FIRST DIVISION
BARNES, P. J.,
MCMILLIAN and MERCIER, JJ.
NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be
physically received in our clerk’s office within ten
days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed.
http://www.gaappeals.us/rules
September 15, 2017
In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
A17A1079. HILL et al. v. ILES.
MCMILLIAN, Judge.
Willie and Yvonne Hill, the maternal grandparents of K. L., a minor child,
appeal the trial court’s award of sole legal custody of K. L. to her father, Gerren Iles
(“Father”). The Hills assert that the trial court erred in awarding Father sole legal
custody of K. L. because (1) the only issue before the trial court was Father’s motion
to vacate the Hills’ guardianship of K. L. and (2) K. L.’s mother (“Mother”) was not
given notice of the pending action or hearing date.1 For the reasons that follow, we
vacate and remand.
We review a trial court’s order regarding a change in custody or visitation for
an abuse of discretion. Jackson v. Sanders, 333 Ga. App. 544, 558 (5) (773 SE2d
1
Father has not filed a response brief on appeal.
835) (2015). However, whether a trial court is authorized to modify custody is a
question of law, and we owe no deference to the trial court’s ruling. See Hammonds
v. Park, 319 Ga. App. 792, 794 (3) (735 SE2d 801) (2012).
The limited record shows that K. L. was born in 2007. Father was not listed on
the birth certificate. Father and Mother later married in 2008 and moved to Texas to
live with Father’s parents. In 2009, Mother took K. L. to Georgia, and in 2010,
Mother sent K. L. to live with the Hills. In July 2012, with Mother’s consent, the Hills
filed a petition for temporary letters of guardianship of K. L. in the Probate Court of
Walton County. Because the Hills alleged that Father’s address was unknown, he was
served by publication.2 The probate court then granted the Hills’ petition.
Just over two years later, in August 2014, Father filed a motion to vacate the
order granting the temporary letters of guardianship. Father also attempted to
introduce the results of a DNA test indicating he was the biological father of K. L.
The Hills objected to Father’s motion, and Father later moved for a judgment on the
pleadings. On May 12, 2015, the probate court denied Father’s motion, finding that,
although the marriage of the mother and biological father of a child born out of
2
There appears to have been uncertainty for some time as to whether Father
was K. L.’s biological father.
2
wedlock and recognition of the child by the father shall render the child legitimate,
the father must still prove he is the biological father. The probate court further found
that the DNA report was insufficient to establish that Father was K. L.’s biological
father because the report did not include a client identification form or chain of
custody.
Father timely appealed to the Superior Court of Walton County. In June 2016,
the trial court held a hearing and found the chain of evidence for Father’s initial DNA
test was inadequate and ordered that a new test be completed. During a later hearing
in October 2016, Father’s paternity was confirmed.3 The trial court then issued an
order terminating the Hills’ temporary letters of guardianship, granting Father full
legal custody of K. L., and providing for Father’s visitation with K. L. until she
finished the remainder of the school semester in Georgia. This appeal followed.4
1. In their first enumeration of error, the Hills assert that the trial court was not
authorized to award custody to Father because the only issue before the trial court
3
The trial court also confirmed that, although Mother and Father had lived in
separate states since 2009, they were still legally married.
4
On appeal, the Hills contest only that portion of the trial court’s order granting
full legal custody to Father and do not challenge the termination of the letters of
guardianship.
3
was Father’s appeal of the denial of his motion to vacate the temporary letters of
guardianship. Georgia law is clear that any complaint seeking to obtain legal custody
of a child “shall be brought as a separate action.” OCGA § 19-9-23 (a). See also
Hammonds, 319 Ga. App. at 794 (3) (mother’s oral motion for change in custody
failed to meet requirements of OCGA § 19-9-23 where it was brought in response to
a contempt petition and not in the county where father resides); Whitlock v. Barrett,
158 Ga. App. 100, 102-03 (279 SE2d 244) (1981) (“we know of no authority for a
superior court to, sua sponte, change the nature of a case from one involving an
application for letters of guardianship to one involving a parent’s right to custody
over her child”). Accordingly, it was error for the trial court to grant a change in
custody, and we therefore vacate that portion of the trial court’s order. See
Hammonds, 319 Ga. App. at 795 (3).
2. Based on our holding in Division 1, we need not reach the Hills’ second
enumeration of error.
Judgment vacated and case remanded. Barnes, P. J., concurs. Mercier, J.,
concurs specially.
In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
A17A1079. HILL et al. v. ILES.
MERCIER, Judge, concurring specially.
While I concur fully with the majority opinion, I write separately to further
explain my analysis of this case.
Relying on the facts as outlined in the majority, it is undisputed that the mother
and father are still legally married and, other than the temporary guardianship at issue
in this case, it does not appear from the record that there has been any other
proceeding that, as of yet, ascertained and declared that either parent had lost or given
up any custodial rights to the child or, in the alternative, that one parent has a superior
custody right over the other parent or a specified third party. Therefore, it necessarily
follows that once the trial court determined that the temporary guardianship should
be terminated, custody would be returned to the parents as both are still the natural
guardians of the child. See Whitlock v. Barrett, 158 Ga. App. 100, 103 (279 SE2d
244) (1981). Therefore, the most the trial court could have done would have been to
return full custody to both parents. Any delineation of custody and/or visitation
2
between the parents or to a third party would have exceeded the trial court’s authority.
See id. (finding that “neither the probate court of that county nor the superior court
hearing an appeal from the probate court had the jurisdiction to appoint a guardian
over the person of the child so long as the appellant’s [i.e., the natural mother’s] right
to custody and her status as natural guardian is beyond question. The loss of that right
and that status must have been ascertained and declared in an authorized proceeding
under law.”).
Significantly, the maternal grandparents did not appeal the trial court’s decision
to terminate the guardianship and, based on the record, they did not clearly object
when the trial court announced its intention to terminate the guardianship. Rather,
when the court made that announcement, the grandparents responded that their only
request was that if the court was “entering an order” designating the child’s placement
that day, that the child would stay “where she is, where she’s been.” The
grandparents stated that “there’s no reason today’s not set for a temporary hearing on
the custody issue.” The grandparents then asked the court to appoint a guardian ad
litem “to make sure the child should be with [the father] but if so[,] then the
transition,” adding that the appointment would ensure “that this child . . . is not
uprooted from the only home she remembers and moved.” The court replied that it
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would appoint a guardian ad litem, but not necessarily to help with a “transition.”
The court thereafter discussed with the parties various custody and visitation matters,
which discussion the grandparents participated in without voicing any objection.
In short, the grandparents tacitly asked the trial court to address the custody
issue of which they complain on appeal, with the end result being that they got
exactly what they requested – the blurring of the instant guardianship case with a
separate custody action. See Graybill v. Attaway Construction & Assocs., 341 Ga.
App. 805, 808-809 (1) (_ SE2d _) (2017) (a party cannot participate and acquiesce
in a trial court’s procedure and then complain of it); Oglethorpe Power Corp. v.
Estate of Forrister, 332 Ga. App. 693, 699 (2) (b) (774 SE2d 755) (2015) (a party
cannot be heard to complain on appeal of error induced by his own conduct, nor to
complain of errors expressly invited by him at trial).
4