Berlin v. Berlin
This text of 386 So. 2d 577 (Berlin v. Berlin) 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.
Opinion
Jerome C. BERLIN, Appellant,
v.
Dawna Michele BERLIN, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
Cypen & Nevins and Wayne Cypen, Miami Beach, for appellant.
Brumer, Cohen, Logan & Kandell, P.A., and Kenneth R. Duboff, Miami, for appellee.
*578 NESBITT, Judge.
This is a consolidated appeal from a judgment entered on a petition for change of custody which transferred custody of two minor children from their father to their mother. We find error and reverse.
This is the second appearance of this case before this court. On April 10, 1979, this court affirmed an order changing custody of the minor children from the mother to the father.[1] On April 23, 1979, the mother filed a petition for change of custody which alleged that: (a) there was "new evidence" and a "new status" since the previous modification award entered on January 18, 1978; (b) she had "maintained a stable life"; (c) she had been evaluated by a psychiatrist who found her to be "normal, stable, and capable of caring for her children in a proper way"; (d) the best interests of the children would be served by returning them to the mother since the court had already determined in a prior hearing that the father was only to have temporary custody of the children;[2] and (e) the children had expressed their preference to live with the mother.
HISTORY OF THE CASE
The parties' marriage was dissolved by a judgment entered on February 8, 1974. That judgment incorporated a separation agreement which granted permanent custody of the children to the mother while reserving reasonable visitation rights for the father.
In April of that year, the mother moved with the children from Miami to a motel in Orange Park, Florida (a suburb of Jacksonville) where her family lived. This was the first in a series of relocations which the mother embarked upon, each time uprooting the children, which the trial court later found to have a detrimental effect upon them. The mother remained in Orange Park until early 1975 when she moved with the children to Colorado. In the summer of 1975, they returned to Miami where they stayed until September, at which point they again moved back to Orange Park. In June of 1976, they once again returned to Miami. The mother placed the children in day care centers while she worked.
In March of 1977, the mother learned of the father's plans to remarry and, once again, moved back to Orange Park. The father filed an injunction to prevent the mother from moving the children to Orange Park during which proceeding the mother was examined by a court-appointed psychiatrist. This examination revealed that the mother had serious psychological and emotional problems. The psychiatrist directed the mother to a psychologist where she underwent psychotherapy. As a result of the proceedings and the results of the examination, the court ordered a modification of custody and visitation. Additionally, the court required the mother to reside in either Dade, Monroe, Collier, or Broward County and to receive psychotherapy at the father's expense. In compliance, she moved to Broward County.
The mother then engaged in a series of activities that displayed a vindictive effort to frustrate the father's visitation rights. Ultimately, the father filed a petition to modify the custody rights which culminated in the order entered January 18, 1978 changing permanent custody of the minors to the father. That order appears to have been entered because of the mother's mental health and because in the past she had effectively frustrated the father's visitation rights and proposed to drastically curtail the father's future visitation rights by moving to and living in the Jacksonville area. The mother was required to submit to additional psychiatric examination by a court-approved psychiatrist, apparently as a condition *579 to the exercise of her visitation privileges.
THE MOTHER'S MENTAL HEALTH
The record demonstrates that the mother was seen by the court-approved psychiatrist on four occasions between January and June of 1978. At the final hearing, conducted on August 30, 1979, her court-approved psychiatrist testified, by way of deposition, that he could find no reason for her to continue psychotherapy based upon his evaluation of the mother as of February 2, 1978 (some two weeks after the order changing custody which required the mother to undergo psychotherapy and nineteen months prior to the final hearing). The remaining visits to the court-approved psychiatrist were made by the mother to comply with the court's order.
The court-appointed psychiatrist, who had also examined the parties, testified at the final hearing that there had been no change in the mother's mental health. His observations were also based upon documentary evidence generated through her court-approved psychiatrist. Like our colleagues in Ashleman v. Ashleman, 381 So.2d 364 (Fla.4th DCA 1980), we find the circumstances here strongly suggest that a current psychiatric evaluation of the mother would have been in order. Nonetheless, we accept as an established fact that the mother's mental health was normal.
THE MOTHER'S STABILITY
At the final hearing, the mother testified that her attitude had changed because she had learned to cope with stress. She also testified that she was employed weekdays between the hours of nine and five as a controller of a motel in Orange Park; that she had joined organizations, made friends, and was beginning to date; and that she desired to care for the children.
THE PREFERENCE OF THE CHILDREN
At the time of the underlying evidentiary hearing, the parties' son was ten years old and their daughter was eight. Neither of the children appeared in court. The mother's court-approved psychiatrist testified, through deposition, based upon conversations with the mother, that the children desired to live with her. The court-appointed attorney ad litem for the children also reported that the children preferred to live with the mother. However, the court-appointed psychiatrist, as well as the children's attending psychiatrist, testified that the children were not of sufficient maturity and wisdom to make an intelligent choice between their parents. A child must be of sufficient intelligence, understanding, and experience to express preference for a custodial parent. § 61.13(3)(i), Fla. Stat. (1979). Only the desire of a child mature enough to make a reasonable choice between competing custodial parents is entitled to any weight. Marshall v. Reams, 32 Fla. 499, 14 So. 95 (1893); Goldstein v. Goldstein, 264 So.2d 49 (Fla.3d DCA 1972).
FRUSTRATION OF THE MOTHER'S VISITATION RIGHTS
In the order appealed from, the court found that both parties exhibited an intransigent behavior with respect to the visitation rights of the other. In particular, the court found the father had denied the mother reasonable visitation with the children on one occasion when he unexpectedly took them on a two-week holiday to Switzerland. The only other support in the record for a showing of frustration of the mother's visitation rights was the testimony by the maternal grandmother (who also lived in Orange Park) that the children seemed oblivious to her during visitation when formerly they had enjoyed a close relationship.
During the twenty-month interval between the separate custody orders involved, the mother rarely visited the children in Miami.
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386 So. 2d 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berlin-v-berlin-fladistctapp-1980.