Alexis Aluise and Andrew Aluise v. Glenda Spanos

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedOctober 24, 2025
Docket5D2024-3376
StatusPublished

This text of Alexis Aluise and Andrew Aluise v. Glenda Spanos (Alexis Aluise and Andrew Aluise v. Glenda Spanos) 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
Alexis Aluise and Andrew Aluise v. Glenda Spanos, (Fla. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

FIFTH DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL STATE OF FLORIDA _____________________________

Case No. 5D2024-3376 L.T. Case No. 2022-DR-008269-FM _____________________________

ALEXIS ALUISE and ANDREW ALUISE,

Appellants,

v.

GLENDA SPANOS,

Appellee. _____________________________

On appeal from the Circuit Court for Duval County. Russell L. Healey, Judge.

David S. DeLugas, of National Association of Parents, Inc. d/b/a Parents USA, Atlanta, Georgia, for Appellants.

No Appearance for Appellee.

October 24, 2025

MACIVER, J.

Alexis Aluise and Andrew Aluise (“Parents”) appeal an order dismissing their petition for modification of a final order from Pennsylvania for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction and an order denying their motion for reconsideration or rehearing. 1 We reverse and remand for further proceedings.

I.

Alexis Aluise is the biological mother of the child, J.R., born in September 2016. The child’s biological father passed away in 2019. The mother married Andrew Aluise in October 2020, and he adopted the child in March 2021.

Appellee, Glenda Spanos—the deceased biological father’s mother (“Grandmother”)—brought an action for grandparent’s rights in the Court of Common Pleas in Butler County, Pennsylvania. Parents and the child moved from Pennsylvania to Jacksonville, Florida in July 2021, and Grandmother remained in Pennsylvania.

Six months later, in January 2022, a Final Order, consented to by all the parties, was entered in the Court of Common Pleas (the “Pennsylvania Order”). The Pennsylvania Order provided that Parents would “retain sole legal and primary physical custody [of the child] subject to Grandmother’s partial physical custody as set forth hereafter.” A graduating schedule was established for Grandmother to exercise custody of the child at Grandmother’s sister’s home in Tampa, which by the year 2024 consisted of five weekends per year plus one week while the child was on summer break from school. Whenever Parents returned to Pennsylvania— at least once per year—they were ordered to give Grandmother seven days’ advance notice and provide Grandmother visits at her home with the child, from four to eight hours depending on the length of Parents’ trip. Grandmother was granted weekly fifteen- minute video calls with the child, and Parents were ordered to

1 As an initial observation, we are troubled by the quality of

the briefing put forth by Parents’ pro hac vice attorney. Parents present numerous arguments comprised of largely flawed and misleading statements of law and inaccurate citations. Nonetheless, notwithstanding the wholly inadequate presentation of their case, they are correct that the court below erred on the question of jurisdiction.

2 provide photos of the child to Grandmother at least six times per year. No party could relocate the minor child without consent of the other parties or court order.

The Pennsylvania Order included the following provision: “None of the parties shall drink to the point of intoxication while the minor child is in their custody. Should any person within the household where the minor child is staying become intoxicated, the custodial party shall remove the intoxicated person or remove the child and exercise their custody elsewhere.”

The Pennsylvania court retained jurisdiction subject to the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (“UCCJEA”), and provided that the “parties’ consent to the terms of this Order is not intended to act as a bar to any subsequent actions or claims pursuant to the UCCJEA.”

In December 2022, Parents petitioned the Circuit Court in Duval County to domesticate and recognize the Pennsylvania Order. By Consent Final Judgment Domesticating Foreign Decree, stipulated to by all the parties, the Pennsylvania Order was domesticated as a Florida judgment in January 2023. The Florida court found it “has subject matter jurisdiction over the Parenting Plan, Time Sharing, and child support issues before the Court.” The Florida court retained jurisdiction and required the parties to appear “upon application for the enforcement or the modification of this judgment.”

In April 2023, Parents filed a Supplemental Petition for Modification of the Final Judgment (the “Modification Petition”), claiming substantial and material changes of circumstances and expressing significant concerns about the child’s safety and well- being while in the care of Grandmother. Parents alleged, among other things, that the child was exposed to excessive alcohol consumption during visits with Grandmother and there were multiple unknown adults at Grandmother’s sister’s home drinking alcohol while the child was present.

Grandmother moved to dismiss the Modification Petition, arguing that the Florida court lacked jurisdiction to modify a child custody determination made by a court of another state. Following

3 a hearing, the trial court granted Grandmother’s motion and dismissed Parents’ Modification Petition. Parents moved for reconsideration and rehearing, which the trial court denied. This appeal followed. II.

We review the trial court’s dismissal de novo. Mattingly v. Hatfield, 395 So. 3d 585, 589 (Fla. 1st DCA 2024). We also review de novo the trial court’s ruling on subject-matter jurisdiction and interpretation and application of a statute. McGovern v. Clark, 298 So. 3d 1244, 1248 (Fla. 5th DCA 2020).

As noted by the trial court, the right to grandparent visitation is broader in Pennsylvania than it is in Florida. Compare 23 Pa. C.S.A. § 5325 (where a parent of the child is deceased, a parent of the deceased parent may file an action for partial physical custody of the child), with section 752.011, Fla. Stat., (the grandparent visitation statute). Section 752.011 provides limited circumstances under which grandparents may petition for visitation, such as when one parent is deceased, missing, or in a vegetative state, and the other parent poses a substantial threat to the child’s welfare. But section 752.011 does not apply to the enforcement of foreign visitation orders, it applies to petitions initiated in Florida courts.

The domestication and enforcement of foreign visitation orders involving grandparents are subject to Florida’s obligations under the Full Faith and Credit Clause 2 and the UCCJEA, codified in Florida in Chapter 61, Part II, Florida Statutes. 3

Foreign orders granting grandparent visitation have been upheld in Florida. For instance, in Ledoux-Nottingham v. Downs, 210 So. 3d 1217, 1221 (Fla. 2017), the Florida Supreme Court held that a Colorado grandparent visitation order was enforceable in

2 See Art. IV, § 1, U.S. Const. (“Full Faith and Credit shall be

given in each State to the public Acts, Records, and judicial Proceedings of every other State.”). 3 The UCCJEA is also codified in Chapter 54, Pennsylvania

Statutes, sections 5401 through 5412.

4 Florida under the Full Faith and Credit Clause and section 61.536 of the UCCJEA (titled “Recognition and enforcement”), despite Florida’s constitutional limitations on grandparent visitation rights. Id. at 1223. The court emphasized that Florida must enforce the foreign order even if a similar order could not be entered under Florida law due to privacy concerns. Id. at 1222. See also Mattingly, 395 So. 3d 585 (where the First District affirmed that grandparent visitation rights granted in a Kentucky order could be enforced in Florida).

But we find the facts of this case to be distinguishable from those in Ledoux-Nottingham and Mattingly. In Ledoux- Nottingham, the Florida action was instituted while the Colorado action was still ongoing. See Ledoux-Nottingham v.

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Related

Snowden v. Snowden
985 So. 2d 584 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2008)
Ruth D. Ledoux-Nottingham v. Jennifer Joy Downs, etc.
210 So. 3d 1217 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2017)
Ledoux-Nottingham v. Downs
163 So. 3d 560 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2015)

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Alexis Aluise and Andrew Aluise v. Glenda Spanos, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexis-aluise-and-andrew-aluise-v-glenda-spanos-fladistctapp-2025.