Bruce H. v. Jennifer L.

407 P.3d 432
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 2017
Docket7204 S-16360
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 407 P.3d 432 (Bruce H. v. Jennifer L.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bruce H. v. Jennifer L., 407 P.3d 432 (Ala. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION

WINFREE, Justice.

I, INTRODUCTION

Following a divorce á mother and father reached a custody settlement giving the mother sole legal and primary physical custody of their son; the father had visitation at the mother’s discretion. After the father later requested joint legal and shared physical custody, the mother sought authorization to relocate with the child out of state. At a combined hearing on both issues the father presented evidence that the mother may have committed domestic violence against a former boyfriend. The superior court denied the father’s custody modification request for failure to demonstrate a substantial change in circumstances. The court granted the mother authorization to move, finding her reasons for relocating legitimate and determining' that the child’s best interests were served by staying with the mother. Under the court’s subsequent order the mother maintained sole legal and primary physical custody, with limited visitation by the father. The father appeals the court’s denial of his custody modification motion, determination that the mother’s move was legitimate, best interests determination, and visitation award. We affirm the determination that the mother’s move was for legitimate purposes; however, because we vacate the underlying finding that no domestic violence occurred between the mother and her former boyfriend and remand that issue for renewed consideration, we also must remand the ultimate custody decision for renewed consideration. The visitation decision necessarily follows the custody decision and should include findings sufficient for appellate review.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

" Jennifer L. and Bruce H. 1 married in Kentucky in 2010. Their only child was born in September of that year. Shortly after their son’s birth the family moved to Unalaska. When Jennifer and Bruce divorced in 2012 they agreed Jennifer would have primary physical and sole legal custody of their son.

In the years immediately following the divorce, the son was in Jennifer’s care full time; Bruce visited only sporadically. But for at least two years prior to trial, the son stayed overnight with Bruce — who lived with his girlfriend and their daughter, the son’s half-sister — about three nights per week.

B. Proceedings

In February 2016, when their son was five years old, Bruce requested a modification to joint legal and shared physical custody. In an accompanying affidavit Bruce accused Jennifer of exposing their son to tumultuous and violent relationships and failing to provide him proper care. While Bruce’s motion was pending, Jennifer indicated that she intended to move with their son to Kentucky to live with her mother and that she already had arranged their transportation. Jennifer then filed a motion seeking the court’s authorization for her relocation with the child to Kentucky.

The superior court ordered a joint eviden-tiary hearing on the motions. Bruce testified about his stable family life and his relationship with his son, and he called several wit; nesses who attested to his parenting abilities. Jennifer testified about her motives for moving to Kentucky, including her resignation from her job in Unalaska, a difficult relationship breakup, a desire to be near family, and the opportunity to further her education in Kentucky. Jennifer said that she had been planning to move for some time and had not realized she needed court permission to do so.

Jennifer, Bruce, and Jennifer’s mother testified that in Kentucky Jennifer and the child would be near Jennifer’s family members, as well as Bruce’s other son and Bruce’s parents in Tennessee. Jennifer and her mother described the area and nearby attractions, such as cities, parks, and museums. Jennifer testified that she had supported visitation between Bruce and their son in the past and that she intended to continue supporting their relationship after the move.

Bruce called Jennifer’s ex-boyfriend, Jose L., to testify about Jennifer’s conduct as a parent, her history of drinking, and an allegation that she committed domestic violence against Jose. Jose testified that during an argument “she tried to hit me, and I threw her to the ground and held heruntil the cops came.” Jose stated that he held Jennifer down by her neck. He stated that the incident probably occurred in 2013, but he was not certain. Jose testified that Jennifer was “fairly intoxicated” at the time, that they argued often, and that there may have been other violent episodes. Jose admitted that Jennifer’s attempt to hit him could be seen as self-defense.

Jennifer also testified about the incident, saying that she did not remember what exactly caused their argument, but “I do know that [Jose] shoved me, trying to make me leave,” and “the argument progressed from there and ... [he] ended up holding me down on the ground, and when I stood up is when I swung at him.” Neither witness testified that Jennifer actually hit Jose. They disagreed only about timing, with Jose testifying that Jennifer tried to hit him before he pinned her to the ground and Jennifer testifying that she tried to hit him. when she stood up afterward. . .

After the hearing the superior court issued a modified child support and custody order and an accompanying order addressing both parties’ arguments. The court denied Bruce’s motion to' modify custody, ruling that he had failed to show a substantial change in circumstances. Responding to Bruce’s argument that the alleged domestic violence constituted a substantial change in • circumstances, the court stated that “there is no time frame associated with this alleged incident and no testimony in support of the allegation, nor is there a report that this incident resulted in judicial proceedings or has occurred on multiple occasions.” But because Jennifer was planning to relocate with their son, the court determined she had alleged a substantial change in circumstances. The court found Jennifer’s motives for moving to Kentucky— employment, family, and educational and extracurricular opportunities- for the child— were legitimate.

The court next addressed whether physical custody with Bruce in Unalaska or with Jennifer in Kentucky would better serve then-son’s interests. Analyzing each best interests factor individually, 2 the court found that th§ stability factor slightly favored Jennifer, because, although moving away from the son’s father and childhood home would be disruptive, separating the child from Jennifer, his “primary parent,” could be more harmful. The- court addressed the domestic violence incident again in the context of the best interests factors, concluding that it “does not rise to the level of domestic violence as defined by AS 25.24.150(g).” After weighing all the factors, the court determined that Jennifer should have primary physical custody; she also retained sole legal custody without comment by the court. The court awarded Bruce visitation consisting of one 30-minute phone call per week, a two-week summer visit, and alternating Christmas and spring break visits.

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Bluebook (online)
407 P.3d 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bruce-h-v-jennifer-l-alaska-2017.