Baiker v. Kaplan

CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedOctober 12, 2021
Docket1 CA-CV 20-0627
StatusUnpublished

This text of Baiker v. Kaplan (Baiker v. Kaplan) 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
Baiker v. Kaplan, (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 UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.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

CHRISTOPHER E. BAIKER, Plaintiff/Appellee,

v.

ASHLEY DORRANCE KAPLAN, Defendant/Appellant.

No. 1 CA-CV 20-0627 FILED 10-12-2021

Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County No. CV2014-091912 The Honorable Janice K. Crawford, Judge

AFFIRMED

COUNSEL

Limón-Wynn Law PLLC, Tempe By Monica A. Limón-Wynn Co-Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellee

Jones, Skelton & Hochuli, PLC, Phoenix By Eileen Dennis GilBride Co-Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellee

Dickinson Wright PLLC, Phoenix By P. Bruce Converse, Scott A. Holcomb, Paxton D. Endres Counsel for Defendant/Appellant BAIKER v. KAPLAN Decision of the Court

MEMORANDUM DECISION

Judge David B. Gass delivered the decision of the court, in which Presiding Judge D. Steven Williams and Judge James B. Morse Jr. joined.

G A S S, Judge:

¶1 The superior court granted summary judgment against mother, finding she sought to modify the parents’ Amended and Restated Joint Custody Agreement (Custody Agreement) without a good-faith basis. Mother appeals. Finding no error, we affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2 From 2010 through March 2012, the parents engaged in extensive litigation in their dissolution matter, including custody—now legal decision-making—and parenting time issues involving their two minor children. Baiker v. Kaplan (Baiker I), 1 CA-CV 15-0033, 2016 WL 3101783 at *1, ¶ 2 (Ariz. App. June 2, 2016) (mem. decision). The underlying facts are unchanged from Baiker I, and this appeal arises out of the same disputed 2013 summer-vacation schedule. See id.

¶3 In 2012, the parents entered into the Custody Agreement and a Separate Property Agreement (Property Agreement). The Property Agreement provides either mother or father generally may seek to enforce the Custody Agreement. But the Property Agreement establishes only four grounds under which a parent may seek to modify the Custody Agreement without breaching the Property Agreement. The four grounds are: (a) a child has significant health issues and a change is in the child’s best interests; (b) a bona fide and genuine issue exists as to the other parent’s physical or mental ability to parent; (c) a parent is substantially non- compliant with the Custody Agreement; or (d) father moves within 100 miles of mother. To avoid breaching the Property Agreement, the parent seeking modification must have a good-faith belief one of the four enumerated grounds applies.

¶4 The Property Agreement includes a “financial incentive” to discourage both parents from breaching its modification provisions. Under the Property Agreement, mother agreed to give father $1,000,000 in supplemental funding to purchase a home near where she lived with the

2 BAIKER v. KAPLAN Decision of the Court

children in California. Father ultimately would own the home as his sole and separate property. But if mother were to seek to modify the Custody Agreement without a good-faith basis as discussed above, the Property Agreement would accelerate her obligations to transfer the supplemental funds and the home to father.

¶5 In 2012, the superior court approved the Custody Agreement and incorporated the Property Agreement into its order. The Custody Agreement gave father priority in scheduling summer vacations in odd- numbered years starting in 2013. In 2013—the first summer father had summer-vacation priority under the Custody Agreement and over father’s objection—mother booked two lengthy vacations with the children. Id. at *1, ¶ 3.

¶6 Father sued mother, seeking to enforce the Custody Agreement and asserting she breached the Property Agreement and owed him the specified financial incentives. Id. at *1, ¶ 7. The superior court dismissed father’s complaint. Id. at *2, ¶ 8. This court reversed, ruling mother sought to modify the Custody Agreement. Id. at *3, ¶¶ 12, 16. This court then remanded for the superior court to determine whether—when mother sought the modification—she acted in good faith under the Property Agreement. Id. at ¶ 13.

¶7 On remand and after additional discovery, the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The superior court denied mother’s motion and granted father’s motion, finding mother sought the modification in violation of the Property Agreement. The superior court awarded father $142,071.86 in attorney fees and costs under A.R.S. §§ 12- 341 and 12-341.01. Mother timely appealed. This court has jurisdiction under article VI, section 9, of the Arizona Constitution, and A.R.S. §§ 12- 120.21.A.1 and 12-2101.A.1.

ANALYSIS

¶8 Mother appeals the superior court’s finding she lacked a good-faith basis to seek to modify the 2013 summer-vacation schedule. She argues she did not breach the Property Agreement, a good-faith determination is not appropriate for summary judgment, and the Property Agreement’s custody-related financial incentives are unenforceable.

3 BAIKER v. KAPLAN Decision of the Court

I. Summary judgment is appropriate because mother failed to show a genuine dispute of material fact.

A. Mother failed to show a genuine dispute as to the four enumerated modification grounds provided under the Property Agreement.

¶9 Summary judgment is appropriate when the moving party shows “there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Ariz. R. Civ. P. 56(a). To carry its burden of proof, the party seeking summary judgment must submit “undisputed admissible evidence that would compel any reasonable juror to find in its favor on every element of its claim.” Comerica Bank v. Mahmoodi, 224 Ariz. 289, 293, ¶ 20 (App. 2010). This court views the facts and reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the non- moving party—here, mother. See Rasor v. Nw. Hosp., LLC, 243 Ariz. 160, 163, ¶ 11 (2017).

¶10 On appeal, mother argues she presented sufficient evidence from which a jury reasonably could conclude she had a good-faith basis to believe father’s substantial non-compliance with the Custody Agreement— the third modification ground—justified her modification request. But mother’s depositions belie her claim she acted under the third, or any other, enumerated ground.

¶11 After remand, mother gave two depositions. During those depositions, mother acknowledged she understood father had priority vacation scheduling in 2013 and father’s decision-making controlled. But mother expressly testified she pursued a modification so her 2013 vacation decisions would control despite believing none of the four enumerated grounds applied, including the third:

FATHER’S COUNSEL: And item (c), that says that a party, either of you, can move to modify the [Custody Agreement] if either party is in substantial non-compliance. That wasn’t the situation for your Hawaii vacation or your Canada vacation, correct?

MOTHER: Correct.

Mother responded with equal clarity and detail when she denied believing the other three grounds applied. And, to resolve any uncertainty, mother twice denied believing she had any grounds under the Custody Agreement:

4 BAIKER v. KAPLAN Decision of the Court

FATHER’S COUNSEL: And at the time in 2013, you didn’t believe that any of these exceptions existed, did you?

MOTHER’S COUNSEL: Object to the form.

MOTHER: No.

....

FATHER’S COUNSEL: Okay. And in 2012 when you -- in 2013 when you filed the response . . .

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Bluebook (online)
Baiker v. Kaplan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baiker-v-kaplan-arizctapp-2021.