In 1857, the US Supreme Court declared in the
Dred Scott decision that Scott had no
standing to bring the case, and that "a black
man has no rights a white man need respect."
Yesterday, in deciding Elk Grove Unified
School Dist. v. Newdow, the US Supreme Court
ruled that noncustodial parent Michael Newdow
has no standing, and that a noncustodial parent
has no rights a court need respect. Since most
of America's 14 million noncustodial parents are
fathers, the court's decision represents an
exceptionally bitter Father's Day gift.
Perhaps most importantly, Elk Grove
places children in harm's way by limiting the
ability of noncustodial parents to use the legal
system to protect their children if the
custodial parent is unable or unwilling to do
so.
For example, in a pending Illinois case, an
elementary school girl suffers from a
life-threatening medical condition which
requires a medical procedure. The procedure,
though standard, violates the custodial mother's
religious beliefs. The girl's noncustodial
father has gone to court to force the mother to
accede to the lifesaving operation. Now, in the
wake of Elk Grove, unless the father can
win custody, the judge may be compelled to rule
in favor of the mother, to the serious detriment
of the child.
In another pending Illinois case, a noncustodial
father seeks to take legal action both against a
baby-sitter who allegedly molested his son, and
against the agency that placed his son in this
baby-sitter's care. However, the custodial
mother, apparently because of her hostility
towards the father, has refused to consent to
the filing of the lawsuit. Under Elk Grove,
unless the father can win a substantial
modification of custody, the father has no
standing to file the lawsuit without the
mother's consent. As a result, his traumatized
son may be deprived of a potential damages award
which is needed to pay for therapy, and neither
the alleged molester nor the agency will be held
responsible.
Elk Grove will make it more difficult for
noncustodial parents to hold negligent schools,
daycare centers, doctors, hospitals, sports
coaches, and others accountable for harming
their children.
The court's ruling also highlights the hypocrisy
of the current public policy and discourse on
fatherhood, wherein men are lectured to take
responsibility for their children while at the
same time courts and lawmakers frequently
disregard their right to play a meaningful role
in their children's lives. Many believe that the
court used the issue of standing as a way to
sidestep having to make a decision on the thorny
issue of the pledge. Evidently noncustodial
parents are of such little concern that the
court found it more expedient to undercut their
rights than to decide the pledge case.
Elk Grove will also fuel damaging and
costly custody battles. Millions of divorced or
separated fathers have declined to fight for
custody because they did not want to put their
children in the middle of a conflict, or because
they wanted to respect their children's bonds
with their mothers. These dads are fit parents
and are an important part of their children's
lives, yet by declaring that noncustodial
parents have no standing, the Court has
seriously undermined their parental rights.
It will now be more difficult for parents to
preserve their rights without expensive and
sometimes gut-wrenching custody litigation, and
the family court system will become even more
adversarial. An average custody battle--one
without accusations of abuse or visitation
interference, and one in which both parents are
relatively civil--often costs $25,000 or more.
This decision aggravates the problem of
divorcing parents financially supporting
attorneys instead of their children.
By upping the ante on winning custody, Elk
Grove may also increase the number of
divorcing parents who use false allegations of
sexual abuse, domestic violence, or child abuse
as weapons in custody battles.
The lasting legacy of Elk Grove will have
little to do with the Pledge of Allegiance or
the battle between atheism and religion that is
now the public's focus. It will instead be a
legacy of pain, both for children of divorce and
for the noncustodial parents who love them, and
who in many cases will now be legally
constrained from acting in their best interests.