In re Adoption of Antaeus A. , 31 Neb. Ct. App. 907 ( 2023 )


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    Nebraska Court of Appeals Advance Sheets
    31 Nebraska Appellate Reports
    IN RE ADOPTION OF ANTAEUS A.
    Cite as 
    31 Neb. App. 907
    In re Adoption of Antaeus A., a minor child.
    William M. and Elizabeth M., appellees,
    v. Andrew A., appellant, and
    Rachel D., appellee.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed May 16, 2023.     No. A-22-594.
    1. Adoption: Appeal and Error. Appeals in adoption proceedings are
    reviewed by an appellate court for error appearing on the record.
    2. Judgments: Appeal and Error. When reviewing a judgment for errors
    appearing on the record, the inquiry is whether the decision conforms
    to the law, is supported by competent evidence, and is neither arbitrary,
    capricious, nor unreasonable.
    3. Abandonment: Evidence: Proof. In order for a court to find that aban-
    donment has occurred, the petitioning party bears the burden of proving
    by clear and convincing evidence that the parent abandoned the child.
    4. Abandonment: Proof. To constitute abandonment, it must appear that
    there has been, by the parents, a giving up or total desertion of the minor
    child. There must be shown an absolute relinquishment of the custody
    and control of the minor and thus the laying aside by the parents of all
    care for the minor.
    5. Adoption. Adoption statutes will be strictly construed in favor of the
    rights of the natural parents in controversies involving termination of
    the relation of the parent and child.
    6. Abandonment: Evidence: Appeal and Error. The various definitions
    of abandonment do not require an appellate court to review the statu-
    tory period in a vacuum. One may consider the evidence of a parent’s
    conduct, either before or after the statutory period, because this evidence
    is relevant to a determination of whether the purpose and intent of that
    parent was to abandon his or her child or children.
    7. Abandonment: Intent: Evidence. Evidence of a parent’s conduct is rel-
    evant to a determination of whether the purpose and intent of that parent
    was to abandon the child.
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    Nebraska Court of Appeals Advance Sheets
    31 Nebraska Appellate Reports
    IN RE ADOPTION OF ANTAEUS A.
    Cite as 
    31 Neb. App. 907
    Appeal from the County Court for Madison County:
    Michael L. Long, Judge. Affirmed.
    Kory L. Quandt and Ryan M. Hoffman, of Bressman,
    Hoffman & Jacobs, P.C., L.L.O., for appellant.
    Susan K. Sapp and Nathan D. Clark, of Cline, Williams,
    Wright, Johnson & Oldfather, L.L.P., for appellees William M.
    and Elizabeth M.
    Riedmann, Bishop, and Arterburn, Judges.
    Riedmann, Judge.
    INTRODUCTION
    This is Andrew A.’s appeal from the order of the county
    court for Madison County finding that his consent, as the bio-
    logical father, to the adoption of Antaeus A. was not needed.
    Andrew assigns that the county court erred in finding that the
    adoptive parents proved by clear and convincing evidence that
    he abandoned the minor child in the 6-month period preceding
    the filing of the adoption petition. Following our review for
    error appearing on the record, we affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    On December 10, 2021, the district court for Madison
    County issued an order for consent to adoption of Antaeus
    upon the motion of his biological mother, Rachel D. On
    January 19, 2022, William M. and Elizabeth M. filed a peti-
    tion for adoption of Antaeus in the county court for Madison
    County; the petition alleged that Andrew and Rachel had
    abandoned Antaeus. The county court granted William and
    Elizabeth’s motion to bifurcate and scheduled a trial on the
    issue of abandonment by Andrew.
    Relevant to this appeal, the evidence showed that Andrew
    and Rachel met at a homeless shelter in Colorado Springs,
    Colorado. Approximately a week later, Rachel became preg-
    nant. While pregnant with Antaeus, Rachel resided with
    Andrew in an apartment in Colorado Springs, though she left
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    IN RE ADOPTION OF ANTAEUS A.
    Cite as 
    31 Neb. App. 907
    the apartment at various times, including twice because of
    domestic violence and twice because Andrew “kicked [her]
    out” of the apartment. On one occasion, she was unable to find
    shelter and slept outside.
    Rachel, working with various resources in Colorado
    Springs, was able to obtain items for use when Antaeus
    was born, such as a crib and changing table, a breast pump,
    and diapers. A month before her due date, Andrew quit his
    job and decided the two would move to Blair, Nebraska, to
    live with his mother. Rachel was under the impression that
    they were going to sell the baby items to raise funds for the
    move; instead, Andrew used the money to purchase marijuana.
    Rachel described Andrew as very controlling and verbally
    combative and agreed that the environment in which she lived
    was volatile.
    Antaeus was born in July 2016 in Colorado Springs. He was
    kept in the hospital an extra day because staff discovered that
    Rachel did not have a crib. Shortly after Antaeus’ birth, the
    three moved to Nebraska; Rachel described the first 4 weeks of
    living with Andrew and his mother, stating that Andrew would
    argue with his mother, call her names, and get “pretty angry”
    with her, and that once, he spit on his mother and threatened
    to beat her up.
    On August 24, 2016, Andrew became suspicious after Rachel
    went to the bathroom, because he was convinced that Rachel
    “had done something in the bathroom other than peeing,” and
    a confrontation between the two occurred. When Andrew’s
    mother intervened, Andrew screamed at his mother and Rachel
    heard his mother scream and what sounded like his mother’s
    being punched several times.
    As a result of this incident, Andrew was arrested and jailed
    “for a long period of time.” Sometime in the fall of 2016,
    Rachel worked with a domestic violence shelter in Norfolk,
    Nebraska, that arranged for her and Antaeus to be transported
    from Blair to the shelter in Norfolk. After a couple of months
    in the emergency shelter, Rachel moved to the program’s
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    IN RE ADOPTION OF ANTAEUS A.
    Cite as 
    31 Neb. App. 907
    transitional house. During this time, Andrew was in jail;
    Rachel used money from a joint account she had with Andrew
    for financial support. Eventually, Rachel obtained a job and
    replaced the money that had been in the checking account.
    In February 2017, Rachel filed a petition in the Madison
    County District Court to establish custody of Antaeus. In May,
    a decree established paternity of Antaeus and awarded Rachel
    sole physical and legal custody. Andrew was not awarded any
    parenting time, nor was he ordered to pay child support. Also
    in May, Rachel obtained a temporary domestic abuse protec-
    tion order against Andrew, which did not prohibit contact
    between Antaeus and Andrew. The order was affirmed in June
    and was in place until May 2019.
    Andrew did not have contact with Antaeus from the time
    of Andrew’s arrest in August 2016 until sometime in 2018.
    During 2017, Rachel employed William and Elizabeth as
    supplemental daycare providers for Antaeus so she could work
    a second job. Eventually, they provided full-time daycare
    for Antaeus.
    In December 2017, Andrew, represented by counsel, filed a
    complaint to modify the decree of paternity. In February 2018,
    Andrew filed a motion for a temporary order requesting visi-
    tation with Antaeus and establishing child support payments.
    The court denied parenting time until Andrew established a
    plan for supervised visitation at a local mental health facility.
    The district court found that was necessary based on Andrew’s
    prior violation of the protection order, his criminal history,
    and the manner in which he testified, which led the court to
    conclude that he was “not sufficiently in control of his emo-
    tional behavior such that he would be able to properly parent a
    child.” It did not order Andrew to pay child support.
    Pursuant to the temporary order, Andrew arranged for
    supervised visits, but due to his aggressive behavior toward
    the supervising facilities’ staff, he had only four 2-hour visits
    throughout 2018. He did not provide any voluntary finan-
    cial support for Antaeus; however, he did offer some gifts
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    through his attorney at a court hearing, but Rachel declined
    his offer because the protection order was still in place.
    On May 23, 2019, the district court entered an order on
    Andrew’s complaint to modify. It acknowledged Andrew’s
    aggressive behaviors during the four supervised visits, his
    extensive criminal history, and his inability to exercise paren-
    tal judgment in an unsupervised setting. The court granted
    Andrew limited supervised visitation for 2 hours on the first
    Saturday of each month. The district court did not order child
    support, because it was not convinced that Andrew had the
    ability to support himself or hold an employed position for
    any length of time due to his “unusual behaviors” shown
    in court.
    Despite the court’s order, Andrew did not exercise any visi-
    tation in 2019. He filed an unverified affidavit and application
    for an order to show cause on June 7, in which he alleged
    that Rachel was being noncompliant with the visitation order.
    Contrary to the order, he asserted that the judge did not limit
    the number of visits he was entitled to. No hearing was ever
    held on the application.
    At some point in late 2019, Rachel left Norfolk and moved
    to Omaha, Nebraska, for about 6 months before eventually
    moving to Hastings, Nebraska, to attend a treatment center.
    After the treatment program, Rachel went to a homeless shel-
    ter. Rachel had trouble transitioning back into the community,
    and she decided it was not fair to put Antaeus in that situation.
    She did not feel Andrew was a viable option. Although Rachel
    had not spoken to William and Elizabeth in a long time, she
    contacted them to see if they would “take” Antaeus. They
    agreed and picked up Antaeus from Hastings on August 16,
    2020; he has been in their care since that date.
    In July 2020, Andrew, represented by new counsel, filed
    a complaint for modification. He asserted that a material
    change in circumstances existed because he was now lead-
    ing a sober and law-abiding life; therefore, he requested
    that he be awarded reasonable unsupervised parenting time.
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    IN RE ADOPTION OF ANTAEUS A.
    Cite as 
    31 Neb. App. 907
    Thereafter, Andrew had two supervised visits with Antaeus,
    which were his only visits in 2020. Andrew’s counsel withdrew
    in late 2020, and there were no additional requests for visita-
    tion. The modification complaint was dismissed for lack of
    prosecution in December. Rachel admitted that she had failed
    to keep her address updated with the court for some period of
    time; however, by the time Andrew’s counsel withdrew, she
    had an address on file where she could be contacted.
    William testified that he and Elizabeth have had placement
    of Antaeus since August 16, 2020. From that date to the filing
    of the adoption petition on January 19, 2022, William did not
    receive any request for visitation or any financial support from
    Andrew. After the filing of the adoption petition, Andrew con-
    tacted William one time to let him know he had been released
    from incarceration and “was looking to find how he fought
    this process.”
    The guardian ad litem (GAL) testified that in the course
    of his investigation, he had two phone conversations with
    Andrew in February 2022. The GAL confirmed that in the 6
    months prior to the filing of the adoption petition, Andrew
    did not provide any financial support for Antaeus. The GAL
    expressed concern with the possessive tone in which Andrew
    spoke of Antaeus and with Andrew’s criminal history. He
    related that Andrew had been arrested between 30 and 40
    times and that beginning in 2019, there were a series of
    assaults for which he served a lengthy jail sentence. Most
    recently, Andrew served a sentence for obstruction of a police
    officer, disturbing the peace, and resisting arrest in the second
    half of 2021.
    The GAL confirmed that the 6-month period at issue was
    from July 2021 to January 23, 2022. During that time period,
    Andrew authored several letters to both the district court
    and county court judges in Madison County. In those letters,
    Andrew expressed a willingness to pay child support; however,
    the GAL noted that at the time the letters were filed, notifi-
    cation had already been given of the intent to adopt. Based
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    IN RE ADOPTION OF ANTAEUS A.
    Cite as 
    31 Neb. App. 907
    upon his investigation, the GAL concluded that Andrew had
    abandoned Antaeus and that it was in the child’s best interests
    for the court to authorize the GAL to give substituted consents
    for adoption.
    Andrew testified at the hearing. He explained that he filed a
    complaint to modify the paternity decree in December 2017 so
    he could have parenting time and pay child support, because
    he wanted to be an integral part of Antaeus’ life. In June
    2019, Andrew filed an application for an order to show cause
    because Rachel failed to bring Antaeus to two supervised
    visits. No trial was ever held on the application. Thereafter,
    Andrew sent letters to the district court judge in an attempt to
    get parenting time. At the time, Andrew was incarcerated and
    had a pending criminal case before the district court judge to
    whom he sent the letters. He admitted on cross-examination
    that the letters were for purposes of not only his domestic
    case, but also his criminal case on which he was await-
    ing sentence.
    Andrew explained that in November 2021, while he was
    incarcerated, he wrote a letter to the district court judge
    because he wanted to regain custody of Antaeus, receive more
    visits, and pay child support. Although Andrew testified that
    he did not know the whereabouts of his son, he never asked
    Rachel where he was, nor did he hire an attorney to help him.
    As to the letters he wrote to the court throughout December
    and into January 2022, Andrew admitted on cross-examination
    that at the time he wrote the letters, he had already received
    notice of the filing of the motion relating to consent to proceed
    with the adoption.
    Andrew confirmed that in the 5 years since Antaeus was
    born, he had had a total of six supervised visits, but empha-
    sized that he had written numerous letters to the court to
    demonstrate his intent to be with Antaeus. Andrew testified
    that he had written letters to Rachel and sent them to a mis-
    sion and a shelter in Norfolk and that although the shelter
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    IN RE ADOPTION OF ANTAEUS A.
    Cite as 
    31 Neb. App. 907
    initially stated copies of the letters could be provided, they
    later recanted that.
    Rachel did not receive support from Andrew from 2017
    through 2020. Aside from the money from the checking account
    that she used, which money she replaced, there was never any
    money or support ever given. William also never received
    any support from Andrew after Antaeus was placed in his and
    Elizabeth’s care.
    The county court issued an order in which it found that
    Andrew had abandoned Antaeus in the 6 months or more prior
    to the filing of the petition for adoption. A decree of adoption
    was issued in July 2022. Andrew appealed.
    ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
    Andrew assigns that the county court erred in finding that
    the adoptive parents proved by clear and convincing evidence
    that he had abandoned Antaeus in the 6 months preceding the
    filing of the adoption petition and that therefore, his consent to
    the adoption would not be required.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1,2] Appeals in adoption proceedings are reviewed by an
    appellate court for error appearing on the record. When review-
    ing a judgment for errors appearing on the record, the inquiry
    is whether the decision conforms to the law, is supported by
    competent evidence, and is neither arbitrary, capricious, nor
    unreasonable. In re Adoption of Micah H., 
    301 Neb. 437
    , 
    918 N.W.2d 834
     (2018).
    ANALYSIS
    Andrew argues the county court erred in finding he had
    abandoned Antaeus in the 6 months preceding the filing of
    the adoption petition. At the time of these proceedings, 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 43-104
    (1) (Reissue 2016) required written con-
    sent from the biological parents prior to an adoption being
    decreed. However, § 43-104(2)(b) excused this requirement
    of a parent who abandoned the child for the 6 months
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    preceding the filing of the adoption petition. Our focus,
    therefore, is on whether Andrew abandoned Antaeus for the
    requisite time period.
    [3,4] In order for a court to find that abandonment has
    occurred, the petitioning party bears the burden of proving by
    clear and convincing evidence that the parent abandoned the
    child. In re Adoption of Micah H., supra. To constitute aban-
    donment, it must appear that there has been, by the parents, a
    giving up or total desertion of the minor child. Id. There must
    be shown an absolute relinquishment of the custody and con-
    trol of the minor and thus the laying aside by the parents of all
    care for the minor. Id.
    [5,6] Adoption statutes will be strictly construed in favor of
    the rights of the natural parents in controversies involving ter-
    mination of the relation of the parent and child. Id. The various
    definitions of abandonment do not require an appellate court to
    review the statutory period in a vacuum. Id. One may consider
    the evidence of a parent’s conduct, either before or after the
    statutory period, because this evidence is relevant to a determi-
    nation of whether the purpose and intent of that parent was to
    abandon his or her child or children. Id.
    [7] Andrew argues that his efforts of filing modification
    petitions and writing letters to the court professing his paren-
    tal desire evinces his intent to parent Antaeus and negates
    a finding of abandonment. However, abandonment may be
    found where there is willful, intentional, or voluntary conduct,
    without just cause or excuse, that evinces a willful neglect and
    refusal to perform the natural and legal obligations of paren-
    tal care and support. See In re Adoption of Micah H., supra.
    Evidence of a parent’s conduct is relevant to a determination of
    whether the purpose and intent of that parent was to abandon
    the child. Jeremiah J. v. Dakota D., 
    287 Neb. 617
    , 
    843 N.W.2d 820
     (2014). Focusing on Andrew’s conduct, not just in the 6
    months preceding the filing of the adoption petition, but dating
    back to Antaeus’ birth, we find no error in the county court’s
    conclusion that Andrew abandoned Antaeus.
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    IN RE ADOPTION OF ANTAEUS A.
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    Andrew lived with Antaeus for approximately 6 weeks
    before being arrested. In the 5 years between Andrew’s arrest
    and the abandonment hearing, Andrew has spent a total of
    12 hours of supervised visitation with Antaeus. He has never
    contributed any sort of support toward Antaeus. While he was
    not ordered to pay child support, a biological father has an
    obligation to financially support his child. See, State on behalf
    of Hopkins v. Batt, 
    253 Neb. 852
    , 
    573 N.W.2d 425
     (1998),
    overruled on other grounds, State on behalf of Miah S. v. Ian
    K., 
    306 Neb. 372
    , 
    945 N.W.2d 178
     (2020); Race v. Mrsny,
    
    155 Neb. 679
    , 
    53 N.W.2d 88
     (1952). And although Andrew
    attempted to give some gifts to Rachel in 2018, this was a
    single attempt. Where there has been a protracted period of
    totally unjustified failure to exercise parental functions, an
    isolated contact or expression of interest does not necessar-
    ily negate the inference that a person no longer wishes to act
    in the role of parent to a child. In re Adoption of Micah H.,
    
    301 Neb. 437
    , 
    918 N.W.2d 834
     (2018). Even after the expira-
    tion of the protection order, which we note applied only to
    Rachel, Andrew never attempted to send Antaeus any items
    of support.
    We acknowledge that Andrew filed two complaints for
    modification in which he sought parenting time and an order
    requiring child support; however, even after being awarded
    parenting time, he did not exercise it. And although he wrote
    several letters to the courts in 2019 and 2021 expressing his
    desire to see his son and to pay child support, he failed to take
    action to effectuate his words. Furthermore, the more recent
    letters were sent after Andrew became aware of the poten-
    tial adoption.
    Andrew testified that he sent letters to Rachel, although he
    was unable to provide copies or additional evidence providing
    their content. There was no evidence that Andrew ever sent
    letters or cards to Antaeus. While Rachel did fail to update
    her address with the court for a period of time, there was no
    evidence that Andrew attempted to send any gifts or make
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    contact with Antaeus during that time, but was unable to do so,
    or that he attempted to make any contact once her information
    was available.
    Overall, since Antaeus’ birth, including the 6 months preced-
    ing the filing of the petition for adoption, Andrew has shown
    an absolute relinquishment of custody, control, and care for
    Antaeus. He has not performed the natural and legal obliga-
    tions of parental care and support. Since his arrest approxi-
    mately 6 weeks after Antaeus’ birth, Andrew, despite being
    entitled to court-ordered visitation starting in 2018, has spent
    12 hours with Antaeus. He made one attempt to provide certain
    items for Antaeus but made no other efforts after that 2018
    attempt was unsuccessful. While Andrew sent numerous let-
    ters to the court, and testified that he sent letters to Rachel,
    there was no testimony or evidence that he attempted to send
    letters, cards, or gifts to Antaeus. He has willfully neglected to
    perform the natural and legal obligations of parental care and
    support; therefore, his conduct demonstrates that he has aban-
    doned Antaeus.
    CONCLUSION
    After reviewing for error on the record, we find none. The
    order of the county court is affirmed.
    Affirmed.