DAVID, Justice.
For the first forty-five months of her life, B.C.H. remained in the primary care, custody, and control of her maternal grandparents T.H. and C.H. ("Grandparents"). Unmarried at the time of B.C.H.'s birth, her mother R.H. ("Mother") would visit her daughter about once a week. Later, Mother began keeping B.C.H. at her apartment one day and night per week, and when Mother married K.J. ("Stepfather"), these visits increased to twice
Indiana Code § 31-19-2.5-3 (effective 2012) requires that legal notice of an adoption petition be given to a "person whose consent to adoption is required under I.C. 31-19-9-1." Under Ind.Code § 31-19-9-1(a) (effective 2012), "a petition to adopt a child who is less than eighteen (18) years of age may be granted only if written consent to adoption has been executed by... (3) [e]ach person, agency, or local office having lawful custody of the child whose adoption is being sought." (Emphasis added.) Neither the adoption statutes nor case law defines "lawful custody" in this context. Therefore, we must interpret the term "lawful custody" and resolve whether B.C.H.'s maternal grandparents had lawful custody of her at the time the adoption petition was filed, thus requiring them to be given legal notice of the adoption petition and an opportunity to withhold consent to her adoption.
On November 29, 2007, B.C.H. was born to seventeen-year-old R.H. (now R.J.) in Johnson County, Indiana. Mother was not married to her daughter's biological father. At the time of B.C.H.'s birth, Mother attended high school, worked at Ruby Tuesday's, and lived independently. Approximately five days after her birth, B.C.H. began staying with her maternal grandparents, T.H. and C.H. For about a month, Mother saw B.C.H. daily. However, Mother soon stopped visiting her daughter on a regular basis. From this time on, the Grandparents served nearly exclusively as the little girl's caregivers. She remained in their primary care, custody, and control until September 4, 2011.
By early 2008, Mother was only visiting her daughter approximately once per week, despite living nearby. Her visits typically lasted between two and four hours, some of which she spent asleep. She had little to no contact with her daughter in between visits.
In February 2008, Mother initiated paternity proceedings in the Johnson County Juvenile Court. On May 23, 2008, the Juvenile Court issued an order establishing paternity
By February 2010, Mother had begun keeping then-two-year-old B.C.H. at her apartment one day and night per week. But despite living near her parents and
Sometime during 2010, Mother married Stepfather. On November 29, 2010, Stepfather, with Mother's consent, filed a petition to adopt B.C.H. in the Johnson County Superior Court. The Grandparents were not served with formal notice of Stepfather's petition to adopt their granddaughter, who continued to reside with them. They were, however, aware of the pending adoption and voiced their adamant opposition to Mother. She assured them that Stepfather's adoption of B.C.H. would not impact their rearing of their granddaughter.
Mother's pattern of weekly visits continued past the adoption filing date until January 3, 2011, when Mother gave birth to a daughter with Stepfather. After her second child's birth, Mother did not see B.C.H. for about a month. Later in 2011, Mother began keeping B.C.H. for two days and nights per week. Until this time, Mother had never cared for her daughter more than two nights per week.
On August 15, 2011, Stepfather's adoption of B.C.H. was finalized.
Ten days after Mother removed B.C.H. from their care, the Grandparents filed a motion seeking custody in the Johnson County Juvenile Court and claiming to be de facto custodians of the girl,
Armed with the Juvenile Court's decree, the Grandparents filed a motion in the Johnson County Superior Court to reopen B.C.H.'s adoption and to intervene. In their motion, the Grandparents argued that under Indiana's adoption statute they had "lawful custody" of their granddaughter when the court granted Stepfather's adoption petition, so they were entitled to legal notice of and the opportunity to consent to her adoption. Additionally, the Grandparents requested that the court allow them access to the transcript of the adoption proceedings in order for them to determine whether to file an Indiana Trial Rule 60(B) motion.
Granting limited relief, the court permitted the Grandparents to file a Rule (60)B motion in order to determine: (1) whether a de facto custodian, not acting pursuant to a court order, is a "lawful custodian" under Ind.Code § 31-19-9-1(a)(3); and (2) if so, whether the Grandparents' consent to B.C.H.'s adoption was required under Ind. Code § 31-19-9-1(a)(3). Subsequently, the Grandparents filed both a Trial Rule
After a hearing, the Superior Court issued an order denying the Grandparents' motion for relief from judgment. Interpreting "lawful custody" within Ind.Code § 31-19-9-1(a)(3) to mean that "custody rights have been establish by court order and the common law right of custody of the parent terminated," the court determined that the grandparents did not have custody of B.C.H. at the time Stepfather filed the adoption petition. (App. at 11.) As such, they were not entitled to notice of their granddaughter's pending adoption, and their consent to her adoption was not required by law. Additionally, the court denied the Grandparents' motion to correct error due to their lack of standing and untimeliness.
The Grandparents appealed, and the Court of Appeals affirmed the Superior Court. In the Matter of the Adoption of B.C.H., a Minor, 7 N.E.3d 1000, 1008 (Ind. Ct.App.2014) (Mathias, J., concurring in result). We granted transfer, thereby vacating the opinion below. See Ind. Appellate Rule 58(A); In the Matter of the Adoption of B.C.H., a Minor, 14 N.E.3d 44 (table) (Ind.2014).
Our task is two-fold. First, we must interpret the meaning of the term "lawful custody" under Ind.Code § 31-19-9-1(a)(3). We review matters of statutory interpretation de novo because they present pure questions of law. Gardiner v. State, 928 N.E.2d 194, 196 (Ind.2010) (citation omitted). Once we determine what constitutes "lawful custody," we will analyze whether the Grandparents had lawful custody of their granddaughter at the time the adoption petition was filed, thus entitling them to both legal notice of the adoption petition and an opportunity to withhold consent to her adoption.
To the Grandparents, the term "lawful custody" in Ind.Code § 31-19-9-1(a)(3) encompasses "those who meet the statutory definition of a de facto custodian at the time a [p]etition for [a]doption is brought ([i.e.,]
Acknowledging that it faced a question of statutory interpretation, the Court of Appeals majority deemed the modifier "lawful" to be "ambiguous and susceptible to multiple interpretations."
Though he concurred with his colleagues in result, Judge Mathias disagreed with the majority's interpretation of "lawful custody." Examining the plain meaning of "lawful" via dictionary definitions, Judge Mathias interpreted the term broadly: "being in harmony with the law" or "[a]ccording or not contrary to law, permitted by law." Id. at 1008 (citing Merriam-Webster and the Oxford English Dictionaries, respectively).
Upon our review of the plain and ordinary meaning of "lawful custody," we agree with Judge Mathias. Put simply, "lawful" means "not contrary to law." See BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY (9th ed. 2009) ("[n]ot contrary to law"; "permitted by law"). Moreover, just because the trial court interpreted the term differently than Black's Law Dictionary does not make its meaning ambiguous. "Lawful" custody means just that — custody that is not unlawful.
We think the General Assembly used the term "lawful" to exclude from consideration a person who illegally absconds with a child. Once we understand what falls out of the definition of "lawful," it is apparent that there are many sources of potential lawful custody that span the spectrum from court-ordered custody of a child to de facto custodianship to informal caretaking arrangements, to name a few.
Our interpretation of "lawful custody" within Ind.Code § 31-19-9-1(a)(3) therefore encompasses more circumstances and familial arrangements than court-ordered legal custody.
The General Assembly's deliberate choice to require those with lawful custody of a child to be given notice of and an opportunity to withhold consent to the child's adoption likely reflects its policy judgment that, in determining whether the adoption is in the child's best interests, trial courts should hear from the party
Additionally, the General Assembly's conscious choice to include the term "lawful" over "legal," and thus broaden who must be given notice of and an opportunity to consent to a child's adoption, is likely responsive to the changing needs of our society and its increasingly diverse familial arrangements. As an example, the Grandparents cite the 2009 U.S. Census findings that 7.8 million children live with at least one grandparent, a sixty-four percent increase from 1991. (Appellant's Br. at 21-22.) In a society where children are cared for and parented by adults without court-ordered custody rights, trial judges conducting adoption proceedings must hear from every party with a significant and substantial connection to the child(ren) in order to gain as much relevant information as possible about the child(ren)'s best interests.
As implied above, these cases are necessarily fact sensitive and must be decided on a case-by-case basis. For each particular case, courts must look to the circumstances at hand to determine if a party is in fact a lawful custodian of a child under Ind.Code § 31-19-9-1(a)(3). We now examine whether the Grandparents, B.C.H.'s primary caregivers for the first three years and nine months of her life, were her lawful custodians on the date Stepfather filed his petition for her adoption.
The Grandparents claim to be B.C.H.'s lawful custodians "by virtue of the de facto custodian definition, and by Mother's placement and acquiescence to the child living with [them]." (Appellant's Br. at 7.) Mother and Stepfather respond that, in the absence of court-ordered custody rights, the Grandparents were merely maternal grandparents informally caring for their grandchild, and as such the law did not consider them to be lawful custodians entitled to notice of and consent to B.C.H.'s pending adoption.
We begin our analysis by recognizing that the Grandparents' later-adjudicated de facto custodian status does not establish their lawful custody of their granddaughter at the time the adoption petition was filed. As Mother and Stepfather note, their status was granted in an action initiated subsequent to the adoption proceedings. Though the Juvenile Court undoubtedly considered the Grandparents' primary caregiving of B.C.H. at the time the adoption petition was filed in order to evaluate their de facto custodianship claim, the court's ruling was not in effect at the time of filing. Therefore, we will not consider the Grandparents' formal status as their granddaughter's de facto custodians.
Rather, we look to the circumstances surrounding their caregiving of B.C.H. to determine if the Grandparents were her lawful custodians under Ind.Code § 31-19-9-1(a)(3) when Stepfather filed the adoption petition. As stated above, T.H. and C.H. were B.C.H.'s primary caregivers for the first forty-five months of her young life, until Mother took her from their home. Day in and day out, they were the
Based on these circumstances, we believe that the Grandparents were exactly the type of caregivers the General Assembly had in mind when they chose the term "lawful custody" over "legal custody" in Ind.Code § 31-19-9-1(a)(3). They were exactly who the legislature thought would be in the best position to tell a judge presiding over an adoption proceeding about the child in question and about the child's best interests. Though only the trial court has the authority to ultimately decide whether the adoption is in the child's best interests, lawful custodians like B.C.H.'s Grandparents have the right to present testimony to aid in the court's often difficult decision.
But in this case, the Grandparents were given neither formal legal notice of the pending adoption nor an opportunity to voice their concerns and be heard. They will have that opportunity now. We vacate the Superior Court's grant of the adoption petition and remand this case to the Superior Court for a hearing on B.C.H.'s best interests in the adoption. As her lawful custodians, the Grandparents must be given the opportunity to give or withhold their consent to Stepfather's adoption of their granddaughter.
However, the Grandparents' opportunity to withhold consent to B.C.H.'s adoption is not the same as an opportunity to veto her adoption for any reason they see fit. Should the Grandparents withhold their consent at the hearing for reasons the Superior Court finds not to be in B.C.H.'s best interests, then Ind.Code § 31-19-9-8(a)(10) enables the court to grant the adoption if it finds that doing so is in the girl's best interests.
We vacate the decision of the Superior Court granting Stepfather's petition to adopt B.C.H. and remand this case to the Superior Court for a hearing on B.C.H.'s best interests in the adoption and other proceedings consistent with this opinion. At this hearing, the Grandparents shall be
RUSH, C.J., DICKSON, RUCKER, and MASSA, JJ., concur.