Amanda Pacholski v. Mark Ladd

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 14, 2024
Docket368466
StatusUnpublished

This text of Amanda Pacholski v. Mark Ladd (Amanda Pacholski v. Mark Ladd) 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
Amanda Pacholski v. Mark Ladd, (Mich. Ct. App. 2024).

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

AMANDA PACHOLSKI, UNPUBLISHED March 14, 2024 Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 368466 Macomb Circuit Court Family Division MARK LADD, LC No. 2020-000544-DS

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: GARRETT, P.J., and RIORDAN and LETICA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In this custody action, plaintiff appeals as of right the trial court’s order denying plaintiff’s objections to the referee report and recommendation that sole legal and physical custody be awarded to defendant. We affirm.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Plaintiff (mother) and defendant (father) never married and had two children, ML and EL. After their relationship ended, father began living with a woman, who is now his fiancée. Father is a stay-at-home parent while his fiancée, an attorney, provides the household income. Mother is unemployed and receives Social Security payments because she is disabled by her narcolepsy1 and cataplexy.2 Mother and father entered a final consent judgment for custody on September 24,

1 “Narcolepsy is a chronic neurological disorder that affects the brain’s ability to control sleep- wake cycles.” National Institute of Health Neurological Disorders and Strokes, Health Information, Narcolepsy, (accessed March 6, 2024). 2 Cataplexy is “sudden muscle weakness while awake that makes a person go limp or unable to move.” National Institute of Health Neurological Disorders and Strokes, Health Information, Narcolepsy, (accessed March 6, 2024).

-1- 2020, in which they agreed to share legal and physical custody of the children. The parents agreed that, during the school year, the children would reside with mother from Monday to Friday, and with father from Friday to Monday, with variations outside of the school year and on holidays.

In May, 2022, Children’s Protective Services (CPS) opened a case that resulted in substantiated allegations of improper supervision against both parents. After both parents successfully completed their treatment plans, the case was closed in early 2023.

At issue in this appeal is father’s August 30, 2022 ex parte emergency motion to suspend custody and parenting time for mother. Father alleged that mother’s negligent supervision of the children resulted in ML sustaining multiple injuries, including a burned lip when he chewed through an electrical cord, bruises on his body, and a black eye that mother attributed to throwing a miniature candy bar to another child that struck ML. Attached to father’s motion was a medical report documenting ML’s eye injury and the pediatrician’s opinion that mother’s account was inconsistent with the injury ML suffered. The report noted that ML was a “[s]uspected victim of physical abuse[.]”

The trial court found that father’s allegations met the threshold for a change of circumstances and referred the matter to the Friend of the Court (FOC) for a custody and parenting investigation and recommendation. The FOC report indicated there was clear and convincing evidence that supported father’s request to modify the established custodial environment the children had with both parents because mother improperly supervised the children, suffered from health issues that compromised her parenting ability, ignored a court order to have the children tested for autism, ignored signs that the children were malnourished, returned the children to father with numerous bruises and injuries on a regular basis, denied father parenting time, and denied Nicole Bryant, a CPS caseworker, access to the children.

Mother filed an objection to the FOC report and recommendation, alleging that the information and circumstances utilized to evaluate the best-interest factors were either not relevant to the best-interest factors or were outdated and inaccurate. Mother requested that a second FOC investigation be conducted or an evidentiary hearing be held on the matter.

Subsequently, an evidentiary hearing was held before a referee. At the hearing, mother, father, father’s fiancée, the children’s paternal grandmother, and Bryant provided testimony concerning CPS’s involvement with the children, the parents’ compliance with CPS, the children’s history of injuries, the parents’ involvement in the children’s medical appointments and special needs programs, the parents’ health issues, the parents’ compliance with parenting time, and the children’s possible malnourishment.

Following the hearing, the referee found that the children had an established custodial environment with both parents and that there was clear and convincing evidence that father should be awarded sole legal and physical custody of the children because he could provide a more appropriate, stable, and safe living environment for the children, while also providing for their special needs. The referee also noted that there were serious concerns about the children’s safety while in mother’s care, and found that mother was not credible when she stated the children were not in her care when most of their injuries occurred. Specifically, the referee found that best- interests factors MCL 722.23(b) (capacity to give love, affection, guidance, and continue religious

-2- upbringing), (g) (mental and physical health), (h) (home, school, and community records), (j) (willingness to facilitate parental relationship), and (l) (any other relevant factor) weighed in favor of father because under (b) mother struggled to manage her household and provide appropriate guidance and supervision for the children; (g) mother’s health issues were more extreme than father’s health issues; (h) father was almost entirely responsible for the children’s extensive health needs; (j) mother denied father parenting time; and (l) father’s parenting skills increased while mother’s decreased.

Mother objected to these best-interest findings and argued that there had been no material change justifying a modification to the custody order. In a written opinion and order, the trial court held that, contrary to mother’s assertions, the referee’s recommendation was based on relevant information and supported by testimony provided at the evidentiary hearing. Accordingly, the trial court denied mother’s objection to the referee report and recommendation, adopted the referee’s findings and recommendation, and awarded father sole legal and physical custody of the children.

From this decision, mother appeals.

II. STANDARDS OF REVIEW

In matters involving child custody, “ ‘all orders and judgments of the circuit court shall be affirmed on appeal unless the trial judge made findings of fact against the great weight of evidence or committed a palpable abuse of discretion or a clear legal error on a major issue.’ ” Pennington v Pennington, 329 Mich App 562, 569-570; 944 NW2d 131 (2019), quoting MCL 722.28. “A finding of fact is against the great weight of the evidence if the evidence clearly preponderates in the opposite direction.” Id. at 570. Discretionary rulings, including a trial court’s decision to change custody, are reviewed for an abuse of discretion. Lieberman v Orr, 319 Mich App 68, 77; 900 NW2d 130 (2017). “[A]n abuse of discretion exists when the result is so palpably and grossly violative of fact and logic that it evidences a perversity of will, a defiance of judgment, or the exercise of passion or bias.” Yachcik v Yachcik, 319 Mich App 24, 31; 900 NW2d 113 (2017) (quotation marks and citation omitted).

III. ANALYSIS

A. CHANGE OF CIRCUMSTANCES

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Bluebook (online)
Amanda Pacholski v. Mark Ladd, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amanda-pacholski-v-mark-ladd-michctapp-2024.