Adel Valezadeh v. Mahnaz Hossaini

174 So. 3d 579, 2015 Fla. App. LEXIS 13074, 2015 WL 5145579
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedSeptember 2, 2015
Docket4D15-2580
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 174 So. 3d 579 (Adel Valezadeh v. Mahnaz Hossaini) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adel Valezadeh v. Mahnaz Hossaini, 174 So. 3d 579, 2015 Fla. App. LEXIS 13074, 2015 WL 5145579 (Fla. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

GERBER, J.

The father appeals from the circuit court’s final judgment granting the mother’s petition to relocate with the parties’ minor child to Nebraska. The father argues good cause existed to preclude entry of the relocation judgment despite the father’s untimely response to the mother’s petition. We agree with that argument and reverse.

Procedural History

The parties are the unmarried parents of a seven-year-old child. After the child was born in 2008, the child lived with the mother in Nebraska while the father lived in Florida. In 2010, a Nebraska court entered a paternity order including a parenting plan. The parenting plan awarded the mother residential custody, subject to the father’s timesharing.

In 2013, the mother and child moved to Broward County to live with the father. In 2014, the father filed a petition in Bro-ward County to domesticate the Nebraska order in Florida. In 2015, the father filed an amended petition not only to domesticate the Nebraska order, but also to modify the order. The amended petition alleged, in pertinent part:

The minor child’s home state is Florida, his home County is Broward. The minor is in the Broward County School System now, for his second consecutive year. The minor child is involved in extracurricular activities in Broward County with the permission and with the encouragement of both of his parents. The minor child is entitled to Health Insurance Coverage in the State of Florida. It is in the best interest of the minor child to have the Court exercise jurisdiction over this matter and to domesticate, register and modify the attached foreign decree.

The amended petition further alleged a “substantial and material change of circumstances,” to justify the father’s requests that: the father and child exclusively possess the father’s home; the mother' reside outside of the father’s home; and an appropriate timesharing arrangement be established to promote the child’s best interests.

In March, 2015, the mother took the child to Nebraska for spring break, despite the fact that the Nebraska order required the child to spend spring break with the father. The father immediately filed a motion to compel the child’s return. Without court action, the mother returned to Florida with the child after spring break, but she maintained custody of the child.

On March 23, 2015, the mother filed a “supplemental petition to permit relocation with minor child” and e-mailed a copy to the father’s attorney. In the petition, the mother alleged:

When my son turned 5 years old, [the father] and I reconciled as a couple (we were never married) and I took a leap of faith and moved to Florida giving up my entire foundation in Nebraska — family and employment. He promised marriage. [The father] became verbally and *581 emotionally] abusive. In order- to support myself, I began working part time to become more independent although my primary job is to be a mother. The move to Florida has left me financially disabled with no support system in place [sic] has refused to replace .the vehicle that was damaged in an accident and has sought to remove me from the only home I have in Florida. I have no place to go and no support system in Florida, financial or otherwise. His desire to control my child and me is a cultural issue that has caused me to seek the assistance of Women in Distress.

In drafting the petition, the mother used Florida Family Law Form 12.950(d), entitled “Supplemental Petition to Permit Relocation with Minor Children.” That form stated, in pertinent part:

A RESPONSE TO THE SUPPLEMENTAL PETITION OBJECTING TO RELOCATION MUST BE MADE IN WRITING, FILED WITH THE COURT, AND SERVED ON THE PARENT OR OTHER PERSON SEEKING TO RELOCATE WITHIN 20 DAYS AFTER SERVICE OF THIS SUPPLEMENTAL PETITION TO RELOCATE. IF YOU FAIL TO TIMELY OBJECT TO THE RELOCATION, THE RELOCATION WILL BE ALLOWED, UNLESS IT IS NOT IN THE BEST INTERESTS OF THE CHILD, WITHOUT FURTHER NOTICE AND WITHOUT A HEARING.

On April 17, 2015 (twenty-five days after the mother served her petition), the mother requested the court to grant relocation because the father did not object timely to the supplemental petition. The mother sent a proposed “final judgment for relocation” to the court and copied the father’s attorney.

Three days later, on April 20, 2015, the father’s attorney served a motion “to set aside/strike and[/]or dismiss” the mother’s petition. In the motion, the father alleged:

3. The means -in which the [mother] has attempted to remove the child include taking the child out of the State without the [father’s] permission ... for a period of time that was not permitted according to their parenting agreement currently in place.
4. When [the mother] did finally return, the child has [sic]' missed some school days and was exhibiting issues of emotional depression, sadness and withdrawal.
5. The [mother] had taken the child to the home of her former Husband (with whom she had previously charged with domestic violence, and where the child had previously seen and' had been involved in the violence of the [sic] his Mother and her former Husband in the past). ' '
6. Procedurally, the manner in which the “Relocation for Minor Child” has been filed and where relief by the [father] is requested, is legally inept, inadequate and cannot stand in the Court of law.

■ One week later, on April 27, 2015, the mother removed the child from school, in the middle of the day and relocated with him to Nebraska.

Two days later, on April 29, 2015, the father, through 'a new attorney, filed a verified emergency motion “to compel [the mother] to - • disclose the minor child’s whereabouts and return to Florida.”

One week later, on May 6, 2015, the circuit court held a hearing on the father’s motion. At the hearing, the father’s new attorney advised that the father’s original attorney: was out of the area tending to an ill family member; had filed a notice of unavailability; and “got [the father’s new *582 attorney] involved because the case needed immediate attention.”

The court denied the father’s motion. The court reasoned:

Instead of taking the time to do a notice of unavailability, [the father’s original attorney] could have just filed an answer or denial of [the mother’s] petition and ask for a hearing. So, I’m not going to sign the pick-up order.
I don’t know if [the father is] entitled to a hearing at this point since 20 days went by after the service. Or if [the father is] entitled to a hearing, I think the child is allowed to stay out of state, but I’m not going to order the child back to the State of Florida since [the father’s original attorney] didn’t file an answer within the 20 days.

The court then stated that the father could set a “best interests” hearing, but that the court would allow the relocation to continue in the interim.

Immediately after the hearing, the court entered a written order stating:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
174 So. 3d 579, 2015 Fla. App. LEXIS 13074, 2015 WL 5145579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adel-valezadeh-v-mahnaz-hossaini-fladistctapp-2015.