IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 21-0146
Filed October 6, 2021
IN THE INTEREST OF THE GUARDIANSHIP OF P.M.,
M.G.,
Guardian-Appellant,
B.R.,
Mother-Appellee.
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Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Black Hawk County, David F. Staudt,
Judge.
A relative of the minor child appeals the denial of her petition seeking to
establish a guardianship of the child. AFFIRMED.
Rebecca Feiereisen of Trent Law Firm, PLLC, Cedar Falls, for
guardian/appellant.
Teri Jo Schmitz of Iowa Legal Aid, Waterloo, for appellee.
Considered by Mullins, P.J., and May and Ahlers, JJ.
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AHLERS, Judge.
P.M. was born in 2018. When the child was four months old, the child’s
parents, who lived in Omaha, Nebraska, had the child live with a paternal aunt.
The aunt lives in Waterloo, Iowa. The plan was for this to be a temporary
arrangement of about two weeks. When the two weeks passed, the child’s parents
and aunt agreed that the child would remain in the aunt’s care. A few months later,
the child’s father was deported to Mexico.1 While the exact number and frequency
is disputed, there were communications and visits between the mother and the
child while he was in the aunt’s care. The mother also provided some financial
assistance to the aunt, although the amount is also disputed.
After the child had been living with the aunt for about six months, the mother
tried to have the child returned to her care permanently, but the aunt refused.
Rather than returning the child, the aunt almost immediately started this action
seeking to establish herself as guardian of the child. The mother’s contact with the
child then decreased substantially. Each party blames the other for the decrease.
As it appeared the case was not going to resolve quickly, a pretrial conference was
held at which the parties agreed to entry of an order establishing a temporary
guardianship with the aunt named as temporary guardian and setting a schedule
of times during which the mother could see the child. The schedule was set with
an eye toward not moving too quickly to reintroduce the child to the mother while
trying to facilitate as much contact as possible between the two. In-person,
telephone, and video visits were encouraged.
1 Around fourteen months after being deported, the father was killed in Mexico.
3
Within one and one-half months following the issuance of the temporary
order, the mother filed a contempt application against the aunt for failing to honor
the schedule of visits. After multiple continuances granted based on
representations that the parties believed they could resolve their disputes, the case
eventually went to final hearing on the aunt’s request for establishment of a
permanent guardianship and the mother’s application for contempt. That hearing
was not completed until nearly two years after the child was originally placed in the
aunt’s care and around seventeen months after the guardianship petition was filed.
Following the hearing, the district court found the aunt failed to prove the
elements of Iowa Code section 232D.204(1) and (2) (2020). As a result, the district
court terminated the temporary guardianship and dismissed the aunt’s petition
seeking to establish a permanent guardianship.2 The aunt appeals.
I. Standard of Review
Even though this case started in 2019, it did not reach final hearing until
2020. As a result, it is governed by the 2019 amendments to the Iowa Code
addressing guardianships of minors, as the amendments apply to “guardianships
and guardianship proceedings of minors established or pending before, on, or after
January 1, 2020.” See 2019 Iowa Acts ch. 56, § 45. The amendments removed
all provisions for guardianships of minors from the Iowa Probate Code (Iowa Code
chapter 633) and replaced them with different provisions in newly created Iowa
Code chapter 232D. See 2019 Iowa Acts ch. 56, 57. Following those
amendments, our standard of review when reviewing the establishment or denial
2 The district court also denied the mother’s application for contempt. That part of
the district court’s ruling is not an issue in this appeal.
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of a guardianship of a minor is de novo. In re Guardianship of J.M., No. 20-1638,
2021 WL 4304224, at *2–3 (Iowa Ct. App. Sep. 22, 2021) (summarizing the history
of the amendments and the resulting standard of review). With de novo review,
we are deferential to the district court’s factual findings but are not bound by them,
and we make our own legal conclusions with no deference to the district court’s
conclusions of law. Woods v. Charles Gabus Ford, Inc., 962 N.W.2d 1, 5 (Iowa
2021).
II. Discussion and Analysis
In assessing the aunt’s challenge, we begin with the statutory requirements
she must prove to establish a guardianship for the minor child:
1. The court may appoint a guardian for a minor without the
consent of the parent or parents having legal custody of the minor if
the court finds by clear and convincing evidence all of the following:
a. There is a person serving as a de facto guardian of the
minor.
b. There has been a demonstrated lack of consistent
parental participation in the life of the minor by the parent. In
determining whether a parent has demonstrated a lack of consistent
participation in the minor’s life, the court may consider all of the
following:
(1) The intent of the parent in placing the custody, care,
and supervision of the minor with the person petitioning as a de facto
guardian and the facts and circumstances regarding such
placement.
(2) The amount of communication and visitation of the
parent with the minor during the alleged de facto guardianship.
(3) Any refusal of the parent to comply with conditions for
retaining custody of the minor set forth in any previous court orders.
2. The court may appoint a guardian for a minor without the
consent of the parent or parents having legal custody of the minor if
the court finds by clear and convincing evidence all of the following:
a. No parent having legal custody of the minor is willing or
able to exercise the power the court will grant to the guardian if the
court appoints a guardian.
b. Appointment of a guardian for the minor is in the best
interest of the minor.
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Iowa Code § 232D.204. The aunt contends she proved the elements necessary
to establish a guardianship under both section 232D.204(1) and (2).
A. Guardianship Under Iowa Code Section 232D.204(1)
We start with the aunt’s claim she satisfied section 232D.204(1). In
resolving this claim, we need not decide whether the aunt was serving as a “de
facto guardian”—a term undefined by the statute—because, even if we assume
for the sake of discussion she was, we find she failed to prove “a demonstrated
lack of consistent parental participation in the life of the minor by the [mother].” In
assessing this element, we take into account the permissive considerations listed
in section 232.204(1)(b).
The aunt and the mother agree the initial plan was that the aunt would care
for the child for a couple of weeks, but they later agreed to extend that period,
though still on a temporary basis. Thus, the intent was to establish a temporary
arrangement brought on by turmoil in the mother’s home that eventually included
deportation of the child’s father and his subsequent death. We find there was no
intent by the mother to relinquish custody, care, or supervision of the child on
anything beyond a temporary basis.
While the parties disagree on the amount of communication, the number of
visits, and whether the aunt withheld visits or the mother failed to appear for visits,
prior to initiation of this guardianship action, both women were cordial with each
other and communicated about the child, showing that the mother did not fail to
participate in the child’s life. The mother also contributed to the support of the child
by sending money to the aunt.
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We agree with the district court’s assessment that the mother took
advantage of the aunt’s generosity in caring for the child for a six-month period.
That said, we also agree there was no justification for the aunt to refuse to return
the child at the end of that period. The aunt testified she would like to see the
mother get mental-health treatment and see a change in the mother’s attitude
before the aunt would be willing to return the child. However, there was no
persuasive evidence in the record supporting the need for such requirement, and
it was not the aunt’s place to impose such a requirement before the mother was
entitled to the return of her own son. The evidence established the mother has
other children, they are thriving in the mother’s care, and the mother has a suitable
home for the children. Like the district court, we view the aunt’s intentions in
refusing to return the child in a negative light. The fact the aunt almost immediately
filed an action to establish a guardianship after the mother demanded return of the
child is a strong indication of the aunt’s intentions to keep the child from the mother,
and it helps explain the decrease in communication that followed.
In short, we find the aunt failed to prove “a demonstrated lack of consistent
parental participation in the life of the minor” by the mother. See id.
§ 232D.204(1)(b). Any lack of consistent participation by the mother was caused
by the interference of the aunt. As a result, we reach the same conclusion as the
district court—the aunt failed to establish grounds for guardianship under section
232D.204(1).
B. Guardianship Under Iowa Code Section 232D.204(2)
The aunt also contends she established the grounds for a guardianship
under section 232D.204(2). After our de novo review, we agree with the district
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court that there is no persuasive evidence the mother is unwilling or unable to care
for the child. See id. § 232D.204(2)(a).
As for willingness, we find the mother has maintained contact with the aunt
and the child to the best of her ability given the distance between the parties and
the resistance exerted by the aunt. When notified of this action, she took
reasonable steps to regain custody of her son, including being willing to work with
the aunt to work through a “reintroduction period” before returning the child full
time.
As for ability, there is no evidence the mother is unable to effectively parent
the child. All persuasive evidence was to the contrary.
The aunt failed to meet her burden to establish “[n]o parent having legal
custody of the minor is willing or able to exercise the power the court will grant to
the guardian if the court appoints a guardian” as required by section
232D.204(2)(a). As a result, the district court was correct in denying the aunt’s
petition for guardianship under section 232D.204(2).
III. Conclusion
Having concluded the aunt failed to prove grounds for establishment of a
guardianship under either Iowa Code section 232D.204(1) or (2), we affirm the
district court.
AFFIRMED.