact
    and logic. Put simply, we will not reverse the trial court unless its decision
    is well removed from any center mark imagined by the reviewing court.
    Santo, 448 Md. at 625-26 (cleaned up). On review, we grant the trial court broad discretion
    “because only [the trial court] sees the witnesses and the parties, hears the testimony and
    has the opportunity to speak with the child.” Burak v. Burak, 
    455 Md. 564
    , 617 (2017)
    (quoting In re Yve S., 
    373 Md. 551
    , 585-86 (2003)). Comparatively speaking, a trial court
    “is in a far better position . . . to weigh the evidence” and determine custody, than an
    appellate court with only a “cold record before it.” 
    Id.
    16
    Even under this deferential review, however, a court’s discretion is always tempered
    by the requirement that the court apply the correct legal standards. Faulkner v. State, 
    468 Md. 418
    , 460-61 (2020) (citing Jackson v. Sollie, 
    449 Md. 165
    , 196 (2016)); In re Dory,
    
    244 Md. App. 177
    , 203 (2019) (“[T]rial courts do not have discretion to apply incorrect
    legal standards and a failure to consider the proper legal standard in reaching a decision
    constitutes an abuse of discretion.” (cleaned up)).
    DISCUSSION
    I.
    De Facto Parentage
    A.     Parties’ Contentions
    Father avers that the “trial court erred when it conflated the test for de facto
    parent[age] with ‘exceptional circumstances.’” According to Father, there are only three
    situations in which a third party may acquire the same status as a natural parent: (1) where
    the natural parents are unfit, (2) where “exceptional circumstances” exist, or (3) where de
    facto parentage has arisen. Relying on Conover v. Conover, 
    450 Md. 51
     (2016) and B.O.
    v. S.O., 
    252 Md. App. 486
     (2021), Father argues that the three situations in which a third
    party may contest custody or visitation are distinct and disjunctive—which means that
    “‘exceptional circumstances’ cannot be swapped for parental consent.” In other words,
    the “exceptional circumstances” analysis is separate and apart from the four factors that
    courts must consider in deciding whether de facto parenthood has been established. Father
    asserts that the court in this case erred when “it substituted a finding of ‘exceptional
    17
    circumstances’ for the consent requirement which is a prerequisite to a finding of de facto
    parentage.”
    In refuting Father’s claim, the Fosters call attention to the recent decision by the
    Court of Appeals in E.N. v. T.R., 
    474 Md. 346
     (2021), which, they contend, clarifies that
    the first prong of the test to determine whether de facto parentage has been established may
    be met by a showing of “exceptional circumstances.” In the alternative, the Fosters contend
    that “implicit consent can clearly be extrapolated from Father’s conduct” because of his
    heroin use while the “Fosters were the primary caregivers for [C.].” We begin our analysis
    with a broad outline of the fundamental rights at stake in a child custody case.
    B.     The Fundamental Right of Parents and the Child’s Best Interests
    The Supreme Court of the United States has recognized that the Due Process Clause
    of the Fourteenth Amendment necessarily “protects the fundamental right of parents to
    make decisions concerning the care, custody, and control of their children.” Troxel v.
    Granville, 
    530 U.S. 57
    , 66 (2000); see also Stanley v. Illinois, 
    405 U.S. 645
    , 652 (1972)
    (holding that parents have a “cognizable and substantial . . . interest in retaining custody of
    [their] children”); Meyer v. Nebraska, 
    262 U.S. 390
    , 399 (1923) (concluding that, under
    the Due Process Clause, a parent’s liberty interest includes the rights of parents to
    “establish a home and bring up children” as well as to control their education). Indeed, the
    Supreme Court has classified the liberty “interest of parents in the care, custody, and
    control of their children[]” as “perhaps the oldest of the fundamental liberty interests
    recognized by this Court.” Troxel, 
    530 U.S. at 65
    .
    18
    Maryland courts, in turn, have “consistently echoed the Supreme Court, declaring a
    parent’s liberty interest in raising a child a fundamental one that cannot be taken away
    unless clearly justified.” In re Yve S., 
    373 Md. 551
    , 566 (2003) (citations omitted). Our
    Courts have deemed the right to rear one’s children as “essential” and have included this
    right among a parent’s “basic civil rights.” Wagner v. Wagner, 
    109 Md. App. 1
    , 37 (1996)
    (citations omitted); see also Maryland Code (1984, 2019 Repl. Vol.), Family Law Article,
    § 5-203 (“parents are the joint natural guardians of their minor child”).
    Balanced against parents’ liberty interest are children’s “indefeasible right to have
    their best interests fully considered” in child custody cases. A.A. v. Ab.D., 
    246 Md. App. 418
    , 422 (citing Flynn v. May, 
    157 Md. App. 389
    , 410 (2004)), cert. denied, 
    471 Md. 75
    (2020). We have repeatedly emphasized that in cases where the child’s best interest
    standard applies, “it is the central consideration.” Id. at 441 (quoting McDermott v.
    Dougherty, 
    385 Md. 320
    , 354 (2005)). While the best interest of the child standard is of
    “transcendent importance,” this standard “does not ignore the interests of the parents
    and their importance to the child” as “in almost all cases, it is in the best interests of the
    child to have reasonable maximum opportunity to develop a close and loving relationship
    with each parent.” McDermott, 
    385 Md. at 354
     (quoting Boswell v. Boswell, 
    352 Md. 204
    ,
    220 (1998)).
    In a custody dispute between two fit parents, a court may focus solely on the child’s
    best interests and avoid this delicate constitutional balancing because “each fit parent’s
    constitutional right neutralizes the other parent’s constitutional right,” rendering the
    parents as “presumptive equals.” 
    Id. at 353
    . Correspondingly, as the Court of Appeals
    19
    recognized in Conover, “the rights of parents to custody of their children are generally
    superior to those of anyone else[.]” 450 Md. at 60. Indeed, the Court of Appeals recently
    reemphasized:
    Where the dispute is between a fit parent and a private third party, both
    parties do not begin on equal footing in respect to rights to “care, custody,
    and control” of the children. The parent is asserting a fundamental
    constitutional right. The third party is not. A private third party has no
    fundamental constitutional right to raise the children of others.
    E.N. v. T.R., 
    474 Md. 346
    , 371 (2021) (quoting McDermott, 
    385 Md. at 353
    ).
    Historically, in light of the custody interests involved, a third party seeking custody
    or visitation must, at the threshold, show unfitness of the natural parents or that
    extraordinary circumstances exist before a trial court may consider whether that third party
    should be awarded custody under the best interests of the child standard. Conover, 450
    Md. at 61. Our Court of Appeals has “explained that, in custody cases, ‘unfitness means
    an unfitness to have custody of the child, not an unfitness to remain the child’s parents;
    exceptional circumstances are those that would make parental custody detrimental to the
    best interest of the child.’” E.N., 474 Md. at 372 (quoting In re Adoption/Guardianship of
    H.W., 
    460 Md. 201
    , 217 (2018)).
    Recently, however, “courts across the country have recognized as de facto parents
    a narrow class of third parties who have a special relationship with a child.” Kpetigo v.
    Kpetigo, 
    238 Md. App. 561
    , 570 (2018). A de facto parent is “a party who claims custody
    or visitation rights based upon the party’s relationship, in fact, with a non-biological, non-
    adopted child.” Conover, 450 Md. at 62 (quoting Janice M. v. Margaret K., 
    404 Md. 661
    ,
    20
    680-81 (2008), overruled by Conover, 450 Md. at 66). Our Court of Appeals enunciated
    the standard for establishing de facto parenthood in Conover v. Conover.
    C.     De Facto Parenthood
    In Conover, the Court of Appeals recognized de facto parenthood and adopted the
    following four-part test set forth by the Supreme Court of Wisconsin in In re Custody of
    H.S.H.-K., 
    533 N.W.2d 419
    , 421 (Wis. 1995), for determining when a person is a de facto
    parent:
    (1) that the biological or adoptive parent consented to, and fostered, the
    petitioner’s formation and establishment of a parent-like relationship with
    the child;
    (2) that the petitioner and the child lived together in the same household;
    (3) that the petitioner assumed obligations of parenthood by taking
    significant responsibility for the child’s care, education and development,
    including contributing towards the child's support, without expectation of
    financial compensation; and
    (4) that the petitioner has been in a parental role for a length of time sufficient
    to have established with the child a bonded, dependent relationship
    parental in nature.
    Conover, 450 Md. at 74.
    The four-part test adopted in Conover, although narrowly crafted, id. at 73-74
    (recognizing that the test “used to determine de facto parenthood was narrowly tailored to
    avoid infringing upon the parental autonomy of a legal parent”), overturned Janice M. and
    significantly reshaped the doctrine of standing in Maryland family law in holding that “de
    facto parents have standing to contest custody or visitation and need not show parental
    unfitness or exceptional circumstances before a trial court can apply a best interests of the
    21
    child analysis,” id. at 85. Accordingly, given the multiplex of parties and circumstances
    presented in family law cases, and the overlapping laws that govern them, it is not
    surprising that issues of first impression would follow the Court’s decision in Conover—
    as both the majority and concurring opinions recognized. Id. at 75, n.18, (majority
    opinion), 88 (Watts, J., concurring). Here, the question is whether a third party can obtain
    de facto parent status where both the legal (biological or adoptive) parents do not consent,
    by demonstrating “exceptional circumstances” or “parental unfitness.”
    Father avers that de facto parenthood can only be established by parental consent
    and that consent “cannot be swapped” for exceptional circumstances. The Fosters, quoting
    E.N., 474 Md. at 394-95, maintain that prospective de facto parenthood can be achieved
    when it is demonstrated that both legal parents’ consent to such a relationship, “or that a
    non-consenting legal parent is unfit or exceptional circumstances exist.” (Emphasis
    supplied by the Fosters). To resolve this issue, we must delve deeper into the opinions by
    the Court of Appeals in Conover and E.N. v. T.R.
    1.     Conover v. Conover
    In Conover, a same-sex couple, Michelle6 and Brittany Conover, entered into a
    relationship in 2002 and decided to have a child together. 450 Md. at 55. Brittany
    6
    In Conover, Michelle noted that “she is now a ‘transgender man’ and states that
    the record does not reflect her gender identity because she transitioned to living as a man
    after the contested divorce hearing occurred. She further explained that she would refer to
    herself using female pronouns and her former name for consistency with the record and
    that her gender identity is not material to any legal issue in this appeal.” 450 Md. at 55 n.1.
    Accordingly, consistent with the Court of Appeals, we also refer to Michelle “using female
    pronouns and her former name.” Id.
    22
    conceived a child through artificial insemination and gave birth to a son in April 2010. Id.
    Although the son’s birth certificate listed Brittany as his mother, no one was identified as
    the father. Id. Michelle and Brittany married when the child was approximately six months
    old but separated a year later. Id. Initially, Michelle had overnight and weekend access to
    the child, but eventually, Brittany prevented Michelle from visiting him. Id.
    In February 2013, Brittany filed a complaint for absolute divorce and alleged that
    “there were no children shared by the couple from the marriage.”               Id.   Michelle
    subsequently filed an answer and counter-complaint and requested visitation rights but not
    custody. Id. Following an evidentiary hearing, the circuit court concluded that Michelle
    did not have standing to seek custody or visitation. Id. at 57. While the court found that
    Michelle was a de facto parent to the child, relying on Janice M., 
    404 Md. 661
    , the court
    concluded that Michelle did not have third-party standing absent a showing “that Brittany
    was unfit or that exceptional circumstances existed to overcome the biological mother’s
    constitutionally protected interest in the care and control of her child.” Id. at 58. Michelle
    appealed the trial court’s order on visitation, and this Court affirmed in a reported decision.
    Id. at 59.
    On certiorari, the Court of Appeals made “explicit that de facto parents are distinct
    from other third parties” and held that a de facto parent has “standing to contest custody or
    visitation and need not show parental unfitness or exceptional circumstances before a trial
    court can apply a best interest of the child analysis.” Id. at 85. In so doing, the Court
    overturned Janice M. as “clearly wrong and contrary to established principles” and as
    “undermined by subsequent events.” Id. at 77.
    23
    The Court adopted the Supreme Court of Wisconsin’s H.S.H.-K. test, observing that
    it was consistent with Maryland law because it was “narrowly tailored to avoid infringing
    upon the parental autonomy of a legal parent.” Id. at 74. The Court explained that the
    doctrine “does not contravene the principle that legal parents have a fundamental right to
    direct and govern the care, custody, and control of their children because a legal parent
    does not have a right to voluntarily cultivate their child’s parental-type relationship with a
    third party and then seek to extinguish it.” Id. at 75. Rather, relying on the Supreme Court
    of South Carolina’s reasoning in Marquez v. Caudill, 
    656 S.E.2d 737
    , 744 (S.C. 2008), the
    Court instructed:
    The first factor in the H.S.H.-K. test is critical because it makes the
    biological or adoptive parent a participant in the creation of the
    psychological parent’s relationship with the child. This factor recognizes
    that when a legal parent invites a third party into a child’s life, and that
    invitation alters a child’s life by essentially providing him with another
    parent, the legal parent’s rights to unilaterally sever that relationship are
    necessarily reduced.
    
    Id.
     (quoting Marquez, 656 S.E.2d at 744) (emphasis added) (cleaned up). The Court
    concluded that its holding “fortif[ied] the best interests standard by allowing judicial
    consideration of the benefits a child gains when there is consistency in the child’s close,
    nurturing relationships.” The Court explained that it was “carefully[] adopting the multi-
    part test first articulated by the Wisconsin Supreme Court in H.S.H.-K.,” because that test
    “accommodates . . . the dissonance between what is in the best interest of a child and a
    parent’s right to direct and govern the care, custody, and control of their children.” Id. at
    85. Accordingly, the Court reversed the judgment of this Court and directed us to remand
    24
    the case to the circuit court “for determination of whether, applying the H.S.H.-K.
    standards, Michelle should be considered a de facto parent.” Id.
    Judge Greene and Judge Watts wrote concurring opinions. In Judge Greene’s
    concurring opinion, he explained that, while he agreed that “de facto parent status should
    be recognized in Maryland,” he did not agree “that a person who qualifies as a de facto
    parent is not required, per se, to establish exceptional circumstances.” Id. at 86 (Greene,
    J., concurring). Judge Greene would consider, alongside other “probative factors,” whether
    a “psychological bond with the child . . . would warrant a finding of an exceptional
    circumstance, and could overcome the presumption in favor of the legal or adoptive parent
    to control access to the child.” Id.
    Judge Watts, joined by Judge Battaglia, agreed with “the recognition of de facto
    parenthood in Maryland” as espoused by the Majority, but explained that, in their view,
    the H.S.H.-K. test is “too broad” and “could have a negative impact on children in
    Maryland.” Id. at 87 (Watts, J., concurring). Specifically, Judge Watts expressed concern
    that “the Majority holds that only one parent is needed to consent to and foster a parent-
    like relationship with the would-be de facto parent.” Id. at 87-88. While the H.S.H.-K.
    test works when there is only one existing parent, it did not account for problems when
    there are two existing parents. Id. at 88. Judge Watts explained:
    Where there are two existing parents, however, permitting a single parent to
    consent to and foster a de facto parent relationship could result in a second
    existing parent having no knowledge that a de facto parent, i.e., a third parent,
    is created. Such situations may result in a child having three parents vying
    for custody and visitation, and being overburdened by the demands of
    multiple parents. Today, many children are not living in a classic nuclear
    family. Families include not only same-sex married parents—in which one
    25
    parent had a child before marriage—but also separated or divorced parents
    who conceived children during a marriage, as well as two parents who have
    never married. The Majority has written broadly a solution for de facto
    parents that will serve couples well under circumstances similar to the parties
    in this case, where there is only one biological or adoptive parent. The
    majority opinion, however, will have greater consequences in cases for
    children with two existing parents because a de facto parent request may
    occur without the knowledge or consent of the second existing parent.
    Children who already have difficulty with visitation schedules, or experience
    custody issues pertaining to two parents, will not be served well by the
    creation of a test that does not account for the second existing parent’s
    knowledge and consent.
    Id.
    The H.S.H.-K. test, Judge Watts wrote, “creates the irreconcilable result . . . that one
    parent may consent to and foster a de facto (third) parent for a child without any sort of
    notice to, or consent from, a second existing parent.” Id. Judge Watts concluded with the
    following guidance:
    To fill the obvious void left by the majority opinion, I would offer the
    following guidance. In every instance in which a trial court is confronted
    with a request for de facto parentship, the trial court should ascertain whether
    there are one or two existing biological or adoptive parents. In the case of
    two existing parents, the trial court should require that the second parent have
    notice of the de facto parent request and ascertain whether the second parent
    consents to the de facto parent relationship. In satisfaction of the first prong
    of the H.S.H.-K. test, an action for de facto parenthood may be initiated only
    by an existing parent or a would-be de facto parent by the filing of a verified
    complaint attesting to the consent of the establishment of de facto parent
    status. The trial court should find by clear and convincing evidence that the
    parent has established:
    that the biological or adoptive parent consented to, and
    fostered, the petitioner’s formation and establishment of a
    parent-like relationship with the child, and in the event of
    two existing biological or adoptive parents, that both
    parents consented to the establishment of a de facto
    parentship[.]
    26
    Id. at 93 (cleaned up) (bold emphasis added).
    Although the Majority urged trial courts to exercise caution in recognizing de facto
    parenthood and “avoid having a child or family to be overburdened or fractured by multiple
    persons seeking access,” it did not specifically address the concern raised in Judge Watts’s
    concurrence. Id. at 75 n.18 (majority opinion).
    2.     E.N. v. T.R.
    Five years later, in E.N. v. T.R., the Court of Appeals—Judge Watts now writing for
    the Majority—returned to the issue of de facto parenthood and examined “the requirements
    necessary for establishment of de facto parenthood in Maryland where a child has two legal
    parents, specifically, whether both parents must consent to, and foster, a prospective de
    facto parent’s formation and establishment of a parent-like relationship with the child.”
    474 Md. at 351.
    In E.N. v. T.R., the biological mother of two minor children and the father’s fiancée
    sought sole legal and physical custody of the children. Id. at 354. Following a five-day
    trial, the circuit court granted the fiancée’s complaint for custody.        Id.   The court
    determined that the biological mother “did not consent to or foster the children’s
    relationship” or “even know” the fiancée. Id. at 354-55. It was “clear” to the court that
    the fiancée “did not establish that [the biological mother] was unfit or that exceptional
    circumstances existed such that [the fiancée] could be declared a de facto parent.” Id. at
    355. Nevertheless, the circuit court found that the “four factors of the H.S.H.-K. test were
    satisfied and that [the fiancée] was a de facto parent of the children.” Id. The court reached
    27
    this finding largely because the biological father consented to the establishment of a de
    facto relationship between his fiancée and his children. Id. 354-55.
    The mother appealed, and this Court affirmed the judgment of the circuit court in a
    reported opinion. E.N. v. T.R., 
    247 Md. App. 234
    , 252 (2020), rev’d, 
    474 Md. 346
     (2021).
    Specifically, we held that a “de facto parent relationship can be created by only one legal
    parent consenting to and fostering a parent-like relationship with a putative de facto
    parent.” Id. at 247. While recognizing that “Conover did not expressly address” this issue,
    we found “no constitutional infringement on Mother’s due process rights because, once
    [the fiancée] achieved de facto parenthood status, [the fiancée] qualified as a ‘legal parent’
    entitled to co-equal fundamental constitutional protections.” Id. at 249. We surmised that
    “such a rule strikes the proper balance between parents’ fundamental rights to care for their
    children and the children’s fundamental rights to be placed with caregivers who will
    promote their best interests.” Id.
    The Court of Appeals reversed, holding that “under the first factor of the H.S.H.-K.
    test adopted by this Court in Conover for establishment of de facto parenthood, where there
    are two legal (biological or adoptive) parents, a prospective de facto parent must
    demonstrate that both legal parents consented to and fostered such a relationship or
    that a non-consenting legal parent is unfit or exceptional circumstances exist.” 474 Md.
    at 394-95 (emphasis added). Central to the Court’s analysis was a parent’s “fundamental
    right, protected by the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution, to direct
    and govern the care, custody, and control of the parent’s children.”             Id. at 395.
    “[C]ompletely disregarding whether both legal parents have consented to and fostered a
    28
    prospective de facto parent’s parent-like relationship with a child, or that a parent is
    otherwise unfit or exceptional circumstances exist, not only runs afoul of a parent’s
    constitutional rights, but also basic family law principles.” Id. at 396-97. The Court
    expounded further upon restating its holding:
    In light of the fundamental rights at stake and important principles expressed
    in our case law, we are compelled to hold that, for the well-being of children
    and family relationships in Maryland, before establishing de facto
    parenthood where there are two existing legal parents, both parents must be
    shown to have consented to a third party’s formation of a parent-like
    relationship with a child or, in the alternative, that one or both parents are
    unfit or exceptional circumstances exist. A parent has a fundamental
    constitutional right to raise and care for the parent’s child and where there
    are two legal parents, one parent’s knowing participation in the formation of
    a third party’s de facto parent relationship with a child cannot suffice to serve
    as the consent of the second parent. Endorsing a holding that would permit
    de facto parenthood to be established with the consent of only one parent
    where there are two legal parents would intrude upon the second parent’s
    constitutional rights, be inconsistent with our case law concerning parental
    custody (case law holding that third party intervention for custody requires a
    showing of unfitness or exceptional circumstances), and would potentially
    create circumstances that are untenable for all involved.
    Id. at 398.
    The Court noted that the biological mother did not “expressly or impliedly
    consent[]” to the relationship between her children and the fiancée. Id. at 395. “In addition,
    [the fiancée] did not establish that [mother] was an unfit parent or that exceptional
    circumstances existed such that [the fiancée] would have standing to seek custody of the
    children.” Id. Consequently, the fiancée could not meet the first factor of the H.S.H.-K.
    test, and the court erred in granting her de facto parent status. Id.
    Rather than conclude its analysis there, the Court further explored application of the
    first factor of the H.S.H.-K. test in Conover. Id. at 401-02. Among other things, the Court
    29
    “recognized that de facto parenthood ‘cannot be achieved without knowing participation
    by the biological parent.’” Id. at 401 (quoting Conover, 450 Md. at 74). The Court
    reiterated:
    . . . . [T]he first factor is not only critical because it makes a legal
    parent a participant in the creation of the de facto parent’s relationship with
    the child, but also because it “recognizes that when a legal parent invites a
    third party into a child’s life, and that invitation alters a child’s life by
    essentially providing him with another parent, the legal parent’s rights to
    unilaterally sever that relationship are necessarily reduced.”
    Read to its logical conclusion, to satisfy the first factor, where there
    are two legal parents, both parents must knowingly participate in consenting
    to and fostering the third party’s formation of a parent-like relationship with
    a child. Otherwise, we create the incomprehensible situation in which a de
    facto parentship may be created by the knowing participation of only one
    legal parent while an equally fit legal parent is denied the same knowing
    participation in the process and denied the meaningful input that we deemed
    so critical for a parent to have in creating de facto parent status for a third
    party.
    Id. at 401 (quoting Conover, 450 Md. at 75). The Court emphasized that the “first factor
    requires that the legal parent consented to and fostered, the prospective de facto parent’s
    formation and establishment of a parent-like relationship with the child.” Id. at 404-05.
    Judge Biran dissented, joined by Chief Judge Barbera. Id. at 414 (Biran, J.,
    dissenting). According to Judge Biran, “[t]here is no sound basis in law or policy to require
    that both legal parents must consent to and foster a third party’s parental-type relationship”
    but rather “[i]t should suffice that one of the legal parents has consented to the
    relationship.” Id. Judge Biran observed that in Conover, the H.S.H.-K. factors “set forth a
    high bar for establishing de facto parent status, which cannot be achieved without knowing
    participation by the biological parent.” Id. at 415. Rather than view a “nonconsenting
    parent’s right to parent their child” as a “zero-sum situation,” the “nonconsenting legal
    30
    parent remains a parent to the child.” Id. at 418. Yet, this right is not absolute. According
    to Judge Biran,
    [T]he Majority’s position ignores a reality that all parents understand when
    they have a child: the union that produced the child may not last forever.
    Thus, it is reasonably foreseeable to any legal parent at the time a child is
    born that there may come a day when the other legal parent will “invite[ ] a
    third party into a child’s life,” and thereby “alter a child’s life by essentially
    providing him with another parent.” Marquez v. Caudill, 
    376 S.C. 229
    , 
    656 S.E.2d 737
    , 744 (2008). When they have the child, the two legal parents
    typically do not know whether the union will end and, if so, which one of
    them may consent to and foster a parental-type relationship between the child
    and a new partner.
    Id. at 421. Judge Biran concluded that he “cannot join an opinion that will lead to the
    severing of parental-type relationships without first giving a family court the opportunity
    to consider whether it is in the best interests of a child to allow a psychological parent to
    have some measure of access to the child and, thereby, keep intact the bond that has formed.
    Instead, I would hold that the consent of one legal parent is sufficient to establish the
    necessary ‘consent’ under the first part of the H.S.H.-K. test.” Id. at 438.
    3.      Analysis
    E.N. v. T.R. presented “the first occasion” for the Court of Appeals to “address [the]
    application of the first factor of the four-factor test adopted in Conover to circumstances
    where a child has two existing legal parents.” E.N., 474 Md. at 395. Here, we are presented
    with the first occasion to address the application of the four-factor test to circumstances
    that involve two existing parents, but neither consent to the formation of a parent-like
    relationship between their child and the would-be de facto parents. Applying the principles
    and teachings imparted in Conover and E.N., we hold that where a child’s existing legal
    31
    parents both do not consent to the formation of a parent-like relationship between the child
    and a third party, the third party has failed, under the first factor of the H.S.H.-K. test, to
    establish a de facto parent relationship. The first factor requires that “the biological or
    adoptive parent consented to, and fostered, the petitioner’s formation and establishment of
    a parent-like relationship with the child.” Conover, 450 Md. at 74 (citation omitted). The
    third party, however, may obtain custody of the child after establishing that the parents are
    either unfit or that exceptional circumstances exist such that continued custody with the
    parents would be detrimental to the child’s best interest. E.N., 474 Md. at 372 (describing
    requirement for third-party standing in a custody case); Ross v. Hoffman, 
    280 Md. 172
    ,
    178-79 (1977) (holding that the presumption of custody with a parent may be overcome if
    “(a) the parent is unfit to have custody, or (b) if there are such exceptional circumstances
    as make such custody detrimental to the best interest of the child”). Once a party has
    demonstrated unfitness or exceptional circumstances, the court can proceed to the best
    interests of the child analysis, and there is no need to show de facto parentage in order for
    the third party to have standing.7
    Here, the circuit court found “that [de facto] parenthood of [C.] was established by
    the Fosters through exceptional circumstances, therefore they were able to meet the first
    prong.” Father rightly claims that the circuit court conflated the third-party “exceptional
    circumstances” analysis with the first prong of the de facto parentage test, when they are,
    7
    Our holding and the circumstances in this case do not require that we decide
    whether a party can obtain de facto parenthood status after a separate showing of
    exceptional circumstances.
    32
    in fact, separate constructs. There are at least two reasons why one cannot be substituted
    for the other.
    First, the requirements for obtaining status as a de facto parent, focus on the
    relationship between a third party “with a non-biological, non-adopted child” which the
    parent consents to and nurtures. Conover, 450 Md. at 62, 85. By contrast, the unfitness or
    exceptional circumstances analysis focuses on the parents’ inability to continue to have
    custody of their child because the continuation of custody is against the child’s best
    interests. McDermott, 
    385 Md. at 325
    . A third-party can obtain standing to pursue custody
    of a child through either path, but they are not the same, and the distinction matters. As
    previously noted, a de facto parent is accorded the same constitutional rights as a biological
    or adoptive parent, and with that, the presumption that the child’s best interests are to be
    with that parent. In third-party custody cases, the third party does not have equal standing
    with a fit parent; that party must rebut the presumption and the court must undertake the
    delicate constitutional balancing that is avoided when “each fit parent’s constitutional right
    neutralizes the other parent’s constitutional right,” rendering the parents as “presumptive
    equals.” McDermott, 
    385 Md. at 353
    ; see E.N., 474 Md. at 371 (quoting McDermott, 
    385 Md. at 353
    ).
    Second, the term “exceptional circumstances” has different connotations and carries
    different meanings and requirements among the various types of third-party custody
    33
    proceedings.8 See In re Adoption/Guardianship of Rashawn H., 
    402 Md. 477
    , 498 (2007)
    (explaining that “[t]he notions of ‘unfitness’ and ‘exceptional circumstances’ have a
    different connotation in TPR cases than they do in custody and visitation disputes,
    however. In a custody case, unfitness means an unfitness to have custody of the child, not
    an unfitness to remain the child’s parent; exceptional circumstances are those that would
    make parental custody detrimental to the best interest of the child.”).
    As previously stated, the first factor requires “that the biological or adoptive parent
    consented to, and fostered, the petitioner’s formation and establishment of a parent-like
    relationship with the child.” Conover, 450 Md. at 74 (quoting H.S.H.-K., 533 N.W.2d at
    435-36). Long held precedent recognizes the fundamental rights of parents, inherent in the
    Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, to direct the care, custody, and control
    8
    For example, in light of the “important rights at stake” in a Termination of Parental
    Rights (“TPR”) proceeding, the Court of Appeals has “described three elements of
    heightened protection provided to parents in a TPR proceeding”:
    First, we have recognized that there is the “presumption that the interest of
    the child is best served by maintaining the parental relationship, a
    presumption that may be rebutted only by a showing that the parent is either
    unfit or that exceptional circumstances exist that would make the continued
    relationship detrimental to the child’s best interest.” Second, this
    presumption can only be overcome if the State establishes by clear and
    convincing evidence of unfitness or exceptional circumstances to justify a
    TPR. This is a heavier burden than the preponderance of evidence standard
    utilized in a standard child custody case. Third, the General Assembly
    provided factors that the juvenile court must expressly consider in
    determining whether termination is in the child’s best interest. While a
    juvenile court is permitted to consider additional factors, the statutory factors
    are intended to provide the basis for any termination of parental rights.
    In re Adoption/Guardianship of C.E., 
    464 Md. 26
    , 49-50 (2019) (cleaned up).
    34
    of their children. The Court of Appeals adopted the H.S.H.-K. test, in part, because it is
    “narrowly tailored to avoid infringing upon” these constitutional rights.       
    Id. at 74
    .
    Accordingly, the Court highlighted that the first factor in the H.S.H.-K. test—the consent
    prong—is “critical because it makes the biological or adoptive parent a participant in the
    creation of the psychological parent’s relationship with the child.” 
    Id. at 75
     (quoting
    Marquez, 
    656 S.E.2d at 744
    ) (emphasis added). Both the Conover and E.N. Courts
    “recognized that de facto parenthood ‘cannot be achieved without knowing participation
    by the biological parent.’” E.N., 474 Md. at 401 (quoting Conover, 450 Md. at 74). Judge
    Biran’s dissent in E.N. equally recognized that the H.S.H.-K. factors “set forth a high bar
    for establishing de facto parent status, which cannot be achieved without knowing
    participation by the biological parent.” Id. at 415 (Biran, J., dissenting).
    As Judge Watts’s concurring opinion in Conover and her majority opinion in E.N.
    reveal, the concern of the Court of Appeals was not that the first factor necessary to
    establish de facto parenthood should be broadened, but rather, that this factor should be
    constrained to protect a parent’s constitutional rights. Id. at 93 (Watts, J., concurring);
    E.N., 474 Md. at 398. To substitute the requirement that the existing legal parents consent
    to the formation of a parent-like relationship between the child and a third party, with a
    finding of “exceptional circumstances,” would confer constitutional parental standing
    rights on potentially countless parties. Consider, for example, as this case demonstrates,9
    9
    Days after the July 2020 overdose incident, the Fosters filed a complaint for
    custody and moved for emergency relief. At the hearing on the same day, a magistrate
    found that extraordinary circumstances existed and recommended granting temporary
    (Continued)
    35
    the fact that our trial courts often find exceptional circumstances necessary to grant custody
    to a third party on a temporary basis.
    For the foregoing reasons, we do not read the holding in E.N. to mean that
    “exceptional circumstances” can substitute for consent under the first prong of the H.S.H.-
    K. test.
    Returning to Father and the Fosters, we conclude that de facto parenthood status
    was not properly conferred on the Fosters because neither Father nor Mother consented to
    the development of a parent-like relationship. Moreover, we are unpersuaded by the
    Fosters’ alternative argument that Father provided implied consent to the Fosters while he
    was recovering from heroin addiction. The Fosters do not direct us where the circuit court
    concluded that Father impliedly consented to the formation of a de facto parental
    relationship, and we have not found any such consent in our review of the record. An
    appellate court is ill-equipped to and, indeed, cannot “substitute our judgment for that of
    the fact finder.” Gordon v. Gordon, 
    174 Md. App. 583
    , 626 (2007).
    We turn now to examine whether the circuit court appropriately determined that
    exceptional circumstances permitted the court, after examining C.’s best interests, to confer
    third-party custody of C. with the maternal grandparents.
    custody of C. to the Fosters. Also that same day, the circuit court ratified the magistrate’s
    findings and recommendations. Our Courts often interchange “extraordinary” and
    “exceptional” circumstances in considering third-party custody cases. See, e.g., Burak v.
    Burak, 
    455 Md. 564
    , 659 (2017).
    36
    II.
    Exceptional Circumstances
    A.      Parties’ Contentions
    Father avers that the “trial court additionally was clearly erroneous and/or abused
    its discretion when it found that ‘exceptional circumstances’ existed which entitled the
    Fosters to parental status superior to that of [Father].” Relying on Ross v. Hoffman, 
    280 Md. 172
     (1977), and Burak v. Burak, 
    455 Md. 564
     (2017), Father argues that “the 10 month
    interval in the present case [between the July 2020 overdoes incident and entry of the
    Parenting Plan] . . . fails to qualify as a ‘long time’ for purposes of ‘exceptional
    circumstances.’” Father urges that this delay is “not sufficient to demonstrate abandonment
    or transfer of physical custody.”
    In response, the Fosters maintain that Father was not involved in C.’s care and
    “relinquished parental duties for a child with special needs to the Fosters.” Concerning the
    length of time, the Fosters aver that it “is one factor for exceptional circumstances, and in
    this case, Father was absent and was found to have neglected the child during the child’s
    entire life up and until the Fosters were awarded custody.”
    B.     Analysis
    In the preeminent case on third-party custody, Ross v. Hoffman, the Court of
    Appeals observed that, “Child custody disputes fall into two categories with respect to
    those seeking custody: disputes between the biological parents and disputes between a
    biological parent and a third party[.]” 
    280 Md. 172
    , 174 (1977). Of course, the overarching
    and controlling test in both categories of disputes is the best interests of the child standard.
    37
    
    Id. at 175
    . Consequently, the Court observed, “[e]ven when father and mother are living
    together, a court has the power, if the best interests of the child require it, to take it away
    from both parents and commit the custody to a third person. In other words, a court of
    chancery stands as a guardian of all children[.]” 
    Id. at 176
    . Still, the law accords a “prima
    facie presumption that the child’s welfare will be best []served in the care and custody of
    its parents rather than in the custody of others, and the burden is then cast upon the parties
    opposing them to show the contrary.” 
    Id. at 178
     (quoting Ross v. Pick, 
    199 Md. 341
    , 351
    (1952)).
    In Hoffman, the Court of Appeals collected certain factors “which may be of
    probative value” in determining whether “exceptional circumstances” exist in a dispute
    between a child’s actual or adoptive parent[s] and a third party. Id. at 191. These factors
    include:
    (1) the length of time the child has been away from the biological parent;
    (2) the age of the child when care was assumed by the third-party;
    (3) the possible emotional effect on the child of a change of custody;
    (4) the period of time which elapsed before the parent sought to reclaim the
    child;
    (5) the nature and strength of the ties between the child and the third-party
    custodian;
    (6) the intensity and genuineness of the parent’s desire to have the child; and
    (7) the stability and certainty as to the child’s future in the custody of the
    parent.
    Burak v. Burak, 
    455 Md. 564
    , 659 (2017) (citing Hoffman, 
    280 Md. at 191
    ). While not
    exclusive or mandatory, these factors have emerged as the “standards and guidelines that
    generate ‘exceptional circumstances.’” McDermott v. Dougherty, 
    385 Md. 320
    , 419
    (2005). The Court of Appeals has held that other factors may be relevant to an “exceptional
    38
    circumstances” analysis, including “the stability of the child’s current home environment,
    whether there is an ongoing family unit, and the child’s physical, mental, and emotional
    needs.” Sider v. Sider, 
    334 Md. 512
    , 532 (1994) (quoting Turner v. Whisted, 
    327 Md. 106
    ,
    116-17 (1992)); see also Monroe v. Monroe, 
    329 Md. 758
    , 775-76 (1993) (concluding that
    the child’s relationship with a third-party is a relevant factor in exceptional circumstances
    inquiry). In custody cases, “exceptional circumstances are those that would make parental
    custody detrimental to the best interests of the child.” In re Adoption/Guardianship of
    Rashawn H., 
    402 Md. 477
    , 498 (2007) (emphasis in original).
    Judge Hotten, writing for the Court of Appeals, explained in Burak v. Burak, that
    the purpose of the first Hoffman factor, “is to determine whether the child [ ] has been
    outside the care and control of the biological parent for a sufficient period of time for a
    court to conclude that the constructive physical custody of the child has shifted from the
    biological parent to a third-party.” 455 Md. at 663. Alternatively stated, the first factor
    concerns whether “a biological parent has, in effect, abandoned his or her child.” Id. While
    this first factor is “not the exclusive consideration,” a “court must first determine that the
    child at issue has spent a long period of time away from his or her biological parent before
    considering the other Hoffman factors.” Id. at 662-63.
    Returning to our case, Father avers that the length of time here was not sufficient to
    demonstrate abandonment or transfer of physical custody. In support, Father asserts that
    prior cases reflect longer periods of separation than the time in this case. See Hoffman, 
    280 Md. at 192
     (finding first factor satisfied where there was a “protracted separation of mother
    from child, beginning at the child’s tender age of about four months and lasting for eight
    39
    and half years”); Ross v. Pick, 
    199 Md. 341
    , 351 (1952) (noting an “important feature of
    this case is that [foster parents] had the care and custody of the child from the time he was
    less than two years old until he was over eleven”). Although the time period reflected in
    the cases referenced by Father is longer than the current situation, the length of time is not
    controlling. Rather, as Burak directs, the relevant inquiry is whether the child “has been
    outside the care and control of the biological parent for a sufficient period of time for a
    court to conclude that the constructive physical custody of the child has shifted from the
    biological parent to a third-party.” 455 Md. at 663.
    In applying the first Hoffman factor, the court found that Father “relinquished all
    parenting responsibility to the Fosters until May of 2021” after his overdosing on heroin
    while caring for C. During this period, which consisted of the majority of C.’s life, the
    Fosters “bond[ed] with [C.] as parents.” Although the judge found that Father had made
    significant strides in his recovery, for a substantial period of C.’s life, the judge concluded
    that Father had abandoned C. and “neglected him,” requiring intervention by the State and
    the Fosters to protect C. and care for his needs. We conclude, based on the unique aspects
    of this case, that C. was away from Father for a sufficient time to shift constructive custody
    to the Fosters.
    Indeed, this shift is evident in the circumstances relevant to the other factors
    considered by the trial judge in her oral ruling. See In re Adoption/Guardianship of Darjal
    C., 
    191 Md. App. 505
    , 532 (2010) (“A court is ‘not required to recite the magic words of
    a legal test[] . . . as an adherence to form over substance, [which would] not cause the Genie
    to appear[,]’ and particular words are ‘neither required nor desired if actual consideration
    40
    of the necessary legal considerations are apparent in the record.’” (quoting S. Easton
    Neighborhood Ass’n, Inc. v. Town of Easton, 
    387 Md. 468
    , 495 (2005)). Specifically,
    regarding the “possible emotional effect on the child,” the court found that the Fosters had
    “bonded” with C. This conclusion is supported by substantial evidence in the record,
    including the testimony of the custody evaluator, Anita Tucker. Alternatively, the court
    recognized that Father was “at the beginning stages” of a parent/child relationship and that
    visitation with Father had resulted in disruption to C.’s sleep schedule and other
    manifestations of separation anxiety, including nail biting.
    Finally, the court found that C.’s developmental delays required significant care.
    While the court found that the Fosters were “primarily responsible for all aspects of [C.]’s
    daily care and long-term care,” the court had concerns that Father had “yet to demonstrate
    an ability to care for [C] without the assistance of his parents” and with Father’s “ability to
    maintain a stable home for [C.], because he is heavily reliant on the family and is at the
    beginning stages of being self-sufficient.”          We hold that the circuit court properly
    considered whether exceptional circumstances were present and that the circuit court did
    not abuse its discretion.10
    10
    Father does not contest the circuit court’s best interests analysis.
    41
    III.
    AWARD OF FUTURE CUSTODY
    A.      Parties’ Contentions
    Father avers that the “trial court abused its discretion when it entered an order under
    which [Father] cannot increase his time with the child, absent consent or a change in
    circumstances.” According to Father, the court “provided for less visitation than the parties
    agreed” and “failed to include any provision whereby [Father] could increase his visitation
    time.” Relying on Boswell v. Boswell, 
    118 Md. App. 1
    , 31 (1987), Father contends that
    the judge abused her discretion by failing “to articulate why [Father]’s visitation of one
    week per month is limited, without any provision for an increase in time.”
    In opposition, after distinguishing Boswell, the Fosters aver that the “schedule
    implemented with phases and conditions . . . was to provide safety and stability in light of
    [C.] having been neglected and maltreated at 6 months of age as a result of Father’s heroin
    overdose.” According to the Fosters, “[i]t does not require further explanation of the
    [c]ourt that for so long as Father lives in New Jersey, and the child’s life is in Maryland,
    an increase of time is not reasonable or child centered.” Further, relying on Schaefer v.
    Cusack, 
    124 Md. App. 288
     (1998), the Fosters contend that “in futuro custody
    determinations are considered an abuse of discretion.” Finally, the Fosters argue that there
    are “proactive steps” that Father may undertake to “better situate himself to be a primary
    caregiver” for C. but the court “need not outline them.”
    42
    B.     Analysis
    Father’s question narrowly asks us to consider whether “the trial court abused its
    discretion when it entered an order under which [Father] cannot increase his time with the
    child, absent consent or a change in circumstances.” We conclude that the circuit court did
    not abuse its discretion by entering a custody order that does not provide for an increase in
    Father’s time with C. Indeed, had the court done what Father proposes, it would have
    abused its discretion. We explain.
    In making a custody determination, “courts look to the situation as it exists at the
    time.” Schaefer v. Cusack, 
    124 Md. App. 288
    , 295 (1998). In Schaefer, this Court analyzed
    a custody order which granted physical custody of a minor child, then five years later, to
    his mother until completion of the fifth grade and then to his father until his eighteenth
    birthday. Id. at 291-92. In determining that the circuit court abused its discretion, we
    explained:
    We have not the faintest idea of what the situation of the parents may
    be at the time when this child completes the fifth grade, obviously a number
    of years hence. We know not what the living conditions of the parties at that
    time will be. We know not where the parties will be living. We do not know
    what their incomes will be. We have no idea of what kind of physical
    condition the parents or child will be in at that time. We do not know what
    the preference of the child at that time may be. We have no idea whatever
    as to the condition under which the parents will be living. Although thus far
    there has been no hint of immorality, we do not know what the situation will
    be at the time of the contemplated change in custody. We do not know what
    effect a change in custody might have on the child. All of these are relevant
    considerations.
    It is hard enough to look into the future and to determine what may be
    perceived as the best interest of the child on the basis of circumstances as
    they exist at the time of a custody hearing. We consider it to be an abuse of
    discretion to attempt to look ahead and to determine now that it will be in the
    43
    best interests of a child who has not yet entered kindergarten to have his
    custody changed upon completion of the fifth grade.
    Id. at 297-98. We see no reason to diverge from our reasoning in this case.
    To the extent Father complains that the court abused its discretion in granting him
    a week of visitation a month, as opposed to some greater number, we first observe that the
    trial judge thoroughly reviewed the relevant custody factors and offered the reasons for her
    decision in great detail. The Court noted that C., who has developmental delays, had been
    obtaining services from the Anne Arundel County Infant and Toddlers Program, where
    “caregivers learn daily strategies and tasks to work with [C.].” The court noted that it was
    in [C.’s] best interests to receive these early intervention services in Anne Arundel County.
    The court further found that Father has moved back with his parents in New Jersey, has
    demonstrated a “lack of involvement” in C.’s treatment strategies, and that no similar
    support services were in place for C. in New Jersey. It is clear to us, from the judge’s
    findings, that she presented a visitation schedule that would allow C. to obtain the treatment
    he needs in Maryland, and still visit his Father one week out of the month. Moreover, in
    regard to the holiday schedule, the court specifically found: “Given my concerns regarding
    the importance of maintaining stability for [C.] and to ensure that it does not negatively
    impact his ability to receive services, I believe that the holiday schedule is an opportunity
    to increase [Father]’s access with [C.] in a way that minimizes a negative impact[.]” We
    discern no abuse of discretion in the court’s custody determination and visitation schedule.
    44
    CONCLUSION
    We hold that because neither Father nor Mother consented to the development of a
    parent-like relationship, de facto parenthood was not properly conferred on the Fosters
    under the first factor of the H.S.H.-K. test adopted in Conover. However, based on the
    circumstances of this case, we hold that the circuit court did not abuse its discretion in
    finding exceptional circumstances sufficient to award the Fosters third-party custody of C.
    Accordingly, we remand the case to the circuit court with instruction to vacate the portion
    of its custody order granting the Fosters de facto parenthood status of C. The remaining
    provisions of the court’s order remain in full force and effect.
    JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
    FOR   ANNE    ARUNDEL    COUNTY
    REVERSED IN PART AND AFFIRMED IN
    PART;   CASE   REMANDED     WITH
    INSTRUCTION TO THE CIRCUIT COURT
    TO VACATE PORTION OF ORDER
    GRANTING DE FACTO PARENTHOOD
    STATUS TO APPELLEES; COSTS TO BE
    PAID ONE HALF BY APPELLANT AND
    ONE HALF BY APPELLEES.
    45