Chandler v. Chandler

37 So. 3d 569, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 739, 2010 WL 1981563
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 19, 2010
Docket45,308-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 37 So. 3d 569 (Chandler v. Chandler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chandler v. Chandler, 37 So. 3d 569, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 739, 2010 WL 1981563 (La. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

GASKINS, J.

| ,This appeal arises from the trial court’s denial of the father’s request to modify custody to award 50/50 shared equal custody of the parties’ son. Following the presentation of the father’s evidence on the rule to modify, the trial court granted the mother’s motion for involuntary dismissal. We affirm the trial court judgment.

FACTS

The parties, Christopher Neil Chandler, Sr., and Elizabeth Mary Toups Chandler, were married in July 1996. A son was born in January 1997. They separated in 1999. Thé father filed for divorce in March 2000; the petition did not request custody of the child. The mother answered the petition and filed a rule for custody and support. She requested joint custody with her being designated as the domiciliary parent. The mother, then a medical student, also sought interim spousal support and child support. The father answered her rule and filed a reeonven-tional demand; he requested that he be designated as the domiciliary parent or that they jointly be so designated under a plan of equal sharing. He also requested child support.

In June 2000, the parties were divorced. Pursuant to a consent judgment, they were awarded joint custody with the mother as domiciliary parent. Monthly child support of $628 was awarded to the mother. The father was given reasonable visitation in accordance with a joint custody implementation plan. Judgment was signed on June 20, 2000. In that judgment, the mother was directed to maintain medical, health and dental insurance for the child; the father was ordered to pay for 74.74 percent of |2any uncovered medical, dental, orthodontic and prescriptive drug expenses for the child with the mother paying for the remaining 25.26 percent.

In January 2005, the Department of Social Services (DSS) filed a rule to change payee/fix arrears. DSS requested that it be designated the proper party to collect child support from the father. It alleged that the father owed $15,583.75 in past child support and $5,539.56 in past medical expenses. In March 2005, a hearing officer set the arrears at $12,859.08. An immediate income assignment order was also signed.

In July 2005, the father filed a pro se request for reduction of child support on the grounds that both parties had remarried; he had two children in his new marriage; and the mother was now a medical *572 doctor married to another doctor. The motion was denied by the hearing officer. The father filed an exception to the hearing officer’s recommendation; he complained that the mother had placed the child in day care and asserted that it would be better and cheaper if the child were instead cared for during the day by his present wife who was a stay-at-home mother. The exception to the hearing officer’s recommendation was denied.

In January 2009, the father filed a pro se rule to modify child support. In February 2009, the hearing officer recommended that the decrease be denied. Judgment accepting the recommendation was initially signed in March 2009.

In April 2009, the father again filed a pro se motion to modify child support. The hearing officer recommended a reduction to $399, effective |8June 1, 2009. The trial court accepted the recommendation and signed a judgment in conformity with it on July 14, 2009.

In August 2009, the father filed a pro se petition to modify custody and/or visitation. He stated that his visitation with the child was every other weekend from Thursday at 6:00 p.m. through Sunday at 6:00 p.m., four weeks in the summer, and one-half of school holidays. He asserted that the mother was a medical doctor who worked long hours and left the 12-year-old boy in the care of a nanny whereas he worked from his home office. 1 He also contended that he had two other children who resided with him 50 percent of the time and wished to see their half-brother more often. The father requested modification awarding him 50/50 physical custody of the child.

The matter was heard on October 7, 2009. The father was the only person to testify during the presentation of his case. The mother was prepared to testify, as was her present husband. The mother also asked that the trial judge speak to the 12-year-old child; the father objected to this request.

Since the father was not represented by counsel, he was placed under oath and allowed to address the court. He accused the mother of “choosing her career” and placing herself above her children by becoming a medical doctor and putting her son in the care of “nonparents.” He stated that his career choice was influenced by a desire to be a father first and not to withhold financial support from the mother. He said his second marriage 14was a mistake and that during it, he often found it was not in the boy’s best interest to be at his home. Having divorced again, he stated that he had enjoyed 50/50 custody of his two children from that marriage (ages five and three) for the previous 27 months. According to him, these two children want to spend more time with their half-brother. He also testified that he is in a “very good relationship” with a woman who has three children of her own.

The father asserted that he was concerned by the lack of time the mother and the stepfather spend with the child due to their careers. He blamed the mother for the child not being admitted to Middle Magnet School for sixth grade because she supposedly missed a deadline, and he contended that the boy was forced to stay in an “undesirable” school (St. Joseph’s) for a year due to this. He claimed that the child has bad dental and fingernail hygiene due to the mother’s lack of attention. He stated that he is very involved in most of the boy’s activities, but the mother’s side of the family is rarely represented at these events. The father also said he did not feel the child should be forced to testify *573 against him and asserted that the mother has traumatized the child by “coaching” him.

On cross-examination, the father admitted that he was about $22,000 in arrears on his child support obligation. He characterized his second wife as suffering from “some instability issues” and as being jealous of the child because of his great dedication to the boy; he admitted that the child witnessed arguments between them. He also admitted that when he was ^Irresponsible for getting the boy to school on Fridays, he was often late but “[n]ever more than five minutes.” He conceded that this upset the child.

The father stated that the child participated in a science fair project involving a surgical device; however, he accused the mother' of doing most of the work oh the project. When the child went to the state science fair in Baton Rouge, the father and his girlfriend drove the boy down there, but chose to return to Shreveport before the fair because of the girlfriend’s work schedule. He admitted that despite his concern for the child’s dental hygiene, he had never taken him to the dentist. While he asserted that he spent time lecturing the boy on cleaning his fingernails, he agreed that the boy did not follow his instructions.

A review of his calendar indicated that the father had not exercised his visitation with the child on several occasions due to other plans.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 So. 3d 569, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 739, 2010 WL 1981563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chandler-v-chandler-lactapp-2010.