Beverley Nettles v. Daniel E Nickerson Jr

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 26, 2016
Docket324631
StatusUnpublished

This text of Beverley Nettles v. Daniel E Nickerson Jr (Beverley Nettles v. Daniel E Nickerson Jr) 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
Beverley Nettles v. Daniel E Nickerson Jr, (Mich. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

BEVERLEY NETTLES, f/k/a BEVERLEY UNPUBLISHED NETTLES NICKERSON, April 26, 2016

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 324631 Ingham Circuit Court DANIEL E. NICKERSON, JR., LC No. 10-004218-DM

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: SAWYER, P.J., and MURPHY and RONAYNE KRAUSE, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff appeals an order denying her motion to set aside a prior custody and parenting time order for her twin sons LLN and LAN; scheduling defendant parenting time; and naming LLN and LAN “beneficiaries of the[ir] Michigan Education Trust Account[s]” (MET). The custody issues are appealed by right, MCR 7.202(6)(a)(iii), and we consider the remaining issues as on leave granted. MCR 7.203(b); Botsford Continuing Care Corp v Intelistaf Healthcare, Inc, 292 Mich App 51, 61-62; 807 NW2d 354 (2011). We affirm.

I. FACTS

The parties divorced in 2006. Upon divorce, the parties shared joint physical and legal custody of their sons and alternated parenting time on a monthly basis. Neither party owed child support. The parties agreed that defendant would manage each child’s MET funds without “chang[ing] investments or us[ing] the children’s [MET] funds unless mutually agreed upon.” Since divorce, the parties have disputed these agreements.

After years of disputes regarding custody and parenting, the trial court found in a March 2012 ruling that the boys had an established custodial environment with plaintiff and ordered parenting time with plaintiff during the school year, and two months of weekend parenting time with defendant.

On March 25, 2014, defendant filed a motion for a change in parenting time, seeking primary physical custody of both boys and asking for plaintiff to only have supervised, daytime visitation. Defendant claimed that the boys had already begun to live with him and that plaintiff consented to his new, proposed parenting time arrangement. A motion hearing was held, but

-1- plaintiff was not present. On April 10, 2014, the trial court temporarily granted defendant’s request for a parenting time change, finding that it was in the boys’ best interests to temporarily reside with defendant, and naming defendant the boys’ temporary, sole, physical custodian. Further, the trial court ordered supervised parenting time for plaintiff and suspended her overnight visits. Because the order was temporary, the trial court set the matter for an evidentiary hearing.

On May 29, 2014, the parties had an evidentiary hearing before a trial court referee. Plaintiff appeared. Plaintiff explained that she agreed to allow the boys to stay with defendant temporarily because she had been hospitalized for an illness, but she now wanted the boys returned to her care. Defendant wanted the boys to remain in his care. At the hearing, it was learned that the parties had not been following the April 10, 2014 custody order. Specifically, the boys had been spending overnights with plaintiff in violation of the court order. The referee found that neither party was following the April 10, 2014 parenting time order, explained that he wanted the order obeyed and, therefore, recommended continuation of the order. After the hearing, it appears that the boys gave in camera, unrecorded statements to the trial court regarding the custody and parenting time situation.

On June 20, 2014, the trial court continued the April 10, 2014 custody and parenting time order, wanting the parties to comply with the April 10, 2014 order before recommending a more long-term solution. Plaintiff objected to the continuation of the April 10, 2014 order and sought primary physical custody of the boys and unsupervised visitation. Plaintiff also objected to the fact that she was not permitted to attend the boys’ previous interviews with the trial court. At a hearing on the plaintiff’s motions, defendant stated that he “d[id] not object to a reinstatement of the order giving [plaintiff] custody of the boys [because] they refuse[d] to comply with [his] rules.” Plaintiff agreed to defendant’s stipulation regarding parenting time, and on August 14, 2014, the trial court entered a corresponding order.

Despite having her children returned to her custody, plaintiff filed a motion for clarification of the trial court’s April, 10, 2014, June 20, 2014, and August 14, 2014 orders. Plaintiff argued that she was deprived of time with her boys from late April 2014 through August 14, 2014. Plaintiff claimed that the April 10, 2014 order modified the boys’ established custodial environment in granting defendant year round parenting time and restricting plaintiff’s access to her boys to daytime, supervised visits. Then, plaintiff argued that the May 29, 2014 evidentiary hearing failed to establish by clear and convincing evidence that the boys’ custodial home needed to be changed. Further, plaintiff argued that boys’ testimony by in camera review lacked notes to review, violated the boys’ due process rights, and improperly went beyond the scope of ascertaining the boys’ custody preferences. Then, plaintiff argued that the trial court’s June 20, 2014 order interfered with the boys’ established custodial environment and that the trial court erred in signing the order before, what she characterized as, the conclusion of the evidentiary hearing.

The trial court commented that it did not understand plaintiff’s motion because “the children are back with [plaintiff] and they have been since August,” but allowed plaintiff to make a record for appeal. Plaintiff argued that her motion had two goals: “to prohibit the type of treatment that [she] ha[d] been subjected to from [happening to] any other parent” and to secure damages. The trial court denied plaintiff’s motion to set aside the June 20, 2014 custody and

-2- parenting time order, denied plaintiff’s motion for damages, and awarded defendant parenting time every other weekend. Plaintiff now appeals this November 6, 2014 order.

Regarding the parties’ child support disputes, after disputing child support payments for years, the parties stipulated on October 11, 2013 that defendant would pay $1,000/month in child support until the latter of the boys’ eighteenth birthday or high school graduation. Additionally, the trial court ordered that “[n]either party may file a motion for review of child support . . . due to a change of circumstances of a change in employment . . . unless either party is fired or laid off.” But when the boys were placed temporarily in defendant’s care on April 10, 2014, the trial court suspended defendant’s child support payments.

When the boys returned to plaintiff’s home, plaintiff sought reinstatement of defendant’s child support payments. Defendant did not object to reinstatement of the previously agreed upon $1,000/month child support order, so long as he received credit for the time the boys resided exclusively with him. Accordingly, the trial court reinstated the child support order—defendant paying $1,000/month child support—effective October 1, 2014.

Finally, regarding the boys’ MET accounts, the record contains little information about the accounts. Plaintiff argued that she had a right to be the beneficiary on the MET accounts because she put half of the funds in the account and, without being a beneficiary, she could not receive account information. Defendant denied that plaintiff contributed half of the money to the accounts, instead explaining that he added money to the accounts after the parties’ divorce. Further, defendant believed that plaintiff would not use the MET funds for the boys’ education, as intended, instead believing that plaintiff would “take the money and use it for her own purposes.” Plaintiff denied that she would misappropriate funds.

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Beverley Nettles v. Daniel E Nickerson Jr, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beverley-nettles-v-daniel-e-nickerson-jr-michctapp-2016.