Andrew Fairbanks Versus Brooke Beninate

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 23, 2020
Docket20-CA-206
StatusUnknown

This text of Andrew Fairbanks Versus Brooke Beninate (Andrew Fairbanks Versus Brooke Beninate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrew Fairbanks Versus Brooke Beninate, (La. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

ANDREW FAIRBANKS NO. 20-CA-206

VERSUS FIFTH CIRCUIT

BROOKE BENINATE COURT OF APPEAL

STATE OF LOUISIANA

ON APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF JEFFERSON, STATE OF LOUISIANA NO. 763-069, DIVISION "L" HONORABLE DONALD A. ROWAN, JR., JUDGE PRESIDING

December 23, 2020

STEPHEN J. WINDHORST JUDGE

Panel composed of Judges Jude G. Gravois, Stephen J. Windhorst, and Hans J. Liljeberg

AFFIRMED IN PART; VACATED IN PART; REMANDED SJW JGG HJL COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLEE, ANDREW FAIRBANKS Terri M. Miles Rebecca Huskey

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLANT, BROOKE BENINATE Richard L. Ducote Victora McIntyre

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE, STATE OF LOUISIANA, DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE Jeffrey M. Landry Alicia Edmond Wheeler David J. Smith, Jr. WINDHORST, J.

In this custody dispute, defendant/appellant, Brooke Beninate, appeals the

trial court’s judgment denying her motion to declare La. R.S. 46:236.5 C

unconstitutional, awarding plaintiff/appellee, Andrew Fairbanks, sole custody of

their child, and restricting Ms. Beninate to supervised visitation. Ms. Beninate also

appeals the awards of child support, attorney’s fees and costs to Mr. Fairbanks. For

the following reasons, we affirm the trial court’s judgment, except as to the child

support award. We vacate the child support award and remand for further

proceedings.

FACTS and PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This case has a protracted history of conflict between the parents of C.B., who

is four years old, related primarily to Mr. Fairbanks’ efforts to obtain visitation and

eventually custody. The parents, Ms. Beninate and Mr. Fairbanks, have never been

married or lived together. Mr. Fairbanks has been identified as the child’s biological

father by scientific testing and has acknowledged the child since birth.

Mr. Fairbanks’ efforts to obtain visitation of the child began on July 21, 2016,

when he filed a petition to establish custody seeking visitation every other weekend

and every other holiday. In that petition, Mr. Fairbanks asserted that Ms. Beninate

had prevented him from seeing the child, even though he had been paying her child

support.

During the course of these proceedings, Ms. Beninate has filed multiple

petitions for protection from abuse, although none have been proven to have merit.

She filed the first petition for protection from abuse on August 16, 2018, not long

after Mr. Fairbanks filed his first petition seeking visitation. Ms. Beninate alleged

that she suspected that her child had been physically and sexually abused by Mr.

Fairbanks because he came home covered in bruises, had a busted lip, a purple

toenail, was traumatized and was not the same after that. She asserted that Mr.

20-CA-206 1 Fairbanks had exhibited physical violence in the past and alleged that he slapped

their child in the face, backhanded and shoved him, and told him to “shut up.” On

August 16, 2018, the court issued an order of protection effective through September

5, 2018, in which Mr. Fairbanks was ordered to not go within 300 feet of their child.

On August 30, 2018, approximately two weeks after filing the petition for protection

from abuse, it was dismissed on Ms. Beninate’s motion.

On August 28, 2018, Mr. Fairbanks filed a petition to set child custody,

seeking formal recognition as C.B.’s biological father and joint custody with a

specific custody and visitation plan. In response, Ms. Beninate asserted that it would

be in the child’s best interest to award her sole custody and Mr. Fairbanks supervised

visitation. She again alleged that Mr. Fairbanks physically and sexually abused their

child. After a hearing officer conference on November 20, 2018 relative to the issues

raised in these pleadings, the hearing officer recommended that Mr. Fairbanks have

visitation with his child twice a week for two hours; that the parties’ counsel arrange

a visitation schedule; and that Mr. Fairbanks pay child support and explore obtaining

health insurance. These recommendations were adopted as an interim judgment of

the court, and Ms. Beninate timely objected to them.

Soon after the interim judgment granting Mr. Fairbanks visitation was signed,

on December 4, 2018, Ms. Beninate filed a second petition for protection from abuse

based on the same previously-asserted allegations that Mr. Fairbanks emotionally,

physically, and sexually abused their child. After a hearing, at which testimony was

presented, the Commissioner found the petition unwarranted and dismissed it due to

Ms. Beninate’s failure to prove the allegations.

Pursuant to a stipulation by the parties, Dr. Karen Van Beyer conducted a

custody evaluation on April 9, 2019. Mr. Fairbanks subsequently moved to

implement Dr. Van Beyer’s recommendations regarding custody, domicile,

activities, vacations, holidays, and therapy.

20-CA-206 2 On May 10, 2019, Mr. Fairbanks filed a first rule for contempt, stating that

despite the interim judgment granting him visitation, Ms. Beninate had refused to

allow him to see his child since August 2018 without her present. He asserted that

he had only been permitted to see his child ten times in her presence, and that after

these short visits with her and their child, she repeatedly texted and harassed him.

In addition, he alleged that after he filed a motion to implement the custody

evaluation, Ms. Beninate threatened to kill herself and their child if Mr. Fairbanks

did not forego his pursuit of custody and visitation. Although Mr. Fairbanks stated

that he did not believe Ms. Beninate would actually harm herself or their child, he

requested that the court address her behavior and threats. The hearing officer

considered this first rule for contempt at a May 28, 2019 hearing officer conference.

After the May 28, 2019 conference, the hearing officer recommended that Dr.

Van Beyer’s recommendations be made the judgment of the court and implemented.

These recommendations were made an interim judgment of the court. The interim

judgment provided that beginning on May 29, 2019, Mr. Fairbanks was entitled to

visitation with his child twice a week for four hours, and after four weeks, an

overnight visit. Ms. Beninate objected to Dr. Van Beyer’s recommendations and the

hearing officer’s recommendations.

After the May 28, 2019 interim judgment, on June 6, 2019, Mr. Fairbanks

filed a second rule for contempt, stating that Ms. Beninate continued to refuse to

allow him visitation. He stated that she met him at the designated meeting place for

visitation on May 29, 2019, but refused to allow him to take their child. He also

alleged that while he was holding their child, Ms. Beninate physically pried him out

of his arms causing their child distress. To document this incident, Mr. Fairbanks

called the police and a complaint report was issued. In this rule for contempt, Mr.

Fairbanks further asserted that Ms. Beninate did not allow him visitation on June 3,

2019, and that she continued to falsely accuse him of sexual abuse in the presence

20-CA-206 3 of their child. At a July 11, 2019 hearing officer conference on the second rule for

contempt, the hearing officer recommended that Mr. Fairbanks receive

compensatory visitation with his child and that Ms. Beninate be found in contempt

for violating the previous visitation order of the court and be ordered to pay Mr.

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