Crystal Senger Cothern v. Christopher Scott Cothern

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 3, 2006
DocketCA-0005-1364
StatusUnknown

This text of Crystal Senger Cothern v. Christopher Scott Cothern (Crystal Senger Cothern v. Christopher Scott Cothern) 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
Crystal Senger Cothern v. Christopher Scott Cothern, (La. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

05-1364

CRYSTAL SENGER COTHERN

VERSUS

CHRISTOPHER SCOTT COTHERN

************

APPEAL FROM THE SEVENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT, PARISH OF CONCORDIA, NO. 38,563, HONORABLE LEO BOOTHE, DISTRICT JUDGE

MICHAEL G. SULLIVAN JUDGE

Court composed of Michael G. Sullivan, Billy Howard Ezell, and James T. Genovese, Judges.

AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.

Lauri G. Boyd Sturgeon & Boyd Post Office Drawer 1463 Ferriday, Louisiana 71334 (318) 757-4151 Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellant: Crystal Senger Cothern

Brent S. Gore Attorney at Law 111 Serio Blvd. Ferriday, Louisiana 71334 (318) 757-4545 Counsel for Defendant/Appellee: Christopher Scott Cothern SULLIVAN, Judge.

In this child custody dispute, the mother appeals a judgment that (1) names the

father as the children’s domiciliary parent, (2) changes the physical custody schedule

from alternating weeks at each parent’s home to the first and third weekends of the

month, specified holidays, and one-half of the summer for the mother, and (3)

terminates the father’s child support obligation and orders the mother to pay child

support at the minimum amount set by the guidelines. Finding that the trial court

judgment does not provide the children with frequent and continuing contact with the

nondomiciliary parent under the particular facts of this case, we affirm in part, reverse

in part, and remand, as more fully explained below.

Discussion of the Record

Christopher Scott Cothern and Crystal Senger Cothern were married from

October 14, 1994 until their divorce on June 23, 2003. Two children were born of the

marriage: Victoria, born on May 23, 1995, and Tyler, born on July 2, 1997. On

May 12, 2003, the parties filed a stipulated judgment in which they agreed that

Crystal would be the domiciliary parent, with Christopher enjoying physical custody

on alternating weekends, plus two days a week, and specified holidays. Christopher

also agreed to pay child support of $686.00 per month. The parties reached additional

stipulations on November 24, 2003, in which they agreed that each parent would have

physical custody of the children every other week and that Christopher’s child

support obligation would be reduced to $375.00 as of January 2004. Those

stipulations were filed into the court record on June 16, 2004.

On January 26, 2005, Crystal filed a rule seeking modification of the physical

custody schedule and an increase in child support, alleging that every other week was

not working out and that one of the children was struggling in school. The trial court set that rule for hearing on April 26, 2005, but before that date, on March 8, 2005,

Crystal voluntarily checked herself into a drug rehabilitation facility for thirty days

to overcome an addiction to prescription medications that she had begun taking after

an automobile accident in November of 2002.1 While Crystal was still in the

treatment facility, on March 21, 2005, Christopher filed a rule alleging a material

change in circumstances due to Crystal’s addiction and entering the treatment

program. In that rule, he prayed for joint custody with him as the domiciliary parent

and with Crystal having the children on alternating weekends. He also requested that

Crystal be ordered to “pay child support based on the guidelines.” By agreement, the

April 26, 2005 hearing of Crystal’s rule was continued, and the trial court set the

hearing of both Crystal’s and Christopher’s rules for May 26, 2005.

On April 7, 2005, Christopher obtained an ex parte order granting him

temporary sole custody of the children until the May 26, 2005 hearing, based

primarily upon two incidents involving Crystal’s parents that occurred while Crystal

was still in the treatment program: Christopher alleged that Crystal’s mother caused

a public disturbance at a ballpark in front of the children and that the younger child,

Tyler, accidentally shot himself in the big toe while being watched by Crystal’s

stepfather. Although this order was styled “ex parte,” Crystal’s opposition to it was

filed into the record before it was signed by the trial court.

At the hearing on May 26, 2005, Crystal testified that she received a certificate

of completion from the drug treatment program; that she is participating in follow-up

1 Crystal was involved in another automobile accident the day before she checked in to the drug treatment facility. She testified that she was not under the influence of drugs when the accident occurred, that she had a “blow out” in the rain, and that the children were not with her. Christopher’s mother, Adella Cothern, testified that she “begged” Crystal not to drive about an hour and a half before that accident, when Crystal seemed upset because Tyler did not want to go home with her the previous night.

2 care, which can involve three to five meetings a week for up to two years; that she

recently underwent a negative drug test; and that she is willing to undergo drug

testing in the future. She explained that she is currently living in Fayette, Mississippi,

which is about twenty-five minutes from Vidalia, Louisiana, where the children are

in school and where Christopher lives, but that she and her fiancé, James Thomas,

have arranged to rent a four-bedroom home in Vidalia after their upcoming wedding

on July 9, 2005.

Crystal also testified that she no longer needs to work due to her planned

marriage and that she would like the children to be with her after school when she has

physical custody of them. (The children had been staying with Christopher’s mother

after school, regardless of whose custody week it was, until that parent picked them

up after work.) Crystal acknowledged that she is now living full-time with her fiancé,

James, but she stated that it was Christopher who insisted that James be present in her

home when she kept the children after getting out of the treatment center. She stated

that Christopher has only allowed her to see the children on weekends since she has

been released, even when he has had to pry them away “kicking, screaming, [and]

crying.” She pointed out one incident in which the older child, Victoria, became so

upset when Christopher refused to let her go home with Crystal that the child’s nose

started to bleed.

Crystal’s fiancé, James, testified that he is a self-employed contractor and that

he supports Crystal’s decision not to work when they are married. He testified that

he gets along “great” with Crystal’s children and that he attends all of their sporting

events, unless he is coaching his own son, who stays with him every other week.

(Crystal testified that all three of the children would have their own room in the house

3 she and James planned to rent after their marriage.) James testified that he believed

Christopher and Crystal were equally good parents.

Christopher testified that he would like to be named the domiciliary parent so

that the children will be “taken care of during school.” Christopher explained that he

works in Natchez, Mississippi, but that he can easily take off from work if the

children need him at school. He stated that after Crystal entered the treatment

program, the children were not getting their homework done and that Tyler was

having problems in school. He also stated that before Crystal went into rehabilitation,

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