C.A.H. v. J.B.S.

49 So. 3d 205, 2010 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 100, 2010 WL 1539730
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedApril 16, 2010
Docket2080850
StatusPublished

This text of 49 So. 3d 205 (C.A.H. v. J.B.S.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C.A.H. v. J.B.S., 49 So. 3d 205, 2010 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 100, 2010 WL 1539730 (Ala. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

BRYAN, Judge.

This appeal was taken by C.A.H. (“the mother”) from a custody-modification proceeding in the Talladega Juvenile Court (“the juvenile court”). The mother and J.B.S. (“the father”) never married, but they had two children: W.G.S., a boy born in August 2006 (“the son”), and S.B.S., a girl born in July 2007 (“the daughter”) (referred to collectively as “the children”).

On November 16, 2006, the mother, through the Alabama Department of Human Resources (“DHR”), filed a petition for child support for the son in the juvenile court. The father was adjudicated the father of the son on January 30, 2007. No child support was ordered at that time because the parties were apparently living together. On July 18, 2007, the father and the mother signed a paternity affidavit regarding the daughter. On or about September 21, 2007, the mother, again through DHR, filed a “petition to modify child support,” seeking support for the son and the daughter. On May 23, 2008, the juvenile court adjudicated the father to be the father of the daughter, and it ordered the father to pay $358 a month in child support for the children.

On or about July 25, 2008, the juvenile court entered an order that reflected an agreement of the parties regarding custody of the children. The parties were awarded joint legal custody of the children, and the mother was awarded primary physical custody, subject to the father’s visitation rights. The order included the language regarding notice of relocation required under the Alabama Parent-Child Relationship Protection Act, § 30-3-130 et seq., Ala.Code 1975 (“the Act”).

On July 16, 2008, the mother informed the father that she intended to relocate to North Carolina with the children. On August 11, 2008, the father filed an objection to the mother’s proposed relocation, a request for a temporary and a permanent injunction preventing the mother from relocating with the children to North Carolina, and a petition for modification of custody.1 He alleged that the proposed [207]*207change in the principal residence of the children constituted a material change in circumstances and that the best interests of the children would be materially promoted if he was awarded custody of the children. The father also sought an award of child support. The mother answered the father’s petition, and she denied that she was planning to move to North Carolina with the children. The mother alleged that the father was in arrears on child-support payments and that the child-support order dated May 28, 2008, was due to be modified because the son had died.2

The juvenile court held an ore tenus hearing on all the issues raised by the parties on November 20, 2008, and the juvenile court issued a judgment on February 27, 2009. The juvenile court modified custody of the daughter and awarded the father and the mother joint physical custody of the daughter in alternating, one-week intervals. The juvenile court ordered specific holiday visitation for both parties, it ordered the parties to equally share the cost of uncovered medical expenses for the daughter, and it ordered that neither party was required to pay child support. The mother appealed.3

The daughter was approximately 16 months old at the time of the final hearing. According to the father, the mother told him at the daughter’s first birthday party in July 2008 that she was moving with the children to North Carolina. The father testified that he did not object at that time because he did not want to cause a scene. The father admitted that the mother had told him three or four weeks before the final hearing that she was not going to move to North Carolina.

The father stated that the mother does not take care of the daughter, and, as an example, he cited an occasion when the mother had sent the daughter to his home for visitation with holes in her pants. The father admitted that he was not current on his child-support obligation, but he testified that it was because he had paid approximately $2,900 for the son’s funeral expenses. He admitted that he had disregarded his court-ordered child-support obligation even though his daughter needed support. The father testified that he worked for a lawn-care company in the summer and that he worked as automobile salesman in the winter. However, the father’s income was not revealed.

The mother testified that she had informed the father of her intent to move to North Carolina in anticipation of her marriage to R.B., who was in the Army. R.B. was scheduled to be stationed in North Carolina for 10 months before being deployed overseas. The mother met R.B. on the Internet in October 2007, and he was stationed in South Korea at the time. The mother and R.B. met in person for the first time on August 2, 2008, when R.B. came to the mother’s home while he was on leave from the Army.4 The mother mar[208]*208ried R.B. on August 16, 2008, apparently one week after the son was buried. The mother’s testimony indicated that she decided not to move to North Carolina after the son died. The mother was unemployed, and she stated that R.B. had paid for the daughter’s care because the father had not paid child support since August 2008.

There was limited testimony regarding the death of the son. Apparently, the son had accidentally drowned in the mother’s neighbor’s pool. The facts and circumstances leading up to the son’s death are not in the record, but there was no indication that the mother was at fault. The attorneys for both parties referred to the son’s death as an “accident.” The mother stated that she also has a pool in her backyard and that, after the son died, she had placed a broom handle in a sliding glass door in her home so that the daughter could not get out of her home. She stated that she had not made any changes to the gates around her home. She stated that the pool in her backyard was not covered but that there was a fence around her pool with a gate that was always locked.

A former friend of the mother testified that the mother had told her that she stayed up late with R.B. when he first came to the mother’s home, which was the week that the son had died, and that the mother had told her that the son had used a marker on the walls of the mother’s home the day before he died, indicating that the son had not been supervised at the time. She stated that their friendship ended after the son died because the mother put her relationship with R.B. before her and the daughter.

The mother’s issues on appeal can be succinctly stated as follows: (1) whether the juvenile court erred in modifying custody of the daughter and (2) whether the juvenile court erred in eliminating child support.

Initially, we will briefly address whether the Act applied in this case. We note that nothing in the juvenile court’s judgment indicates that it relied on, or even considered, the Act when it modified custody of the daughter. Although the father’s petition to modify custody was based on his belief that the mother was moving to North Carolina with the children, the evidence indisputably showed that the mother was not moving to North Carolina with the daughter. The Act did not apply in this case because a proposed change of the principal residence of the daughter was not before the juvenile court. See generally § 30-3-162, Ala.Code 1975 (setting forth the applicability of the Act).

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Bluebook (online)
49 So. 3d 205, 2010 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 100, 2010 WL 1539730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cah-v-jbs-alacivapp-2010.