Title: In re Adoption of J.T.D.
Citation: N/A
Docket Number: 45S03-1406-AD-387
State: Indiana
Issuer: Indiana Supreme Court
Date: December 4, 2014

ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT 
Gregory F. Zoeller 
Attorney General of Indiana 
Robert J. Henke 
David E. Corey 
Deputy Attorneys General 
Indianapolis, Indiana
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEES 
Larry D. Stassin 
Layer, Tanzillo, Stassin & Babcock, P.C. 
Dyer, Indiana 
__________________________________________________________________________________ 
 
In the 
Indiana Supreme Court 
_________________________________ 
 
No. 45S03-1406-AD-387 
 
IN THE MATTER OF THE ADOPTION OF MINOR CHILDREN: J.T.D. AND J.S.: 
 
INDIANA DEPARTMENT OF CHILD SERVICES, 
 
Appellant/Intervenor,  
 
V. 
 
N.E. 
Appellee/Petitioner  
Prospective Adoptive Parent.  
_________________________________ 
 
Appeal from the Lake Superior Court, Nos. 45D02-1306-AD-1 and 45D02-1306-AD-2 
The Honorable Calvin D. Hawkins, Judge 
_________________________________ 
 
On Petition to Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals, No. 45A03-1308-AD-310 
_________________________________ 
 
December 4, 2014 
Rush, Chief Justice. 
Local rules cannot confer, revoke, or override subject matter jurisdiction, but they may 
properly prescribe venue—the particular location among courts that have jurisdiction for cases to be 
heard. Here, the Lake Superior Court has four divisions, “civil (including probate), criminal, county, 
and juvenile,” Ind. Code §§ 33-33-45-3, -21(a) (2008), none of which is a “separate probate court” 
that would have exclusive adoption jurisdiction, see I.C. § 31-19-1-2(a). N.E. filed two adoption 
petitions in one of the Civil Division courts, violating a local rule that all adoptions (a type of 
Dec 04 2014, 2:03 pm
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probate case) must be filed in the Juvenile Division. The trial court, in turn, declined to transfer 
the cases to the Juvenile Division, and the Court of Appeals affirmed. Largely in an effort to adhere 
to dicta in one of our previous cases, it held the local rule impermissibly impinged on the jurisdiction 
of the Superior Court’s “civil (including probate)” division. We disagree. The local rule does not 
impermissibly expand jurisdiction beyond statutory bounds, but simply prescribes venue—and 
like all local rules, it is binding on the courts and litigants. The trial court erred in refusing to 
transfer these adoptions to the Juvenile Division, and we reverse and remand accordingly. 
Facts and Procedural History 
J.T.D. (born in 2011) and J.S. (born in 2009) are siblings. Both tested drug-positive at birth, 
and were immediately removed from their parents. The Juvenile Division of the Lake Superior Court 
has adjudicated them both to be children in need of services (CHINS), and those CHINS cases are 
still open. The Juvenile Division terminated both parents’ rights over J.S. in 2012, and a similar 
petition for J.T.D. remains pending. 
The children’s cousin N.E. was their foster parent and planned to adopt them. But on March 
27, 2013, the Indiana Department of Child Services (DCS) petitioned to remove the children from 
her care after she violated her confidentiality agreement with DCS by using the children’s confi-
dential information, and other false or misleading information, on a fundraising website seeking 
donations to defray household expenses. The Juvenile Division found removal was in the children’s 
best interests, and placed them in a new pre-adoptive foster home. The Juvenile Division later 
denied N.E.’s petition to intervene in the CHINS cases. 
After the Juvenile Division denied her leave to intervene, N.E. filed petitions to adopt the 
children in Lake Superior Court 2, part of the court’s Civil Division. But filing in that court contra-
vened Lake County’s Caseload Allocation Plan—a local rule requiring adoptions of minors, among 
other case types, “to be exclusively filed in the Juvenile Division,” though the Juvenile Division may 
then transfer a limited number of such cases to the Circuit Court and each room of the Superior 
Court’s Civil Division. Lake County adopted the Caseload Allocation Plan to comply with this Court’s 
mandate that each county “by a local rule, implement a caseload allocation plan . . . that ensures an 
even distribution of judicial workload among the courts of record in the county.” Ind. Administrative 
Rule 1(E). Citing the Caseload Allocation Plan, DCS and the Court Appointed Special Advocate 
(CASA) moved to intervene in the adoptions and transfer them to the Juvenile Division. 
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In the trial court, DCS argued that the Caseload Allocation Plan “expands the jurisdiction 
of the Juvenile Division to include all adoptions of minors, and it clearly says all adoptions of 
minors are to be exclusively filed in the Juvenile Division.” But N.E. countered that because “local 
rules can’t supersede legislative enactments,” the statute creating the Lake Superior Court’s “civil 
(including probate), criminal, county, and juvenile divisions” was controlling over the Caseload 
Allocation Plan and gave the trial court probate jurisdiction. Ind. Code § 33-33-45-21 (emphasis 
added). The trial court agreed with N.E. and denied the motion to transfer to the Juvenile Division. 
Its written order was summary, but it explained its rationale at the conclusion of the hearing: 
The weighted caseload [rule] is simply a methodology . . . to make 
sure that judges work, and that’s about it . . . . So it’s a paper process. 
Now having said that, . . . the [local] rules do not trump the statute. . . . 
They just don’t. 
And all it takes is an individual who looks at [Indiana Code 31-19-2-2, 
requiring adoptions of minors to be filed “with the clerk of the court 
having probate jurisdiction”] to say, “I’m going to comply with the 
statute.” And I could have said because of the weighted caseload, and 
still could say, “I’m going to transfer this case back to Juvenile Court.” 
I’m not. I’m going to deny your motion, because I think it could be 
filed here. The law allows it to be filed here. 
But the trial court also immediately certified its order for interlocutory appeal. 
The Court of Appeals affirmed in a published decision, relying on the statutory division of 
Lake Superior Court into “civil (including probate), criminal, county, and juvenile divisions” and 
our previous statement that the County’s “‘juvenile division does not have jurisdiction in probate 
matters and, thus, cannot assert jurisdiction in an adoption proceeding,’” In re Adoption of J.T.D. 
and J.S., 5 N.E.3d 786, 790 (Ind. Ct. App. 2014) (quoting I.C. § 33-33-45-21 and In re Adoption 
of T.B., 622 N.E.2d 921, 924 (Ind. 1993)). On that basis, the Court of Appeals held that the “Civil 
Division has . . . exclusive subject matter jurisdiction over adoption proceedings,” which the Case-
load Allocation Plan, as a local rule, could not defeat. Id. at 792. We granted transfer.  
Standard of Review 
When, as here, “the facts before the trial court are not in dispute, then the question of subject 
matter jurisdiction is purely one of law,” which we review de novo and without any deference to 
the trial court’s determinations. GKN Co. v. Magness, 744 N.E.2d 397, 401 (Ind. 2001). Similarly, 
4 
 
interpreting a statute is a question of law that we review de novo, Justice v. Am. Family Mut. Ins. 
Co., 4 N.E.3d 1171, 1175 (Ind. 2014)—giving the statutory language its plain and ordinary meaning 
unless the statute indicates otherwise, because “‘[t]he best evidence of legislative intent is the lan-
guage of the statute itself,’” Hendrix v. State, 759 N.E.2d 1045, 1047 (Ind. 2001).  
Discussion 
I. Because Lake County Has No “Separate Probate Court,” the Exclusive Jurisdiction Pro-
vision of Indiana Code section 31-19-1-2 Does Not Apply. 
As a threshold issue, we address the Court of Appeals’ reliance on Indiana Code section 31-
19-1-2(b), which provides that the “‘probate court has exclusive jurisdiction in all adoption matters.’” 
J.T.D., 5 N.E.3d at 789 (quoting I.C. § 31-19-1-2(b)). But the first part of that statute unambiguously 
states that it applies only “to each Indiana county that has a separate probate court.” I.C. § 31-19-1-
2(a). So in Saint Joseph County, for example, this statute would confer exclusive adoption jurisdic-
tion on that county’s Probate Court, see I.C. § 33-31-1-1—which is created separately from either 
its Circuit Court under the Indiana Constitution and Indiana Code chapter 33-28-1, or its Superior 
Court under Indiana Code chapter 33-33-71. But in Lake County, by contrast, the “civil (including 
probate)” division is expressly established as a division of the Superior Court, I.C. § 33-33-45-21(a), 
and not a separate statutory court. The Court of Appeals was therefore correct to recognize that Lake 
County has no “separate probate court.” J.T.D., 5 N.E.3d at 790 (citing T.B., 622 N.E.2d at 924). But 
that also means that, by its express terms, Indiana Code section 31-19-1-2(b) does not apply, and 
thus does not confer exclusive adoption jurisdiction on the Superior Court’s Civil Division. 
II. The Lake Superior Court Is One Court of Broad Original, Concurrent Jurisdiction, Shared 
Among Its Divisions—So the Divisions’ Caseloads Are a Matter of Venue, Not Jurisdiction. 
Because Lake County has no “separate probate court” to exercise exclusive adoption juris-
diction under Indiana Code section 31-19-1-2(b), we turn to the statutes creating the county’s 
Superior Court. Courts “receive[] subject matter jurisdiction over a class of cases only from the con-
stitution or from statutes.” Georgetown Bd. of Zoning Appeals v. Keele, 743 N.E.2d 301, 303 (Ind. 
Ct. App. 2001). And while Circuit Courts are created by the Indiana Constitution, see Ind. Const. art. 
7, §§ 7–8, Superior Courts are created entirely by statute. Generally, they have “original and concur-
rent jurisdiction in all civil cases and in all criminal cases.” I.C. §§ 33-29-1-1.5 (Supp. 2014) 
(applying to “standard superior courts”), -29-1.5-2(1) (Supp. 2014) (applying to all other superior 
5 
 
courts). But then the various chapters of Indiana Code article 33-33 (for Lake County, Indiana 
Code chapter 33-33-45) contain further provisions unique to each county’s Superior Court system, 
which “are in pari materia” with the general provisions of Indiana Code article 33-29 “and should 
be construed together so as to produce a harmonious statutory scheme” if possible. Sanders v. 
State, 466 N.E.2d 424, 428 (Ind. 1984). Only if “the two statutes present an irreconcilable conflict” 
will “the more detailed statute . . . prevail over the less detailed” one. Id.  
Here, the Lake County statutes expressly create one Superior Court and consistently refer to 
it as a single court: “There is established a superior court in Lake County (referred to as ‘the court’ 
in this chapter).” I.C. § 33-33-45-3. But that one court “is divided into civil (including probate), 
criminal, county, and juvenile divisions,” with instructions that “[t]he work of the court shall be 
divided among the divisions by the rules of the court.” I.C. § 33-33-45-21(a).  
The parties dispute the nature of those divisions. If they are jurisdictional, then N.E. is correct 
that the Caseload Allocation Plan cannot alter them. Unlike rules promulgated by this Court, local 
rules “may not conflict with the rules established . . . by statute.” State ex rel. Commons v. Pera, 
987 N.E.2d 1074, 1078 (Ind. 2013). Thus, if only the Civil Division has probate jurisdiction, the 
Caseload Allocation Plan cannot properly assign adoptions to the Juvenile Division, and the trial 
court correctly refused to transfer these adoptions. But if the divisions are not jurisdictional, there 
is no conflict between the statute and the Caseload Allocation Plan—in which case “the court and all 
litigants subject to the [Caseload Allocation Plan] are bound by [it],” Gill v. Evansville Sheet Metal 
Works, Inc., 970 N.E.2d 633, 646 (Ind. 2012), and the adoptions should have been transferred as the 
Caseload Allocation Plan requires.  
We conclude that the Lake Superior Court’s four statutory divisions are not jurisdictional 
and therefore reverse the trial court. 
A. By Their Plain Language, Indiana Code Sections 33-33-45-3 and -21 Create Four Divi-
sions of One Court, Authorized to Divide Caseloads Among Its Divisions. 
As discussed above, Lake Superior Court is a single unified court, referred to as such by the 
singular term “the court” throughout the chapter. I.C. § 33-33-45-3. So like all Superior Courts, it 
has “original and concurrent jurisdiction in all civil cases and in all criminal cases,” including probate 
and thus adoptions as well, I.C. § 33-29-1.5-2(1), unless one of the Lake County-specific statutes 
6 
 
overrides that general rule, Sanders, 466 N.E.2d at 428. And one section of the chapter clearly does 
so, by declaring that Lake County’s “juvenile court has exclusive jurisdiction over a child” taken into 
custody in the county for “an act that would be a misdemeanor traffic offense if committed by an 
adult.” I.C. § 33-33-45-6(b) (emphasis added). But nothing in the section that creates the court’s four 
divisions, I.C. § 33-33-45-21(a), nor anything else in the entire chapter, even mentions “jurisdiction” 
at all—let alone confers “exclusive” jurisdiction on any particular division. Reading the statute as a 
whole, it is unlikely that the General Assembly would draft such a subtle jurisdictional provision in 
section 21 after speaking so clearly in section 6. We are therefore reluctant to read the two-word 
parenthetical “(including probate)” as vesting exclusive probate jurisdiction in the Civil Division. 
Moreover, interpreting the divisions as jurisdictional would render the very next sentence of 
the statute meaningless. Indiana Code section 33-33-45-21(a) contains two sentences: “The court 
is divided into civil (including probate), criminal, county, and juvenile divisions. The work of the 
court shall be divided among the divisions by the rules of the court.” (emphasis added). Certainly 
“the subject matter jurisdiction of our courts is generally created by statute or constitutional pro-
vision,” N. Ind. Commuter Transp. Dist. v. Chicago SouthShore and South Bend R.R., 685 N.E.2d 
680, 695 (Ind. 1997), and a local rule cannot override a statute, Pera, 987 N.E.2d at 1078. But the 
“work of the court” could not possibly be “divided” between the divisions by local “rules of the 
court” as the statute contemplates if the divisions’ names reflected hard-and-fast jurisdictional limits. 
N.E.’s interpretation, then, would violate the well-settled rule that “‘[w]here possible, every word 
[of a statute] must be given effect and meaning, and no part is to be held meaningless if it can be 
reconciled with the rest of the statute.’” Pabey v. Pastrick, 816 N.E.2d 1138, 1148 (Ind. 2004) 
(quoting Hall Drive Ins., Inc. v. City of Fort Wayne, 773 N.E.2d 255, 257 (Ind. 2002)).  
We therefore conclude that the Lake Superior Court’s four divisions are merely descriptive 
of venue, not prescriptive of rigid jurisdictional boundaries. “Indiana courts have only such juris-
diction as is granted to them by the state constitution and statutes”—but “[v]enue and jurisdiction 
are not the same.” Benham v. State, 637 N.E.2d 133, 136–37 (Ind. 1994). “[V]enue statutes and 
rules do not confer jurisdiction but rather prescribe the location at which trial proceedings are to 
occur from among the courts empowered to exercise jurisdiction.” Id. at 137. Understanding the 
divisions to share the full subject matter jurisdiction of the Superior Court as a whole, and their 
names to be only a matter of venue that may therefore be varied by “rules of the court,” is the only 
7 
 
way to harmonize those provisions. In other words, there is only one Lake County Superior Court, 
and its divisions are for administrative convenience and venue, not jurisdictional limits. 
B. Our Statement in In re Adoption of T.B. That the Juvenile Division Lacks Probate 
Jurisdiction Is Not Controlling.  
This interpretation of the statute, however, runs counter to language in our 1993 decision 
in T.B. There, a child who had been adopted in Lake Circuit Court proceedings less than five years 
earlier had become the subject of a CHINS case in the Juvenile Division because of promiscuous, 
delinquent, and violent behavior. T.B., 622 N.E.2d at 922. The adoptive parent petitioned the Circuit 
Court to revoke the adoption, alleging that the Lake County Division of Family and Children Ser-
vices (DCS’s predecessor agency) fraudulently failed to disclose that the child had been sexually 
abused before the adoption. Id. at 923–24. The Circuit Court granted the petition, and the agency 
appealed, arguing that the Juvenile Division’s exclusive jurisdiction over CHINS cases implicitly 
precluded the Circuit Court from exercising subject matter jurisdiction over any case that “conflicted 
with the [CHINS] proceeding.” Id. at 923. On transfer, we rejected that argument and stated: 
In Lake County, the circuit court and superior court have concurrent jurisdiction over 
probate matters. The superior court of Lake County is divided into four divisions, 
civil (including probate), criminal, county, and juvenile. The juvenile division does 
not have jurisdiction in probate matters and, thus, cannot assert jurisdiction in an 
adoption proceeding. Either the civil division of the superior court or the circuit court 
could hear the adoption matter. 
Id. at 924 (emphasis added) (citations omitted).  
N.E. and the Court of Appeals rely heavily on this passage in support of their statutory analy-
sis, while DCS responds that it is dicta, or at least superseded by Lake County’s subsequent 
adoption of the Caseload Allocation Plan. On the latter point, DCS is mistaken—because, again, 
subject matter jurisdiction is conferred by constitution or statute, Chicago SouthShore, 685 N.E.2d 
at 695, and the Caseload Allocation Plan is a local rule that cannot override a contrary statutory 
provision, Pera, 987 N.E.2d at 1078. Therefore, the Caseload Allocation Plan cannot create juris-
diction where it would not otherwise exist. But we do agree that this passage of T.B. is dicta, and 
therefore not controlling. 
“[S]tatements not necessary in the determination of the issues presented are obiter dictum. 
They are not binding and do not become the law.” Koske v. Townsend Eng’g Co., 551 N.E.2d 437, 
8 
 
443 (Ind. 1990). And in T.B., the issue was not whether the Juvenile Division lacked adoption juris-
diction, but whether the Circuit Court had it—so discussing the extent of the Juvenile Division’s 
probate jurisdiction was wholly unnecessary to the question at hand, the epitome of dicta.  Next, the 
question in T.B. did not involve the statute creating the court’s divisions, but rather harmonized 
an alleged conflict between two express jurisdictional provisions—whether the Juvenile Division’s 
undisputed CHINS jurisdiction implicitly precluded the Circuit Court from exercising its otherwise-
undisputed adoption jurisdiction. Finally, T.B. did not undertake any detailed statutory analysis—
likely because the agency had expressly (and, it seems, improvidently) “concede[d] that the juvenile 
court does not have authority to revoke an adoption.” Id. at 923 (emphasis added). 
Accordingly, we are persuaded that T.B. does not preclude our analysis of Indiana Code 
section 33-33-45-21(a). Instead, we believe that the Lake Superior Court’s divisions are imbued 
with the same broad subject matter jurisdiction as the court as a whole, and their statutory names are 
merely descriptive of venue. N.E. argues this cannot be, since it would counterintuitively permit 
adoptions to be filed in the Criminal Division. And while that is true as a jurisdictional matter—that 
is, an adoption judgment rendered in the Criminal Division would be merely voidable, not void—it 
overlooks Lake County’s binding local rules for venue of various case types, which “divide the work 
of the court” as the statute authorizes. We therefore turn to those local rules. 
III. Because the Caseload Allocation Plan Did Not Contravene a Statute, the Trial Court 
Lacked Discretion to Retain Venue of These Adoptions. 
The 2009 version of the Caseload Allocation Plan—the one in effect when N.E. filed these 
adoptions in the trial court—called for all adoptions of minors to be filed in the Juvenile Division: 
Effective January 1, 2000, the current case assignment of the Lake 
Superior Court, Juvenile Division shall be increased by the addition of 
the following casetypes to be exclusively filed in the Juvenile Division: 
i. Adoptions of minors, 
ii. Adoption History cases, and 
iii. Guardianships for minors unrelated to litigation pending in other 
courts. 
DCS App. 23. But the trial court concluded that because it, too, had subject matter jurisdiction over 
adoptions, transfer of these cases pursuant to the Caseload Allocation Plan was not mandatory: 
. . . I could have said because of the weighted caseload, and still could 
say, “I’m going to transfer this case back to Juvenile Court.” 
9 
 
I’m not. I’m going to deny your motion, because I think it could be filed 
here. The law allows it to be filed here. 
Tr. 20:15–20. That conclusion was only partially correct. An adoption granted by the Civil Division 
would not be void because it (like all of the Lake Superior Court’s divisions, as discussed above) 
shares the full Superior Court’s subject matter jurisdiction, which includes cases of this type. 
But having jurisdiction over adoptions did not make the trial court a proper venue, because 
the Caseload Allocation Plan provided otherwise. Such local rules, “when adopted and published, 
. . . have the force and effect of law,” Magnuson v. Billings, 152 Ind. 177, 180, 52 N.E. 803, 804 
(1899), and are binding on both “the court and all litigants,” Gill, 970 N.E.2d at 646. As we 
explained in Magnuson, 
A rule of court is a law of practice, extended alike to all litigants who 
come within its purview, and who . . . have the right to assume that it 
will be uniformly enforced by the court, in conservation of their 
rights, as well as to secure the prompt and orderly dispatch of busi-
ness. Furthermore, a rule adopted by a court . . . becomes a law of 
procedure therein, in all matters to which it relates, until rescinded or 
modified by the court. 
152 Ind. at 180, 52 N.E. at 804. And because the Caseload Allocation Plan is consistent with the 
controlling statutes, the trial court was bound by the Rule’s venue provisions. Thus, N.E. was obli-
gated to file her adoption petitions in the Juvenile Division; and when she failed to do so, the trial 
court was similarly obligated to yield venue to the Juvenile Division. 
We note that subsequent to the Court of Appeals’ decision, Lake County has amended the 
Caseload Allocation Plan to assign adoptions to the Circuit Court and certain courts of the Civil 
Division, effective the first day of 2015. Lake LR45-AR1-01(I)(13)–(14) (effective Jan. 1, 2015). 
At oral argument, DCS represented that the revision was solely a response to the Court of Appeals’ 
decision, and that the overall preference of the Lake County courts would be to retain the system 
as it existed under the 2009 amendment. In view of today’s decision, either version of the Caseload 
Allocation Plan is permissible, so we leave the promulgation of local rules to the local courts who 
must abide by them. For this case, it is sufficient to note that N.E.’s adoption petitions are subject 
to the Caseload Allocation Plan as it existed when the petitions were filed. We therefore reverse 
the trial court’s denial of DCS’s motion to transfer these adoptions to the Juvenile Division 
pursuant to the then-existing Caseload Allocation Plan. 
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Conclusion  
The parties and both of the previous courts were all partly correct in their analyses. The trial 
court was correct that it did have subject matter jurisdiction over adoptions and that the Caseload 
Allocation Plan was a matter of venue and not jurisdiction. Yet DCS was correct that the trial court 
was bound by the Caseload Allocation Plan and therefore obligated to transfer the adoption to the 
Juvenile Division. Because nothing in Indiana Code chapter 33-33-45 restricts the probate jurisdic-
tion of any of the Lake Superior Court’s divisions, each division—including the Juvenile Division—
is imbued with the same jurisdiction as the court at-large. Therefore, even though the Caseload 
Allocation Plan’s provisions establish only venue and not jurisdiction, they are binding on the court 
and litigants. Lake County was free to adopt a Caseload Allocation Plan establishing exclusive venue 
for adoptions in the Juvenile Division as a matter of administrative convenience and efficiency, and 
that Rule is binding on the court and litigants. 
Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s denial of DCS’s motion to transfer and order these 
adoptions transferred to the Juvenile Division consistent with the Lake County Caseload Allocation 
Plan that was in effect at the time N.E. filed these adoptions. 
Dickson, Rucker, David, and Massa, JJ., concur.