20251112_C371521_128_371521.Opn.Pdf

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 12, 2025
Docket20251112
StatusUnpublished

This text of 20251112_C371521_128_371521.Opn.Pdf (20251112_C371521_128_371521.Opn.Pdf) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
20251112_C371521_128_371521.Opn.Pdf, (Mich. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

ROGER RAY MACNEILL, UNPUBLISHED November 12, 2025 Plaintiff-Appellee, 12:22 PM

v No. 371521 Alcona Circuit Court OPHELIA MAE MCKINNEY, Family Division LC No. 2023-003834-DP Defendant-Appellant.

Before: O’BRIEN, P.J., and K. F. KELLY and BORRELLO, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In this paternity action, defendant appeals by right the trial court’s judgment granting sole physical custody of the parties’ child to plaintiff, granting joint legal custody to both parties, and suspending defendant’s parenting time. Defendant also challenges the court’s order that she pay child support. We affirm the trial court’s judgment to the extent that it grants the parties joint legal custody and grants plaintiff sole physical custody, and we affirm the trial court’s child support order. However, we vacate the portion of the trial court’s judgment suspending defendant’s parenting time because the court did so without finding that there was clear and convincing evidence that parenting time would endanger the parties’ child, and remand for further proceedings.

I. BASIC FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The parties’ child began suffering from severe diaper rash shortly after his birth. Plaintiff thought that the rashes appeared to be the result of a food allergy or reaction, but he also did not believe that defendant changed the child’s diaper enough. Further, plaintiff testified that he had observed defendant smoking marijuana while caring for the child and that the child had been left alone in the bathtub. According to plaintiff, defendant responded with hostility when he confronted her about both incidents. Defendant denied smoking marijuana around the child and leaving him unattended. Defendant also testified that she took the child to the doctor concerning his diaper rash and was prescribed a topical treatment. Defendant stated that the child experienced rashes because of his type of skin.

-1- While plaintiff, defendant, and the child were living together, plaintiff filed a complaint for paternity. During the proceedings, defendant moved out. The court granted plaintiff’s motion to declare the child’s paternity and granted him leave to amend his pleadings to address issues related to custody, child support, and parenting time. Plaintiff thereafter sought joint legal and sole physical custody and supervised parenting time on the basis of an injury that the child sustained in defendant’s care and defendant’s threat to move with the child to another location in the state. The trial court granted the motion pending a hearing on temporary custody because of the possibility that the child could otherwise suffer irreparable harm.

The court subsequently found that the child had no established custodial environment, that it was in his best interests for plaintiff to have sole physical custody, and that defendant’s parenting time should remain supervised. The court ordered that, under the temporary custody order, plaintiff was to have primary physical custody and the parties were to have joint legal custody. The court ordered that supervised parenting time continue three days a week for three hours each visit and ordered the parties to work with the Friend of the Court toward creating a parenting-time schedule that allowed defendant unsupervised parenting time.

In December 2023, plaintiff moved the trial court to order that defendant obtain a psychological evaluation on the basis of her allegedly erratic behavior around the child. Defendant denied the behavior and requested that plaintiff also be required to take a psychological evaluation. At the hearing on the motion, defendant was not represented by counsel. She indicated that she had a psychological evaluation scheduled but would not speak further before obtaining another attorney. Defendant also requested to be contacted by the court’s coordinator under the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”), 42 USC 12101 et seq., regarding filling out form MC 70.1 The court ordered both parties to submit psychological evaluations and stated that defendant would need to contact the court’s ADA coordinator. After further discussion, the court indicated that it would have someone reach out to defendant about the issue.

Defendant subsequently moved in propria persona to disqualify the trial court judge and to change venue, asserting that the judge was violating defendant’s due-process rights and had longstanding ties to plaintiff, which resulted in a conflict of interest. Defendant also requested that the case be transferred to a different court. At the hearing on the motion, the topic of defendant’s disability paperwork arose. The court stated that defendant had repeatedly been requested to provide letters from her doctors regarding the extent of her disabilities so that the court could determine how to accommodate her. Defendant claimed that the paperwork had already been provided, but she later stated that she had provided it to her former attorneys, and that if they had not given the documentation to the court, “that’s their problem.” Defendant also stated that she had letters but did not have them with her. Defendant claimed that the court’s ADA coordinator was supposed to have filled out the MC 70 form for her, but the court stated that court staff could not fill out the paperwork for her and that she needed to substantiate her disability. Defendant ultimately stated that the accommodation that she needed was to be appointed an attorney, and the

1 Form MC 70 is a standardized form approved by the Michigan State Court Administrative Office for an applicant to request reasonable accommodations for a disability in advance of a court appearance or activity. See SCAO, Form MC 70 (October 2015).

-2- court indicated defendant had been repeatedly told that an attorney could not be appointed for her in a civil case.

The court denied defendant’s motion to disqualify the trial court judge or change venue. The court found that the ADA coordinator had attempted to assist defendant, but defendant had been verbally abusive, used foul language, and yelled at court staff. Defendant also violated court rules by coming to the courthouse with a camera and attempting to videotape staff. The court also noted that it had ordered defendant to obtain a psychological evaluation and that she had not provided one. The court granted defendant 14 days to obtain a psychological evaluation and to provide documentation regarding her disability.

Ultimately, plaintiff moved for a default judgment on the basis that defendant had not provided a copy of her psychological evaluation. Although defendant had provided a psychological evaluation, all of the relevant information had been blacked out. The court stated that it would grant a default judgment because the case had “dragged on” while defendant repeatedly had failed to provide documentation, which left the court unable to address her claims. It also found that the child’s food allergies were not being “observed” while the child was in defendant’s care and stated that it would suspend defendant’s parenting time “pending medical documentation of the child’s allergies.” Ultimately, the court ordered defendant’s parenting time suspended

based upon the concerns of the court about [defendant’s] ability to care for the minor child given her refusal to provide a psychological evaluation which was previously ordered by the court to determine her fitness to parent as well as [defendant’s] continuing to feed the minor child food that resulted in severe rashes after being advised not to do so.

The court also adopted its previous temporary order requiring defendant to pay child support. This appeal followed.

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