Petition of Eric Willeke and Regina Willeke , 169 N.H. 802 ( 2017 )


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    THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
    ___________________________
    8th Circuit Court-Keene Family Division
    No. 2016-0079
    PETITION OF ERIC WILLEKE AND REGINA WILLEKE
    Submitted: February 16, 2017
    Opinion Issued: May 12, 2017
    Law Offices of Joseph S. Hoppock, PLLC, of Keene (Joseph S. Hoppock
    on the brief), for the petitioners.
    Samantha Pelc, self-represented party, filed no brief.
    Tyler Wyman, self-represented party, filed no brief.
    HICKS, J. The petitioners, Eric and Regina Willeke, appeal an order of
    the Circuit Court (Forrest, J.) dismissing their petition for visitation with their
    now five-year-old great-grandchild for lack of standing. We affirm.
    The relevant facts follow. Regina Willeke is the maternal great-
    grandmother of the child. Eric Willeke is the child’s maternal step-great-
    grandfather. The Willekes’ petition alleges that the child lived with the
    petitioners for most of her life. They were her guardians until November 12,
    2015, and they sought great-grandparent visitation rights on September 22,
    2015. Tyler Wyman, the child’s father, responded to the petition, arguing that
    New Hampshire law does not confer upon great-grandparents standing to seek
    visitation. The trial court construed the answer as a motion to dismiss, to
    which the petitioners objected. In their objection, the petitioners argued that
    they have a common-law right to seek visitation with the child and,
    alternatively, that RSA 461-A:13 (Supp. 2016) should be interpreted as
    conferring upon great-grandparents standing to petition for visitation.
    The trial court granted the motion to dismiss, concluding “that the words
    of [RSA 461-A:13] are not ambiguous and are intended to afford rights to
    grandparents only.” The trial court did not address the petitioners’ common-
    law claim.
    On appeal, the petitioners do not argue that the trial court erred in
    interpreting RSA 461-A:13. Instead, they argue only that they have common-
    law standing, independent of RSA 461-A:13, to request that the trial court
    exercise its parens patriae power to grant them visitation with the child. In the
    petitioners’ view, the common-law right to seek visitation survived the 1991
    amendment of RSA 458:17, VI (1983 & Supp. 1991) (amended 2003) (repealed
    2005) and the enactment of RSA 458:17-d (1992) (amended 1993, 2004)
    (repealed 2005), which were succeeded by RSA 461-A:6, V (Supp. 2016) and
    RSA 461-A:13 respectively, see Laws 2005, 273:1, :20. Thus, the petitioners
    conclude that the trial court’s failure to “consider the availability” of its parens
    patriae power to order great-grandparent visitation was error. They also argue
    that the principles of Troxel v. Granville, 
    530 U.S. 57
     (2000) (plurality opinion),
    adopted by this court in In the Matter of Rupa & Rupa, 
    161 N.H. 311
    , 317-18
    (2010), “[a]re [n]ot [o]ffended” by the court’s exercise of that parens patriae
    power. (Bolding omitted.) Because we conclude that RSA 458:17, VI, as
    amended in 1991, and RSA 458:17-d and their statutory successors
    extinguished courts’ common law parens patriae power to order visitation, we
    need not determine whether the exercise of that power to order great-
    grandparent visitation would offend the principles of Troxel.
    “Usually, in ruling upon a motion to dismiss, the trial court is required to
    determine whether the allegations contained in the petitioners’ pleadings are
    sufficient to state a basis upon which relief may be granted.” Petition of
    Lundquist, 
    168 N.H. 629
    , 631 (2016) (quotation omitted). “To make this
    determination, the court would accept all facts pleaded by the petitioners to be
    true and construe all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the
    petitioners.” 
    Id.
     (quotation omitted). “When, however, the motion to dismiss
    does not contest the sufficiency of the petitioners’ legal claim, but instead
    challenges their standing to sue, the trial court must look beyond the
    allegations and determine, based upon the facts, whether the petitioners have
    sufficiently demonstrated a right to claim relief.” 
    Id.
     (quotation omitted).
    “Because the underlying facts are not in dispute, we review the trial court’s
    decision de novo.” 
    Id.
     (quotation omitted).
    2
    Determining whether RSA 458:17, VI, as amended in 1991, RSA
    458:17-d, and their successors, RSA 461-A:6, V and RSA 461-A:13, abrogated
    the common-law right to petition for visitation requires that we engage in
    statutory interpretation. “Statutory interpretation is a question of law, which
    we review de novo.” 
    Id.
     (quotation omitted). In matters of statutory
    interpretation, we are the final arbiter of the intent of the legislature as
    expressed in the words of the statute considered as a whole. 
    Id.
     We first look
    to the language of the statute itself, and, if possible, construe that language
    according to its plain and ordinary meaning. 
    Id.
     We interpret legislative intent
    from the statute as written and will not consider what the legislature might
    have said or add language that the legislature did not see fit to include. 
    Id.
    Prior to 1989, RSA 458:17, VI (1983) (amended 1991, 2003) (repealed
    2005) empowered courts to order grandparent visitation only in divorce
    proceedings. See Roberts v. Ward, 126 N.H 388, 390-91 (1985). Under the
    common law, however, courts could use their “parens patriae power to permit
    grandparental visitation when it [was] in the best interests of the child, in
    situations where RSA 458:17, VI [was] not applicable.” 
    Id. at 392
    . In deciding
    that courts could grant grandparent visitation outside divorce proceedings, we
    explained that:
    It would be shortsighted indeed, for this court not to recognize the
    realities and complexities of modern family life, by holding today
    that a child has no rights, over the objection of a parent, to
    maintain a close extra-parental relationship which has formed in
    the absence of a nuclear family.
    
    Id.
     Thus, Roberts recognized a common-law right of grandparents and others
    with whom a child had formed a close extra-parental relationship to petition for
    visitation — outside divorce proceedings — in the absence of a nuclear family.
    
    Id.
    In 1989, the legislature enacted RSA 458:17-d, which provided, in
    relevant part, that:
    Grandparents, whether adoptive or natural, may petition the court
    for reasonable rights of visitation with the minor child as provided
    in paragraph III. The provisions of this section shall not apply in
    cases where access by the grandparent or grandparents to the
    minor child has been restricted for any reason prior to or
    contemporaneous with the divorce, death, relinquishment or
    termination of parental rights, or other cause of the absence of a
    nuclear family.
    RSA 458:17-d, I; Laws 1989, 314:2. When the legislature passed RSA
    458:17-d in 1989, it simultaneously amended RSA 458:17, VI to reflect that
    3
    courts could grant visitation to grandparents pursuant to RSA 458:17-d. Laws
    1989, 314:1-2. Later, in 1991, RSA 458:17, VI was amended to read, in
    relevant part:
    If the court determines that it is in the best interest and welfare of
    the children, it shall in its decree grant reasonable visitation
    privileges to a party who is a stepparent of the children or to the
    grandparents of the children pursuant to RSA 458:17-d.
    Laws 1991, 93:1.
    In 2005, the legislature repealed a large portion of RSA chapter 458 and
    replaced it with RSA chapter 461-A, entitled “PARENTAL RIGHTS AND
    RESPONSIBILITIES.” See RSA ch. 458 (2004 & Supp. 2016); RSA ch. 461-A
    (Supp. 2016); Laws 2005, ch. 273. RSA chapter 461-A controls “cases
    concerning parental rights and responsibilities,” RSA 461-A:3 (Supp. 2016),
    and is not limited to divorce cases, see RSA 461-A:13 (“The petition for
    visitation shall be entered in the court which has jurisdiction over the divorce,
    legal separation, or a proceeding brought under this chapter.”). The sentence
    of RSA 458:17, VI, as amended in 1991, that authorized stepparent and
    grandparent visitation was incorporated into RSA 461-A:6, V. Compare RSA
    458:17, VI, with RSA 461-A:6, V. RSA 461-A:13 replaced RSA 458:17-d, and
    the two statutes are substantially similar. Compare RSA 458:17-d, with RSA
    461-A:13.
    Generally, “[w]e will not construe a statute . . . as abrogating the
    common law unless the statute clearly expresses such an intention.” Univ.
    Sys. of N.H. Bd. of Trs. v. Dorfsman, 
    168 N.H. 450
    , 454 (2015) (quotation
    omitted). However, when a statute revises the entire subject of a common law
    cause of action and is clearly designed as a substitute, the common law is
    abrogated, although no express terms to that effect are used. See Powell v.
    Catholic Med. Ctr., 
    145 N.H. 7
    , 11 (2000). This rule rests upon the principle
    that:
    [W]hen the legislature frames a new statute upon [a] subject–
    matter, and from the framework of the act it is apparent that the
    legislature designed a complete scheme for this matter, it is a
    legislative declaration that whatever is embraced in the new law
    shall prevail, and whatever is excluded is discarded.
    
    Id.
     (quotation and ellipsis omitted). We conclude that RSA 458:17, VI, as
    amended in 1991, and RSA 458:17-d abrogated the common-law right to
    petition for visitation because the statutes revised the entire subject of
    visitation and were designed as a substitute.
    4
    The legislature’s intent to revise the entire subject of visitation is evident
    because RSA 458:17, VI, as amended in 1991, and RSA 458:17-d conferred
    standing upon stepparents and grandparents to seek visitation in the same
    circumstances that the common law, together with the earlier version of RSA
    458:17, VI, conferred standing upon those with whom a child had formed a
    close extra-parental relationship. RSA 458:17-d specifically permitted
    grandparents standing to seek visitation in “the absence of a nuclear family.”
    RSA 458:17-d, I; see O’Brien v. O’Brien, 
    141 N.H. 435
    , 436-37 (1996)
    (construing RSA 458:17-d to authorize grandparent visitation only when one of
    the following conditions has come to pass: “divorce, death, relinquishment or
    termination of parental rights, or other cause of the absence of a nuclear
    family” (quotation omitted)). The common law conferred standing upon those
    with whom a child had formed a close extra-parental relationship in
    substantially similar circumstances. Roberts, 126 N.H. at 390-92 (discussing
    court’s parens patriae power to grant visitation in certain circumstances
    outside of divorce proceedings, and explaining that RSA 458:17, VI controlled
    visitation in divorce proceedings). In fact, the legislature incorporated the very
    language used in Roberts: “the absence of a nuclear family.” RSA 458:17-d, I;
    RSA 461-A:13, I; see Roberts, 126 N.H. at 392.
    The fact that RSA 458:17, VI, as amended in 1991, and RSA 458:17-d
    did not simply codify Roberts, but rather significantly altered the standard we
    articulated in Roberts, demonstrates that the statutes were designed as a
    substitute for the common law. The statutes altered the common law in four
    respects. First, the legislature circumscribed the class of people who could
    petition for visitation. When it amended RSA 458:17, VI in 1991, the
    legislature permitted only grandparents and stepparents to seek visitation.
    Laws 1991, 93:1. By contrast, the common law conferred standing to seek
    visitation upon anyone with whom a child had formed a close extra-parental
    relationship. Roberts, 126 N.H. at 392. Second, RSA 458:17-d changed the
    manner in which courts decide whether to grant grandparent visitation. The
    statute required courts to consider the factors that, in Roberts, we only
    suggested, but did not require, that they consider. See RSA 458:17-d, II (listing
    factors suggested in Roberts); Roberts, 126 N.H. at 394. It also added two
    factors that courts must consider. See RSA 458:17-d, II (requiring courts to
    also address a guardian ad litem’s recommendation and whether visitation
    would interfere with parent’s authority over child or with parent-child
    relationship); Roberts, 126 N.H. at 394. Third, RSA 458:17-d added the
    significant caveat that no visitation would be permitted if the grandparent’s
    access to the child had been “restricted for any reason” prior to the triggering
    condition. RSA 458:17-d, I. Finally, the statute dictated where the petition
    should be filed and allocated the costs of the petition. RSA 458:17-d, III, VII.
    Accordingly, we now hold that the common-law right to petition for
    visitation was superseded by the enactment of RSA 458:17, VI, as amended in
    1991, and RSA 458:17-d because the legislature revised the entire subject of
    5
    visitation, and the statutes were clearly designed as substitutes for the
    common law. The legislature preserved that statutory scheme when it enacted
    RSA 461-A:6, V and RSA 461-A:13. Therefore, we conclude that the trial court
    did not err when it did not consider its parens patriae power as a basis to order
    great-grandparent visitation. Thus, we affirm the trial court’s dismissal of the
    great-grandparents’ petition for visitation for lack of standing.
    Finally, any issues raised in the notice of appeal, but not briefed, are
    deemed waived. See Town of Barrington v. Townsend, 
    164 N.H. 241
    , 251
    (2012).
    Affirmed.
    DALIANIS, C.J., and CONBOY, LYNN, and BASSETT, JJ., concurred.
    6
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2016-0079

Citation Numbers: 160 A.3d 688, 169 N.H. 802

Judges: Hicks, Dalianis, Conboy, Lynn, Bassett

Filed Date: 5/12/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024