Alcott v. Killebrew

CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedOctober 19, 2021
Docket1 CA-CV 20-0538-FC
StatusUnpublished

This text of Alcott v. Killebrew (Alcott v. Killebrew) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alcott v. Killebrew, (Ark. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION. UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.

IN THE ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION ONE

In re the Matter of:

KRISTYN ANNE ALCOTT, Petitioner/Appellant,

v.

KYLE JEFFRY KILLEBREW, Respondent/Appellee.

No. 1 CA-CV 20-0538 FC FILED 10-19-2021

Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County No. FC2015-091121 The Honorable Suzanne S. Marwil, Judge

AFFIRMED

COUNSEL

Strong Law, Scottsdale By Marc R. Grant, Jr. Counsel for Petitioner/Appellant

Kyle Jeffry Killebrew, Peoria Respondent/Appellee ALCOTT v. KILLEBREW Decision of the Court

MEMORANDUM DECISION

Judge Maurice Portley1 delivered the decision of the Court, in which Presiding Judge Jennifer B. Campbell and Judge Samuel A. Thumma joined.

P O R T L E Y, Judge:

¶1 Kristyn Anne Alcott (“Mother”) appeals the family court’s ruling on competing petitions to modify a decree entered in 2015. Mother argues the family court (1) erred in ordering Mother and Kyle Jeffry Killebrew (“Father”) to choose a school for their children using distance as the only factor; (2) failed to consider all relevant school placement factors as discussed in Jordan v. Rea, 221 Ariz. 581, 590, ¶¶ 23-24 (App. 2009); and (3) effectively usurped her authority to make a final decision on a choice of school for the parties’ children. For the following reasons, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2 Mother and Father were married in 2009 and have two minor children, born in December 2010 and February 2012. In 2015, Mother filed a petition to dissolve their marriage. Later that year, the parties submitted a consent decree, which the court entered.

¶3 In the decree, the court awarded the parties joint legal decision-making with Mother having final decision-making authority. Mother received primary physical custody with Father receiving regular parenting time. The decree also specified the following regarding the children’s education:

Once both children are of appropriate school age, [the] parties will mutually agree upon an elementary school of equal distance between parental homes. This agreement shall be in writing and filed with the court at that time.

(Capitalization omitted; italics added.)

1 The Honorable Maurice Portley, Retired Judge of the Court of Appeals, Division One, has been authorized to sit in this matter pursuant to Article 6, Section 3, of the Arizona Constitution.

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¶4 After the parties stipulated to adopt a week on/week off parenting time schedule in August 2016, the court adopted and entered the agreement as an order. A year later Mother filed a petition to modify child parenting time after Father moved to Flagstaff, Arizona. The family court granted the petition and ordered: (1) Father could exercise parenting time every weekend except for the first weekend of each month as long as Father lived more than twenty-five miles away from Mother; (2) the parties would resume the week on/week off schedule should Father relocate within twenty-five miles of Mother; and (3) the parties would continue to have joint legal decision-making authority, and if they could not agree after making a good-faith effort to reach an agreement, Mother would have “presumptive decision-making authority.” Importantly, the court also otherwise affirmed “all Orders currently in place, except as expressly modified herein.”

¶5 Father subsequently moved back to the Phoenix area, near Mother’s residence, and the parties resumed their week on/week off parenting schedule. The resumption of this schedule was not without controversy, however, involving significant motion practice and a prior appeal not detailed here.

¶6 In May 2019, Father filed a “Petition to Modify Legal Decision-Making, Parenting Time and Child Support,” requesting he be awarded sole legal decision-making, especially regarding the children’s medical and education decisions, and seeking equal parenting time. Mother then filed a petition seeking an order that Father pay certain medical bills, and in July 2019, Mother filed a petition to modify parenting time and child support.

¶7 In August 2019, Father also filed an “Expedited Petition for Temporary Orders Re: Legal Decision-Making,” in which he stated he had just become aware that Mother had again moved and placed the children in another school, which was at least twenty-two miles away from the children’s previous school and farther from Father’s residence, and requested that the family court “temporarily order that he be awarded sole legal decision-making such that he [might] move the minor children to the school where they attended the previous year.” In his response to Mother’s pending petition to modify parenting time, Father also contended in part that Mother had moved the children from an A-rated school to a B-rated school that had fewer services for the children.

¶8 The court set a temporary orders hearing for September 2019. In her separate pretrial statement, Mother argued she had presumptive

3 ALCOTT v. KILLEBREW Decision of the Court

decision-making authority under the January 2018 order and could unilaterally change the children’s school unless Father could demonstrate that it was contrary to the children’s best interests. She also argued that “changing schools again at this point will only cause upset and disrupt the children.” In Father’s separate pretrial statement, he argued the children’s new school lacked “before and after care,” which created a logistical hardship for him because it resided at least twenty-four miles away.

¶9 In its temporary ruling, the family court

directed [Father] to research any other schools available to the children and that are more centrally located between the parties. Once appropriate schools are located, Father shall provide a list of the schools to Mother. If the parties are unable to reach an agreement, counsel are directed to submit a blind list of schools to the Court on or before October 3, 2019.

(Emphasis omitted.) The court also deleted the 25-mile radius contingency contained in its January 2018 order.

¶10 The parties were unable to agree on a suitable equidistant school that was still accepting students. The court then issued a temporary order that the children remain at their new school and making Mother responsible for picking up and dropping off the children.

¶11 The trial on the parties’ pending petitions was set for August 2020. In her separate pretrial statement, Mother argued that the school choice issue was no longer in dispute. In his pretrial statement, Father argued he should have final decision-making authority, in part because “Mother repeatedly abuses the authority to have final say [which] allows her to change schools [each time] she moves.”

¶12 After trial, the court made detailed best interest findings. Specifically, the court addressed the school choice issue, noting that Father found it hard to work while the children were enrolled in a school that did not have a before or after care program:

The Court ordered that the children could remain enrolled in [the new school] because no school equidistant between the parties had space for them in October 2019. That may not be true at this time. Further, the lack of a before and after school program has led to more interaction between the parties and more conflict. Accordingly, by no later than September 8, 2020, both parties shall make and exchange lists of no less

4 ALCOTT v. KILLEBREW Decision of the Court

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Related

Gonzales v. Gonzales
657 P.2d 425 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1982)
Hoffman v. Hoffman
417 P.2d 717 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1966)
Jordan v. Rea
212 P.3d 919 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 2009)
Palmer v. Palmer
170 P.3d 676 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 2007)
Baker v. Meyer
346 P.3d 998 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 2015)
Robert J Nicaise Jr v. Aparna Sundaram
432 P.3d 925 (Arizona Supreme Court, 2019)
Paul E. v. Courtney F.
439 P.3d 1169 (Arizona Supreme Court, 2019)
Nold v. Nold
304 P.3d 1093 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 2013)

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Bluebook (online)
Alcott v. Killebrew, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alcott-v-killebrew-arizctapp-2021.