In re D.T.

Skoglund, J.

Mother appeals from a family court decision that held D.T. is a child in need of care and supervision (CHINS). She claims that the family court did not have jurisdiction under the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Act (UCCJA) over the merits of the CHINS proceeding. She further claims that the court’s determination that D.T. was a child in need of care or supervision was unsupported by the court’s findings and that the findings of the court have no support in the record. Father joins in mother’s appeal. Although we conclude that the trial court failed to make adequate findings in deciding the jurisdictional issue, we nonetheless affirm because the record contains sufficient evidence to support a finding of jurisdiction. We affirm the determination of CHINS as well.

When D.T. was ten weeks old, he was taken into protective custody by the Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services (SRS) after he was hospitalized for bronchial distress. At the detention hearing, both mother and father agreed to temporary custody with SRS. See 38 V.S.A. § 5502(a)(12)(B). Prior to the merits hearing, parents filed *150a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction on the basis that Vermont was not the child’s home state under the UCCJA. See 15 V.S.A. § 1032(a)(1). The State did not argue that Vermont was the home state; rather, it posited that the court had jurisdiction under 15 V.S.A. § 1032(a)(2), i.e., that it would be in the best interest of the child for a court in Vermont to assume jurisdiction based on the child’s and the parents’ significant connection with this state and because substantial evidence concerning the child’s present or future care and protection was available here. For purposes of deciding the jurisdictional issue, the parents agreed that the court could consider the facts alleged in the affidavits submitted in the case, but reserved the right to contest certain allegations of abuse and neglect. They further stipulated that they were in Vermont temporarily, but had not decided to leave.

The affidavits informed the court of the following. D.T. was born prematurely on April 9,1998, in Worcester, Massachusetts, weighing only 2.2 pounds. D.T. remained hospitalized on a ventilator for two months prior to his being released to the parents on June 9, 1998. Mother, father and child left directly from the hospital to Vermont where they had arranged to live temporarily with father’s ex-wife. Based on a referral from the Massachusetts hospital, services had been prearranged for the family. On the evening of the family’s arrival in Vermont (the four hour trip took the family eight and one-half hours to complete), the child was seen by a home health nurse. Home health nurses came daily to check D.T.’s condition, to give instruction to the parents on the specialized care D.T. required, including the need for a respiratory monitor and to reinforce previous training. The home health nurses determined that the baby lost two ounces in his first twenty-four hours out of the hospital. A healthy-baby coordinator also had daily contact with the parents and the child. On June 16,1998, D.T. was hospitalized due to respiratory problems, and was then under the care of a physician.

The affidavits noted that father’s two children with his ex-wife had previously been taken into SRS custody in Vermont, and that his parental rights to these children were terminated by a Vermont court. No evidence was presented to the court concerning the parents’ ties to Massachusetts, except for the undisputed fact that the child was hospitalized there for the first nine weeks of his life. One affidavit further alleged that mother has three other children that the State of New York took into custody in 1985.

On June 18,1998, SRS took custody of D.T. and filed a CHINS petition. The court held a detention hearing the following day. The *151sole purpose of a detention hearing is to determine if continued detention is in the child’s best interest and welfare. See S3 V.S.A. § 5515(a). The court continued detention, and the parents agreed to SRS’s temporary custody of D.T. The child remained in the hospital. The parents were appointed counsel and filed a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction in response to the State’s CHINS petition, arguing only that Vermont was not D.T.’s “home state.” On July 22,1998, the court held a hearing, at which no evidence was taken. The court ruled from the bench based on the stipulated facts, concluding that it could exercise jurisdiction under either the significant-connections provision or the emergency provision of the UCCJA. See 15 V.S.A. § 1032(a)(2), (a)(3). SRS specifically requested that the court assert jurisdiction solely under the significant-connections provision of the UCCJA, but the court declined to do so. It found that the petition alleged an emergency situation and that there were sufficient contacts to exercise jurisdiction because: (1) the child was in the state and receiving medical treatment, (2) the parents were in the state, (3) the court was not informed of any proceeding pending in another state, (4) the court was not aware of any other state that would “have a better grasp” of the case (by which we assume the judge meant that no other state had more substantial evidence concerning the child’s situation), and (5) no other state would be a more convenient forum.

A hearing on the merits of the CHINS petition was held on September 1 and November 10,1998. On February 2,1999, the court issued an order finding D.T. was CHINS. Following a motion on behalf of D.T. to correct judgment, the court amended the judgment to correct mother’s name and to clarify that the findings were made by a preponderance of the evidence. Mother appeals. Father has joined mother’s brief. D.T. has joined SRS’s brief.

Mother argues that, under the UCCJA, the family court did not have jurisdiction to proceed to the merits of the CHINS proceeding. The UCCJA specifically includes neglect and dependency proceedings, such as CHINS proceedings, under the definition of “custody proceedings.” See 15 V.S.A. § 1031(3). It provides four bases for jurisdiction to make a child custody determination. See In re A.L.H., 160 Vt. 410, 413, 630 A.2d 1288, 1290 (1993). Under the UCCJA, Vermont has jurisdiction if: (1) Vermont is the “home state” of the child, or (2) Vermont jurisdiction is in the child’s best interest because the child and at least one contestant have significant connection to Vermont and there is substantial evidence in Vermont concerning the child’s present or future care, or (3) the child is present in Vermont *152and needs emergency protection, or (4) no other state would have jurisdiction under (1), (2) or (3) or another state has declined jurisdiction because Vermont is a more appropriate forum to determine custody and it is in the best interest of the child to do so. See 15 V.S.A. § 1032(a).

SRS contends that Vermont may exercise jurisdiction under subsections (1), (2) or (3). Under subsection (1), the issue is whether Vermont was D.T.’s “home state” at the time of the commencement of the proceeding. See 15 V.S.A. § 1032(a)(1). “[I]n the case of a child less than six months old,” the “home state” is “the state in which the child lived from birth” with “his parents, a parent, or a person acting as parent.” 15 V.S.A. § 1031(5). Vermont is not D.T.’s “home state” because he did not live in Vermont “from birth.” See In re Cifarelli, 158 Vt. 249, 253, 611 A.2d 394, 397 (1992) (Vermont is not “home state” of five-month-old child born in Bermuda, taken to New York for two weeks and then moved to Vermont because child did not five in Vermont “from birth” to commencement of proceeding); see also Parental Kidnapping Prevention Act (PKPA), 28 U.S.C. § 1738A(b)(4) (1989) (defining “home state”). We need not decide whether Massachusetts would qualify as D.T.’s home state because, unlike PKPA, Vermont’s UCCJA does not give preference to the “home state.”1 Under Vermont’s UCCJA, there is no preference for one jurisdictional ground over another. See Shute v. Shute, 158 Vt. 242, 247, 607 A.2d 890, 893 (1992).

Under subsection (2), Vermont has jurisdiction if it is in the best interest of the child for Vermont to assume jurisdiction because the child and at least one contestant have significant connections to Vermont and there is substantial evidence concerning the child’s present and future care in Vermont. See 15 V.S.A. § 1032(a)(2). At the time the court asserted jurisdiction in this case, the only facts before *153it were those alleged in the affidavit filed with the petition and the parties’ stipulation that the parents and D.T. were temporarily living in Vermont and had not decided to leave. The court found that Vermont had sufficient contacts to exercise jurisdiction under this subsection because the child was in Vermont and receiving medical treatment, the parents were in Vermont, and the court was not aware of any proceeding pending in another state or of any other state that would “have a better grasp” of the situation or be a more convenient forum. We conclude that these findings are insufficient to support jurisdiction under subsection (2).

The court did have evidence before it from which it could determine that the child and at least one contestant had significant connections with this state and that substantial evidence concerning the child’s present or future care, protection, and personal relationships were available in Vermont. The child was ten weeks old when he was taken into custody. He had spent nine days in Vermont. It is difficult to conceive that a ten-week old child can have “significant connections” to a state. A court has to evaluate the situation presented, however, and in the case of a ten-week old infant, a court could find that, in unique circumstances, the requisite connection to a state has been met. Further, the court below had before it evidence that father had two children taken into custody in Vermont from a previous relationship, and that he and mother had intended to reside in Vermont, at least temporarily, when they brought the child into this state.

On the question of whether substantial evidence was available in Vermont, the affidavits showed that home health nurses had seen the child every day he was in the care of his parents while in Vermont, that a healthy-baby coordinator had seen the child and the parents every day since the family moved to Vermont, and, significantly, that Vermont was the only state wherein the parents had provided care for this child while not in a supervised hospital setting. Evidence concerning the child’s “present care” was obviously fresh in Vermont. Finally, the affidavits indicated that the child’s medical records, or at least the hospital discharge summary, had been transferred to Vermont as part of the Massachusetts agency’s attempt to facilitate the parents’ move to Vermont with D.T.

Despite this evidence in the record, the court did nothing more than to state the grounds required by the statute. It failed to make findings that would support jurisdiction. Further, the court apparently based its finding of jurisdiction, in part, on the absence of any proceeding in another state. The absence of a proceeding in another *154state, see 15 V.S.A. § 1035 (simultaneous proceedings in other states), and the determination of the appropriate forum, see 15 V.S.A. § 1036 (inconvenient or inappropriate forum), are not considered in the court’s determination that it may exercise jurisdiction under one of the four subsections of § 1032(a).2 If a court decides that it has jurisdiction under § 1032, it must then consider issues raised in those sections. Further, the UCCJA does not require one state’s “substantial contacts” to be weighed against another state’s “substantial contacts” for a state to have jurisdiction. See In re Adoption of Child by T.W.C., 636 A.2d 1083, 1089 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 1994). Therefore, the court’s findings that no other proceedings were pending in another state, that no other state would “have a better grasp,” and that no other state would be a more convenient forum were extraneous.

We are therefore left with two statements by the court to support its jurisdictional determination: that the child was in the state and receiving medical treatment and that the parents were in the state. The child and one of the contestants’ physical presence in the state is not by itself sufficient to confer jurisdiction on a court of this state to make a child custody determination, except under subdivisions (3) or (4) of subsection (a). See 15 V.S.A. § 1032(b). That the child was receiving medical treatment in Vermont provides a significant connection and a source of substantial evidence, but the court’s mere notice of this fact cannot save the failure of the findings overall.

Although the court’s findings are not adequate to support its conclusion regarding jurisdiction, the record here supported a finding of jurisdiction under 15 V.S.A. § 1032(a)(2) of the UCCJA. In light of the undisputed facts, summarized above, there is no sound or constructive reason to remand to the family court so it may make additional findings to support its conclusion. In these circumstances, a remand would amount to nothing more than an empty formality. Hence, we affirm. See Gochey v. Bombardier, Inc., 153 Vt. 607, 613, 572 A.2d 921, 925 (1990) (we “may affirm a correct judgment even though the grounds stated in support of it are erroneous”); see also *155Hanley v. United Steel Workers of America, 119 Vt. 187, 192, 122 A.2d 872, 875 (1956) (“We affirm the ruling on any legal ground shown by the record . . . .”).

Though we affirm the court’s jurisdiction under § 1032(a)(2), we address the question raised by the State’s claim that jurisdiction exists pursuant to § 1032(a)(3). Under subsection (3), Vermont has jurisdiction if “the child is physically present in this state” and “it is necessary in an emergency to protect the child.” 15 V.S.A. § 1032(a)(3). The court found that it could exercise jurisdiction under this provision in addition to subsection (2). Mother does not dispute that the court had jurisdiction under this emergency provision at the commencement of the proceeding; rather, she contends that the jurisdiction conferred under subsection (3) allows the court to enter only a temporary custody order until the jurisdiction issue is resolved. She maintains that the court cannot proceed to the merits and disposition of the ease under subsection (3) emergency jurisdiction. We agree.

This issue was addressed in In re A.L.H., in which we held that a Vermont court exercising temporary emergency jurisdiction under the UCCJA cannot proceed to make a permanent custody decision. See 160 Vt. at 413, 630 A.2d at 1291. In A.L.H., we recognized that subsection (3) allowed Vermont to enter only a temporary custody order until the proper forum was determined. See id. at 415-16, 630 A.2d at 1291-92. To allow a CHINS proceeding to continue on the basis of emergency jurisdiction alone would undermine the purposes of the UCCJA to assure that litigation concerning child custody takes place in the state with the most significant connections because emergency jurisdiction requires only the presence of the child and an emergency. See id. In sum, subsection (3) emergency jurisdiction allowed the court to enter a temporary custody order while the jurisdictional issue was being resolved, but cannot provide the jurisdictional basis for the merits decision here.

SRS contends that In re B.C., 169 Vt. 1, 6, 726 A.2d 45, 49-50 (1999), holds that Vermont may decide CHINS merits and initial disposition orders under subsection (3) emergency jurisdiction because neither is a permanent custody order. B.C. was an appeal from an order terminating parental rights in which the mother argued that the underlying merits and initial disposition orders were void for lack of jurisdiction and, therefore, could not be the basis for the termination proceeding. The mother had failed to appeal the merits and disposition orders and thus could prevail only if she satisfied V.R.C.P. *15660(b)(4) to obtain relief from a final judgment. We held that the mother had not shown that either order was void for lack of subject matter jurisdiction because the family courts have exclusive jurisdiction over CHINS proceedings and the UCCJA imposes only territorial limits on the court’s exercise of jurisdiction, which cannot be challenged under V.R.C.P. 60(b)(4). See id. at 7, 726 A.2d at 50.

We further noted that the court could have exercised jurisdiction under subsection (3), the emergency provision of the UCCJA, because the merits and initial disposition were not permanent custody orders. We now clarify that discussion. A decision from the merits hearing makes no award of custody, permanent or otherwise. It is an adjudication that a child is or is not in need of care or supervision pursuant to 33 V.S.A. § 5502(a)(12). Following an adjudication of CHINS, the court may continue any detention or temporary care theretofore ordered in the case, pending a disposition hearing. See 33 V.S.A. §§ 5514, 5515, 5526, 5527. A disposition hearing is a continuation of the juvenile proceeding begun with the merits hearing. In a disposition order, the court may permit the child to remain with his parents, guardian, or custodian, place the child under protective supervision, or transfer legal custody or guardianship over the child to certain named individuals and entities, including the commissioner of SRS. Thus, a disposition hearing results in an award of custody that is “permanent,” at least until further order of the court. We hold that a court exercising emergency jurisdiction may not enter a final order on the merits and disposition in a CHINS proceeding.

Mother also claims that the record does not support the trial court’s findings and, alternatively, that the facts fail to support the court’s determination of CHINS. The issue before the family court at the merits stage of a CHINS proceeding is a determination of whether, at the time of the filing of the petition, the juvenile is a child in need of care and supervision. See 33 V.S.A. § 5526(a); In re R.L., 148 Vt. 223, 227, 531 A.2d 909, 911 (1987) (quoting In re L.S., 147 Vt. 36, 38, 509 A.2d 1017, 1019 (1986)). The State has the burden of proving, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the child is in need of care and supervision. See In re M.B., 158 Vt. 63, 70, 605 A.2d 515, 519 (1992). The trial court’s findings will stand unless clearly erroneous, and its conclusions of law will be upheld if supported by the findings. See In re M.C.P., 153 Vt. 275, 295, 571 A.2d 627, 633 (1989).

In its decision, the trial court found that the premature infant, weighing 2.2 pounds at birth, lost weight he could not afford to lose *157during the lengthy trip from Massachusetts to Vermont; that mother did not feed the child on demand as instructed by the Massachusetts hospital at discharge; that she let the child cry for long periods of time, making no effort to pick him up or feed him; that she cursed at the baby; that she did not love or cuddle the child; that neither parent had the ability to recognize the special needs of their child nor to plan to meet those needs; that father did not give the required attention to his son and that the parents’ lack of planning had rendered them homeless. The court also found that mother had lost children to Massachusetts agencies because of past alcohol problems and because she was unable to protect her children from sexual abuse. The court further found that father suffered from bi-polar disorder, seizures, and anger problems. Finally, the court found that the parents were blaming their homeless situation on both the pediatrician attending D.T. and SRS, which was involved in the family life of father’s former wife. The court ultimately concluded that, “in June of 1998, D.T. was a child in need of care and supervision, as the parents were unable to meet his special needs.”

Mother challenges only certain portions of the decision as lacking factual support. She disputes the evidence regarding the special needs of the child and the parents’ feeding and attention to the child, arguing that the evidence showed that the child gained weight during his first week in Vermont and that any evidence that D.T. lost weight on the trip to Vermont was in dispute. The fact that D.T. gained weight during his first week in Vermont while under the watchful eye of home health nurses does not cast doubt on the court’s findings concerning the care the parents provided the child. The fact that mother testified that the nurse lied in her testimony before the court about D.T. losing weight on the trip to Vermont is also not dispositive on that issue. As we have stated often, credibility of the witnesses is a matter for the trier of fact to judge. See In re Con-Elec Corp., 168 Vt. 576, 577, 716 A.2d 822, 824 (1998). “Due regard shall be given to the opportunity of the trial court to judge of the credibility of the witnesses and the weight of the evidence.” V.R.C.P. 52(a)(2). Mother further challenges these findings because of testimony provided at the November 10 hearing to the effect that D.T. no longer needed a monitor, was doing well at that time, and weighed twelve pounds four ounces. The fact that the child was doing well in November does not discredit the court’s findings that, as of June 1998, D.T. had special needs his parents were unable to meet.

*158Further, mother herself testified that the chaotic living situation at father’s former wife’s house was taking its toll on the family. She was afraid she could not perform CPR on the child by herself, and that she was left alone to do so every night because the child’s father and ex-wife both took their medication in the evening. She had a history of substance abuse and told service providers that the stressful living situation was placing her at risk of drinking again. The Vermont care providers noted little, if any, bonding between the parents and D.T. The court’s findings on the issues of parents’ attention paid to D.T. and their ability to attend to his nutritional and nurturing needs are not clearly erroneous and are supported in the record.

Mother also claims that the court’s findings regarding the prior terminations of her other children and of father’s “disabilities” were inadequate to support the CHINS determination because the court did not directly link them to D.T. We have held that “[wjhether treatment of one child is probative of neglect or abuse of a sibling must be determined on the basis of the facts of each case.” In re D.P., 147 Vt. 26, 30, 510 A.2d 967, 970 (1986). We agree that, beyond finding the facts above, neither of which is disputed by mother or father, the court did not articulate what bearing, if any, such facts had on the CHINS decision. Because we find adequate support in the record and in the court’s findings concerning the parents’ abilities to care for D.T. and his special needs in June of 1998, the failure of the court to connect these facts to its decision concerning the parents’ ability to care for D.T. does not require reversal for more adequate findings.

The credible evidence in this case amply supports the trial court’s findings and determination that in June of 1998, D.T. was a child in need of care and supervision.

Affirmed.

The parties have not argued that the PKPA, a federal act with jurisdictional criteria similar to the UCCJA, which requires states to give full faith and credit to child custody determinations made by other states, applies to this case. We note that this Court has not determined whether it applies to dependency and neglect proceedings, and, as we have previously observed, courts are divided on the issue. See In re A.L.H., 160 Vt. at 413 n.2, 630 at A.2d at 1290 n.2 (collecting cases); Annotation, What Types of Proceedings or Determinations are Governed by the Uniform Child, Custody Jurisdiction Act (UCCJA) or the Parental Kidnapping Prevention Act (PKPA), 78 A.L.R.4th 1028 (1990) (same). This case does not squarely present the issue because the PKPA applies only where a decree already exists or where custody proceedings have commenced in another state, which is not the instant case. See 28 U.S.C. § 1738A (1989); State ex rel. R.P. v. Rosen, 966 S.W.2d 292, 299 n.2 (Mo. Ct. App. 1998).

The dissent miscontrues this holding. For purposes of determining jurisdiction, a court does not need to weigh its state’s connections against those of another. It either has jurisdiction or it does not. The provisions of the UCCJA relevant to inconvenient forum and situations in which a custody proceeding is pending in another state are not factors in the determination of the discrete issue of a court’s jurisdiction. This is particularly evident when the case does not set parent against parent but is brought by the State alleging child neglect and dependency.