PRISCILLA OWENBY,
Plaintiff,
v
.
McDowell County
No. 00 CVD 440
FRED JOHNSON YOUNG,
Defendant.
Lynch & Taylor, P.A., by Anthony Lynch, for plaintiff-
appellant.
C. Gary Triggs, for defendant-appellee.
GREENE, Judge.
Priscilla Owenby (Plaintiff) appeals a judgment filed 3
January 2001 dismissing her action against Fred Johnson Young
(Defendant) for lack of standing.
In summary form, the undisputed evidence shows Defendant and
Priscilla Price Young (Young), Plaintiff's daughter, were married
on 13 July 1985. During their marriage, Defendant and Young had
two children: Frederick Johnson Young, III (Trey), born on 12 May
1989, and Taylor Patrick Young (Taylor), born on 11 December 1990.
On 25 August 1993, Defendant and Young divorced and custody issues
were settled in a separation agreement, which was later
incorporated into a court order. Defendant and Young had jointcustody of the children, with Young having primary custody and
Defendant having secondary custody, structured as visitation.
After Defendant and Young separated, Young and the children often
lived with Plaintiff. In December 1995 and again on 13 April 2000,
Defendant was convicted of driving while impaired. As a result of
Defendant's second driving while impaired conviction, his driver's
license was revoked.
Subsequently, on 28 April 2000, Young died in a plane crash
and shortly thereafter, on 26 May 2000, Plaintiff filed a complaint
seeking custody of Trey and Taylor. In her complaint, Plaintiff
alleged Defendant was unfit to have care, custody, and control of
Trey and Taylor due to his: lifelong problem with alcohol abuse;
DWI convictions; and employment and economic instability. On the
day Plaintiff filed her complaint, she moved the trial court to
enter an order granting her temporary care, custody, and control of
Trey and Taylor. The trial court entered an ex parte order on 26
May 2000 granting Plaintiff immediate temporary custody of Trey and
Taylor. After Defendant moved the trial court for dissolution of
the 26 May 2000 order, the trial court entered a temporary order on
21 July 2000 incorporating an agreement reached by Plaintiff and
Defendant. The 21 July 2000 order maintained primary custody with
Plaintiff, awarded Defendant visitation of the children, and
further ordered that:
ii. Neither party shall consume
alcohol around the children or permit alcohol
to be consumed by others at their residence
while the children are present.
iii. Neither party shall drive thechildren unless they are properly licensed by
the state of North Carolina; neither party
will permit another to drive the minor
children except those licensed, insured and
driving a properly registered vehicle.
A two-day hearing was held on 7 and 18 December 2000 to
determine if Plaintiff had standing to seek custody of Trey and
Taylor. The trial court stated Plaintiff's burden was to show
[Defendant] to be unfit or in some other way to have acted . . . in
a [manner] inconsistent with the parental relationships. At the
hearing, Defendant testified he has driven while impaired and has
also driven without a license. At times, Defendant has operated
a vehicle[] and consumed alcohol at the same time. Defendant also
testified that while he knew it was wrong, he has allowed others to
drive his children in the recent past while the individuals were
consuming alcohol. According to Defendant, the children have spent
a significant part of their lives in McDowell County, living either
with or in proximity to Plaintiff.
Both Trey and Taylor testified they often smelled alcohol on
Defendant's breath. Trey stated that on several instances in the
past, he has ridden in a vehicle with Defendant while Defendant
drank beer. In addition, Trey's paternal uncle, while drinking,
has driven Trey, Taylor, and Defendant to Charlotte.
Taylor testified that on more than one occasion, he has ridden
in a car with Defendant while Defendant and others consumed alcohol
while driving. On one occasion, when the children's paternal uncle
was drinking alcohol and driving, the children were involved in an
automobile accident but were not severely injured. Taylor statedthat he did not feel good about riding with his father because he
was afraid [Defendant] might . . . [drink] and [they] would get in
a wreck again. Both children testified that when Defendant drinks
alcohol, he becomes upset and agitated with Trey and Taylor. The
two minor children were aware Defendant's driver's license was
suspended, he often operated a vehicle while drinking alcohol or
being under its influence, and Defendant operated a vehicle on
several occasions while his license had been revoked.
After the hearing, the trial court concluded:
2. The burden of proof is on the non-parent
to show the existence of the factual basis for
a conclusion of unfitness or neglect.
. . . .
4. The facts found on the threshold issue do
not make out a prima facie case that as a
matter of law [D]efendant is unfit to act as a
parent, or that he has so neglected his
responsibilities as a parent as to constitute
a waiver of his rights to raise his own
children.
5. Plaintiff, having failed to make out a
prima facie case that [D]efendant is unfit or
neglectful or that he has otherwise acted
inconsistent with the parental relationship,
has no standing to maintain an action against
[D]efendant for custody of his minor children.
Consistent with its findings of fact and conclusions of law, the
trial court dismissed Plaintiff's action for lack of standing and
dissolved the temporary custody order.
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