Capri M.P. v. Ronald O.

480 A.2d 669, 1984 Del. Fam. Ct. LEXIS 29
CourtDelaware Family Court
DecidedJune 12, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 480 A.2d 669 (Capri M.P. v. Ronald O.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Delaware Family Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Capri M.P. v. Ronald O., 480 A.2d 669, 1984 Del. Fam. Ct. LEXIS 29 (Del. Super. Ct. 1984).

Opinion

THOMPSON, Chief Judge:

This is the Court’s decision on a visitation petition which was filed in 1977 by the mother of four children who have remained in the custody of their father since the parties’ divorce in 1974.

Shortly after the divorce petitioner signed an agreement which provided that custody should remain with the children’s father, the respondent, and that she would not seek visitation privileges at that time. This provision was agreed to after petitioner consulted a psychiatrist who was treating the children as a result of the emotional turmoil surrounding petitioner’s estrangement from the family. While involved in an extramarital relationship, petitioner was in and out of the house for almost two years prior to the divorce. Shortly before the parties’ final separation, she spent two months in a private psychiatric hospital for treatment of depression marked by self-destructive tendencies. She subsequently married her paramour, by whom she was pregnant, divorced him, and, after another unsuccessful marriage, now lives in California with her fourth husband and two children born of these marriages.

At the time petitioner left the family, Ronnie was age five, Krissy was four, Cara was two, and Erica was one. Respondent hired daytime housekeepers and sought counseling for the children who were affected to some extent by the petitioner’s departure. One individual who has played a prominent role in bringing these children to their current state of emotional equilibrium is respondent’s wife, Barbara, who came. into the household originally as a governess. The couple have two other children.

Without chronicling in detail the procedural history of this case, the Court finds that the delay in resolving the petition can be attributed to a combination of factors, including the need for numerous psychological and psychiatric evaluations. Because of the passage of time, re-evaluations and updated recommendations were ordered. Petitioner blames part of this delay on her previous attorney, whom she fired and then sued for malpractice. All these maneuverings were done at long distance and at a time when petitioner was going through several marriages and divorces and was raising two other children. Nevertheless, *671 for at least six years petitioner has persisted in her demand for visitation and respondent in his opposition.

In the course of these proceedings, petitioner has seen three psychologists and two psychiatrists and, needless to say, there is no shortage of expert evidence. In 1977, one psychologist reported that the petitioner had found strength and stability in her third marriage. The facts show that petitioner and her third husband separated six months later and were subsequently divorced. The reports based on the most in-depth analyses come from Dr. Lord Lee-Benner of Los Angeles, California, and Dr. Ellen Gay of Wilmington, Delaware. Dr. Lee-Benner’s knowledge of the petitioner dates back before her divorce from respondent in 1974, when he treated her during her stay in a psychiatric hospital. The petitioner, against her wishes and at the insistence of the respondent, was again seen by Dr. Lee-Benner in 1976 for the purpose of showing change, if any, in petitioner’s emotional condition. His report was most uncomplimentary and concluded that his original assessment of pathological narcissism remained the same.

In 1982, Dr. Gay evaluated all the parties involved in the case. Her report reflected a general agreement with Dr. Lee-Benner’s description of petitioner’s personality; however, she recommended a supervised trial visit.

A hearing was held in June 1982 but was continued to receive a written report of the Court-ordered evaluation by Dr. Gay. After the Court received the report, further testimony was ordered from Dr. Gay by way of deposition. Based on Dr. Gay’s interviews with the petitioner, the respondent, the children’s stepmother, and the four children, the recommended trial visitation took place for approximately two hours, in Dr. Gay’s office, in October 1983. After the trial visitation, Dr. Gay did a follow-up evaluation of the children which concluded that the visit went well, the children were not demonstrably affected, and, although not without some reservations, she found the children would probably not be harmed if another structured visitation took place.

In the meantime, the judge who had been hearing the case retired. On May 3, 1984, this judge held a final hearing, giving the parties, including the stepmother, the opportunity to summarize their positions. The children were interviewed individually and as a group.

Petitioner contends that she has never given up her quest to maintain contact with her children and that she has a right to visitation but is willing to abide by any reasonable plan in order to avoid disrupting the children's lives. Throughout the years she has sent cards and money gifts to the children on holidays and birthdays but has not contacted them directly, in part because respondent has denied such contact and, further, because she was awaiting the Court’s disposition. She has submitted a detailed proposal for visitation through the summer of 1986 which amounts to four visits with her children each year. She claims she does not wish to harm the children or interfere in their lives but steadfastly maintains her right to build a relationship with her children so that they may know her and know her love for them.

Respondent and his wife oppose visitation of any sort. Respondent described the period when petitioner was moving in and out of the house and her instability in the years prior to the divorce. Respondent sees petitioner as manipulative and self-interested to the point that he fears she will use the children to prove her self-worth and then move on when her goal has been achieved or when the relationship no longer satisfies her. Respondent and his wife described their struggle to build a stable family life, the developmental problems of each child, and the long healing process which was required in the aftermath of petitioner’s “desertion” of the children. The children’s stepmother, Barbara, described Ronnie’s past problems with lying, insecurity, and fear of failure; Krissy’s early acting out; Cara’s deafness, which was later diag *672 nosed as psychosomatic; and Erica’s present fairy-godmother view of her natural mother. In a particularly heartfelt plea, she warned that the four ebullient teenagers seen by the Court are in a precarious stage of life and still suffer from unseen wounds. Both respondent and his wife resent petitioner’s intrusion and see her as a danger to the hard-fought stability the family is now enjoying. They feel that her presence is not needed and that visitation will provide no benefit to the children, only sure harm. Respondent terms the Court’s involvement an invasion of privacy and asks this Court for guarantees that his children will not be hurt by contact with their mother. Respondent declined the Court’s request for a counter-proposal to petitioner’s visitation schedule.

From the Court’s interviews with the children, the Court sees four seemingly normal and well-adjusted teenagers who are sports-minded and family-oriented and have no outstanding school problems. The Court was impressed by their family “togetherness.” Their life revolves around traditional family holidays, visits with grandparents, and a regular Christmas trip to the Cayman Islands. The children are protective of these activities.

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Bluebook (online)
480 A.2d 669, 1984 Del. Fam. Ct. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capri-mp-v-ronald-o-delfamct-1984.