Atkinson v. Atkinson

212 So. 3d 631, 2016 La.App. 4 Cir. 0759, 2017 WL 605016, 2017 La. App. LEXIS 231
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 15, 2017
DocketNO. 2016-CA-0759
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 212 So. 3d 631 (Atkinson v. Atkinson) 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
Atkinson v. Atkinson, 212 So. 3d 631, 2016 La.App. 4 Cir. 0759, 2017 WL 605016, 2017 La. App. LEXIS 231 (La. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinions

Judge Daniel L. Dysart

11 Dianne Dennison Atkinson (“Ms. Atkinson”) appeals the trial court’s maintaining the Peremptory Exception of No Cause of Action filed in response to her Rule for Modifications of Physical Custody Schedule. She also appeals the trial court’s ruling in a consolidated Motion for Suspension of Child Support filed by James Dudley Atkinson, IV (“Dr. Atkinson”), relieving him of his obligation to pay child support during the months of June and July.

After review, we affirm the trial court’s ruling maintaining the Peremptory Exception of No Cause of Action. Further, we vacate that portion of the judgment relieving Dr. Atkinson of his child support obligation during the months of June and July, and remand that matter to the trial court for further proceedings.

BACKGROUND:

The parties were divorced in 2010. They have one child, Camille, who was eleven at the time the trial court heard this matter on April 6, 2016. Based on several consent judgments and a considered decree, the issues of custody, visitation, and holiday and summer schedules were established.1 The consent | ¿judgments establish that the parties are the joint custodians of Camille, with Ms. Atkinson being the primary domiciliary parent. By virtue of a December 15, 2014 considered decree, Ms. Atkinson is designated as the primary custodial parent during the school year, with Dr. Atkinson having physical custody from two days after the end of the school year until five days before the beginning of the next school year. The non-custodial parent has visitation every other weekend and on Wednesday evenings of every week. The judgment provides for vacation time with the child for each parent during the summer months. Further, the judgment allows for the modification of visitation, but only with the written consent of the parties.

Ms. Atkinson raised several issues in her first appeal, including custody, but voluntarily dismissed all issues except one pertaining to transportation of the child for visitation.

In November 2015, two months after this Court rendered its opinion in the previous appeal, Ms. Atkinson filed a Rule for Contempt against Dr. Atkinson for not paying child support during the two summer months Camille had spent with him. In response, Dr. Atkinson filed a motion to suspend child support during those summer months. Ms. Atkinson responded with a Rule for Modifications of Physical Custody Schedule. Specifically, Ms. Atkinson requested that the summer schedule be modified to provide for Camille to spend at least half of each summer with her mother in New Orleans.2 She also sought to hold Dr. Atkinson in contempt for not paying his share of educational and medical expenses for Camille. Dr. Atkinson objected to the request for change of the summer custody schedule by |sfiling a Peremptory Exception of No Cause of Action, arguing that Ms. Atkinson’s premise for the change of custody did not meet the Bergeron3 standard required for a change of custody [634]*634after a considered decree has been rendered. As such, he argued that Ms. Atkinson did not state a valid cause of action. As stated above, the trial court agreed with Dr. Atkinson, maintaining his exception, thereby dismissing Ms. Atkinson’s motion to modify custody.

At the subject hearing, the parties stipulated that Dr. Atkinson would pay within five days to Ms. Atkinson the $5000 owed for child support in the summer of 2015, and that Ms. Atkinson would dismiss her rule for contempt. However, the trial court also granted Dr. Atkinson’s rule to suspend child support for June and July of each year going forward.

DISCUSSION:

On appeal, Ms. Atkinson raises two assignments of error. First, she argues that the trial court erred in maintaining Dr. Atkinson’s Peremptory Exception of No Cause of Action, as she did not request a change of custody, but rather a change to the allocation of physical custody over the summer. In her second assignment of error, she argues that the trial court erred in suspending Dr. Atkinson’s child support payments during the summer.

We find Ms. Atkinson’s argument that her request for modification was not a change of custody, but merely a change to the allocation of physical custody during the summer, is without merit. The motion she filed was entitled “Rule for Modifications of Physical Custody Schedule,” and in it she specifically requests that the previously ordered custody schedule for the summer be changed such that |4she would be awarded one-half of that period. We find such to be a request for a change of custody without the requisite material change in circumstances alleged or set forth in the motion. Accordingly, the Exception of No Cause of Action is an appropriate challenge to her motion.

The exception of no cause of action serves to test the legal sufficiency of a petition by determining whether the law affords a remedy on the facts alleged. Loan Partners, LLC v. PTC Family Investments, LLC, 14-0582, p. 3 (La.App. 4 Cir. 11/26/14), 157 So.3d 771, 773; Kirksey v. New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Found., Inc., 12-1351, p. 7 (La.App. 4 Cir. 2/27/13), 116 So.3d 664, 669. The pertinent inquiry is whether, in a light most favorable to the plaintiff and with every doubt resolved in plaintiffs behalf, the petition states any valid cause of action for relief. La. Code Civ. Proc. arts. 927, 931; City of New Orleans v. Bd. of Directors of Louisiana State Museum, 98-1170, p. 9 (La. 3/2/99), 739 So.2d 748, 755; Kirksey, 12-1351, p. 7, 116 So.3d at 669. The exception is triable on the face of the petition, with the trial court presuming that all well-pleaded facts in the petition are true. Loan Partners, 14-0582, p. 3,157 So.3d at 773.

A party seeking to modify a considered custody decree bears a heavy burden of proof to warrant a change in that custody arrangement. Hilkirk v. Johnson, 15-577, p. 28 (La.App. 4 Cir. 12/23/15), 183 So.3d 731, 747, citing Bergeron, 492 So.2d at 1196. In Bergeron, the Louisiana Supreme Court stated:

When a trial court has made a considered decree of permanent custody the party seeking change bears a heavy burden of proving that the continuation of the present custody is so deleterious to the child as to justify a modification of the custody decree, or of proving by clear and convincing evidence that the harm likely to be caused by a change of environment is substantially outweighed by its advantages to the child.

| ¡Bergeron, 492 So.2d at 1200.

More recently, in Mulkey v. Mulkey, 12-2709 (La. 5/7/13), 118 So.3d 357, the [635]*635Louisiana Supreme Court restated the Bergeron rule:

[W]hen a party seeks to change custody rendered in a considered decree, the proponent of change must not only show that a change in circumstances materially affecting the welfare of the child has occurred since the prior order respecting custody, but he or she must also meet the burden of proof set forth in Bergeron.

Mulkey, 12-2709, p. 11, 118 So.3d at 365.

Ms. Atkinson’s Rule for Modification provides in pertinent part:

III. The summer schedule provided for in the judgment of December 15, 2014 [sic], is not in the best interests of the minor child.

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212 So. 3d 631, 2016 La.App. 4 Cir. 0759, 2017 WL 605016, 2017 La. App. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atkinson-v-atkinson-lactapp-2017.