Albergottie v. James

470 A.2d 266, 1983 D.C. App. LEXIS 537
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 23, 1983
Docket82-58
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 470 A.2d 266 (Albergottie v. James) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Albergottie v. James, 470 A.2d 266, 1983 D.C. App. LEXIS 537 (D.C. 1983).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Appellant mother seeks reversal of an order of the Superior Court, Family Division, which awarded custody of the parties’ son to appellee father. As an initial matter appellant contends that the trial court erred in failing to decline jurisdiction of this proceeding. Alternatively, appellant contends that even if the court properly exercised jurisdiction, the court erred in considering appellee’s gender and better financial situation as factors in determining which parent should have custody of the child. Finding no abuse of discretion, we affirm.

I

The parties met in 1977 while they were students at Ohio State University. In 1978 appellee graduated and moved to the District of Columbia, where he became employed. Appellant remained in Ohio, where she continued her studies. The parties continued seeing each other following appel-lee’s move and, in early 1979, appellant discovered that she was pregnant by appel-lee. Although appellee apparently never disputed paternity, he declined to marry appellant, and contributed only $80 toward her support during the pregnancy.

Appellant’s pregnancy forced her to withdraw from the University and to move to South Carolina, where friends and family were located. Appellant’s financial circumstances were such that she found it necessary to obtain AFDC benefits (Aid to Families with Dependent Children) from the State of South Carolina. On December 29, 1979, she gave birth to the subject of this custody dispute, Hamadi Mugabe Albergot-tie.

Following the child’s birth appellee continued to pursue his career in the District of Columbia while appellant remained in South Carolina, where she assumed the duties of the child’s primary caretaker and, *268 for a period, continued to receive AFDC benefits. Friction that arose between appellant and the relatives with whom she stayed necessitated a number of moves within a relatively short period. Between the time of the child’s birth and October 18, 1980, appellee contributed a total of $600 toward the child’s support and saw the child three times.

On October 18, 1980, appellee visited appellant and the child in South Carolina and obtained appellant’s permission to bring the child to the District of Columbia for what appellee represented would be a visit of several weeks. Eleven days after bringing the child into the District appellee initiated a custody proceeding in the Superior Court. Appellant thereafter filed a single motion in which she sought both a temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction ordering, inter alia, the child’s immediate return. The application for a temporary restraining order was brought before the Judge in Chambers on the day it was filed, February 2,1981. Following a hearing, the judge denied the temporary restraining order so as to preserve the District of Columbia’s jurisdiction over the custody proceeding until a hearing on the merits could be held. 1 Appellant did not pursue a further hearing in Superior Court on the motion for preliminary injunction. She thus was not in a position to seek appellate review of the denial of injunctive relief.

On April 23, 1981, a hearing was held on appellant’s motion for custody pendente lite. That motion was denied, without prejudice, on the ground of insufficient evidence.

A trial on the merits took place in November 1981. The trial court rejected appellant’s contention that the exercise of jurisdiction should be declined because appel-lee, by using deception to procure the child’s presence in the District, came to the court with unclean hands. The court concluded that the unclean hands doctrine was inapplicable in this case for several reasons. First, the court noted that what occurred here was not a typical instance of what is sometimes termed “child-snatching” in that appellee had not violated the terms of a custody decree in removing the child from South Carolina. The court observed that, in the absence of such an order, each parent technically had an equal right to custody. Second, the court noted that appellee had acted out of concern for what he considered the child’s best interests when he became concerned that appellant was not providing a suitable environment for the child. Third, the court noted that the child did not have well established connections with South Carolina, where mother and child had moved in and out of a number of crowded and compromising living arrangements.

Having rejected appellant’s invitation to decline to exercise jurisdiction, the court then determined that the child’s best interests dictated that appellee should retain custody. Relative to that point, the trial judge had already observed that appellant had treated the child neglectfully, even according to her own relatives, and that the child had been, in appellant’s words, “bounced from pillar to post,” and forced to sleep on the floor. He had also cited appellant’s statement that the child was her only economic leverage. He went on to find the appellant mother more dependent and less mature than appellee father.

The court then noted that, in contrast to appellant, who had been at times a welfare recipient, appellee was well educated, well employed, and able to provide a good male role model for the child. The court observed that appellee had provided good care for his child while employed, and concluded that he was the more suitable custodian. Finally, the court explained that notwithstanding the troubling circumstances under which the child had come to be within the District, by the time of trial the child had lived here most of his life, a fact that *269 “provide[d] a bootstrap argument for continued maintenance of the status quo,” since another abrupt change in the child’s living situation would be likely to do more harm than good.

This appeal followed.

II

Appellant’s first contention is that the trial court abused its discretion in failing to decline to exercise jurisdiction because the child’s presence in the District of Columbia was the product of “child snatching.” Appellant argues that under the doctrine of unclean hands, courts of equity have traditionally exercised their discretion to deny relief to parties who have acted in bad faith. Appellant maintains that the trial court should have applied that equitable doctrine to his case. In addition, appellant stresses that the court’s exercise of jurisdiction offended the policies embodied in the federal Parental Kidnapping Prevention Act (PKPA) 2 and the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Act (UCCJA). 3 Those statutes are designed to deter child snatching by, inter alia, substantially limiting the power of courts to legitimize the de facto custody possession by parents who take children across state lines in order to obtain an initial custody determination or to seek a modification of an existing decree that was rendered in another state.

At the time of the proceedings below the District of Columbia was among a handful of jurisdictions that had not adopted the UCCJA and where, therefore, a child’s physical presence was sufficient to warrant the exercise of jurisdiction by our courts. See, e.g., Rzeszotarski v. Rzeszotarski,

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Bluebook (online)
470 A.2d 266, 1983 D.C. App. LEXIS 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/albergottie-v-james-dc-1983.