Sven Mjolnir-Cohen
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As I best understand it, there is a law in Tennessee that allows a parent to lose parental rights because of "abandonment by incarceration" if the prison sentence is 15 years or more. That was the basis the foster parents used to get his rights terminated.
Not exactly.
If you read the court case that voided the adoption, you will find that the original judge did rule that Sonya was "abandoned by incarceration".
However, the Hs' attorney did not ask that Sonya be found abandoned on those grounds, but rather be found as simply abandoned - where a different law applies.
The judge who voided the adoption ruled that a judge cannot make a ruling that does not reflect the pleadings of either party - and since no one asked that Sonya be found to be "abandoned by incarceration" - the judge erred in applying this statue.
In other words, the Hs' attorney failed to utter the appropriate ritual formulae. Since the courts are primarily abound ritual rather than substance, failure to perform appropriate ritual is a major faux pas.