Custody of Zia

736 N.E.2d 449, 50 Mass. App. Ct. 237, 2000 Mass. App. LEXIS 842
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedOctober 13, 2000
DocketNo. 00-P-355
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 736 N.E.2d 449 (Custody of Zia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Custody of Zia, 736 N.E.2d 449, 50 Mass. App. Ct. 237, 2000 Mass. App. LEXIS 842 (Mass. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

Brown, J.

This case involves a dispute between a mother and father concerning the custody of their child bom out of wedlock. [238]*238A judge of the Probate and Family Court, on the father’s complaint to establish paternity (the question of paternity is not at issue), awarded the father sole legal and physical custody of the child. The mother has appealed. We affirm the judgment.

1. We summarize the findings of the probate judge. The mother and father began a romantic relationship in 1995 that resulted in the child’s birth in August, 1996. At the time of the birth, the mother was nineteen years of age and the father was twenty-one. The mother has been the child’s primary physical caretaker while the father has exercised substantial visitation with the child.

The father was raised in Brookline and attended school there; he has attended college for one year. He currently works as a patient service representative and is enrolled in a graphic design program at a local university. The father’s parents, one of whom is black, the other white, are well educated professionals. The father has had legal problems, including his convictions for assault and battery (not involving the mother or child) and a drug offense. Two abuse protection orders (discussed more fully, infra) have been issued against him. There is also pending against the father an assault and battery charge.

The mother was born in Puerto Ric'o and came to Massachusetts at the age of nine. (The mother speaks both English and Spanish.) She lives in New Bedford. Since arriving in the Commonwealth she has resided, with her mother or with the child, in public housing. The mother dropped out of high school in the eleventh grade because of an earlier pregnancy2 but she later received her GED as well as employment training in several areas. In addition, she has worked as a cashier, cook, translator, and at a cranberry bog facility. Although the mother stopped working after the child’s birth, she obtained full time temporary employment at a rubber company during the course of trial. The mother has been arrested for possession of drugs (class A) (for which she ultimately was placed on probation) and for driving without a license.

As a result of a stipulation and temporary order dated November 4, 1996, the parties agreed to share legal custody of the child with physical custody in the mother. Both the mother and father have actively participated in the child’s care. The [239]*239father has regularly exercised visitation with the child, seeing and taking her in excess of 140 days per calendar year. The father’s visitation takes place at his parents’ home in Brookline where he receives assistance from his parents.3 The child maintains a strong relationship with the paternal grandparents and, the judge found, benefits from their society and companionship and the cultural and intellectual stimulation they provide her. Although the father’s visitation takes place at his parents’ home, he is the child’s “primary caregiver” during the visits. “He makes her meals and feeds her. He dresses her and makes sure she’s clean and has brushed her teeth. He fixes her hair. He puts her to bed.” The.child spends “the vast majority of her time” with the father during visitation and looks to him for comfort.

The father has also encouraged physical and mental stimulation of the child, taking her on walks and rides and visiting, for example, the circus, the zoo, and the aquarium. The father has shown himself to be interested in the child’s early education as well. In addition to providing the child with books, he offered to enroll her at a day care center in Brookline when the mother’s day care vouchers were terminated.4 Although the father was willing to pay for the child to resume day care in Brookline and, in exchange, give up his weekend visitation, the mother refused the offer. The father loves the child, who is “attached” to and has “bonded” with him.

The mother, as we have indicated, has been the primary caretaker for the child. She resides in a clean, well-furnished apartment, and, in general, has taken good care of the child “physically.” Indeed, the parties stipulated that the child is “happy and well adjusted” and that her “mental, physical and intellectual development is appropriate for her age.” The mother has lived with her own mother (who often cares for the child) [240]*240in the past and appears to have a good relationship with her. While the mother is at work, the child is cared for by the mother’s seventy-four year old grandmother. As with the father, the mother loves the child and the child is “attached” and “bonded” to her.

Notwithstanding the positive attributes of the mother’s care of the child, the judge had serious concerns about the mother’s judgment, parenting abilities, and interactions with the father. The judge found that the mother has “dismissed the need of [the child] for a [f]ather”5 and has “thwarted his joint legal custody at every turn.” “She has denied him information about and input into the most important decisions and events concerning the child: medical issues, hospitalizations, attendance at preschool, selection of pre-school educational programs, all to the detriment of [the child].” The judge found that the mother believes that she alone can make important decisions in the child’s life.

In addition, the judge found that there was a lack of structure in the mother’s home and that the mother failed adequately to set rules or to establish boundaries. The judge stated, for example, that the mother allows the child to go to bed between 10" p.m. and 10:30 p.m. (as opposed to the more appropriate bedtime of 8 p.m. imposed by the father), to sleep with her on a regular basis, and to watch television constantly. The judge also found that the mother has had the child in bed with her and her boyfriend, a practice which the judge viewed as inappropriate and harmful. Moreover, the judge found that the mother, on occasion, had engaged in conduct that simply was not in the child’s best interests. Such conduct includes the mother’s arriving to pick up the child at the home of the paternal grandparents (1) without a car seat and (2) in a vehicle driven by a relative who was drinking an alcoholic beverage.

The judge also voiced her concern that the mother, through her own lack of education and willingness to learn, fails to recognize the value of education or the child’s need for stimulation and enrichment. In this regard, the judge noted that the mother has done “little if anything on her own initiative to stimulate or enrich” the child, and had rejected the father’s offer to resume day care for the child (a decision, in the judge’s [241]*241view, that was not in the child’s best interests). Indeed, the judge found, as we have indicated, that the child rarely does anything in the mother’s care but watch television, including adult-oriented talk shows. Finally, the judge commented critically on the mother’s inability to obey court orders as manifested by her failure to complete a court-ordered parenting class (that the father has successfully completed) and her attempts to thwart the father’s joint legal custody.6

On these findings, and others, the judge concluded that it was in the child’s best interests to award sole legal and physical custody to the father.7

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
736 N.E.2d 449, 50 Mass. App. Ct. 237, 2000 Mass. App. LEXIS 842, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/custody-of-zia-massappct-2000.