Dallow v. Dallow

791 S.E.2d 20, 299 Ga. 762, 2016 Ga. LEXIS 581
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 12, 2016
DocketS16A1210
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 791 S.E.2d 20 (Dallow v. Dallow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dallow v. Dallow, 791 S.E.2d 20, 299 Ga. 762, 2016 Ga. LEXIS 581 (Ga. 2016).

Opinion

NAHMIAS, Justice.

This appeal arises from the appellee mother’s complaint for modification of the divorce parenting plan for her now-17-year-old child. The appellant father contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion to dismiss the modification action, impermissibly modified his visitation rights to require him to arrange visits with his daughter at times that are mutually agreeable, and improperly awarded the mother $46,593.05 in attorney fees and costs. Aside from what we conclude is a scrivener’s mistake in the order awarding attorney fees, we see no error. Accordingly, we affirm.

1. The pertinent facts and convoluted procedural history of this case and the related contempt proceedings will take a number of pages to lay out.

*763 (a) Joel A. Dallow (Father) and Mary Ellen Kelly (Mother) married in August 1994 and had three children together: Cecily, Eric, and the child at issue in this case, J. D. Father is a musician with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, and Mother is an emergency room nurse at Northside Hospital. In January 2014, Father filed a complaint for divorce, and Mother answered and counterclaimed for divorce. The parties entered into a settlement agreement and prepared an agreed parenting plan, proposed child support worksheet, and consent child support addendum. On April 23, 2014, the trial court entered a final judgment and decree of divorce incorporating the parties’ agreements and proposals. When the decree was entered, Cecily was an adult and in college; Eric was 17 and about to graduate from high school and go away to college; and J. D. was 14. The parties were awarded joint legal custody of Eric and J. D., with Mother given final decision-making authority regarding their non-emergency healthcare, extracurricular activities, education, and religious upbringing.

Mother was awarded the marital residence, which is within walking distance of J. D.’s high school. The agreed parenting plan incorporated into the divorce decree designated Mother as Eric and J. D.’s primary physical custodian. As for visitation, the plan said:

Due to the fact that Eric will graduate high school in May 2014, and that [J. D.] is over the age of 14, [Father] will have parenting time at any time mutually agreeable to [Father] and each minor child. To the extent that [Father] and [J. D.] cannot agree to more time, this Parenting Plan is the minimum time [Father] will have with [her]. [Father] shall have the minimum parenting time each week with [J. D.]: if he is not working on Sunday, his parenting time starts at 12:00 noon on Sunday, and if he is working, his parenting time starts at 6:00 p.m. on Sunday continuing until Wednesday morning to drop [J. D.] off at school, or at 9:00 a.m. when school is not in session.

There was also a holiday and school break visitation schedule.

The parenting plan acknowledged the logistical challenges inherent in raising busy teenagers who have extensive time commitments in addition to school. The parties agreed to “exchange the children at school when possible,” but “[i]f the children are not in school or exchange at school is not practicable,” Father was ordered to “pick up the children from [Mother and] ... drop the children off with [Mother] at the end of his . . . visitation period.” Under the heading “Other *764 Parenting Time Provisions/Agreements,” the plan listed several optional provisions, including the following one that was checked by the parties:

The parties agree that strict compliance with time and schedules set forth herein will not always be possible and agree to cooperate with each other in connection therewith. Both parties agree to exercise the parenting time/visitation schedule as set forth herein so as not to unreasonably interfere with [J. D.’s] schooling and extracurricular activities. . . .

The parties did not check the option to require both parents to “consult with each other prior to scheduling any activity that will impact time the other parent spends with the child(ren).”

(b) In May 2014, Father bought a house three miles from the marital residence. In June, J. D. threw an unauthorized party at Father’s new house while he was out of town, which resulted in what Father characterized as some minimal property damage. Two watches with sentimental value to Father also went missing, along with an iPhone charger, several pieces of a ratchet set, and two vegetarian pizzas. J. D.’s conduct damaged her parents’ trust in her. Mother grounded J. D. for the rest of the summer. Father was very upset. He demanded that she give him the names of the other children at the party so that he could call their parents, and when J. D. resisted, he threatened to call the police on her. This threat greatly disturbed her. Father hounded J. D. to help him find out who took the missing items; after a few days, the level and constancy of Father’s anger and yelling at J. D. made her scared to be alone with him, so on Father’s Day she visited him with her older brother Eric. J. D. eventually gave Father the other children’s names, and he contacted their parents. At the end of the summer, Eric moved to North Carolina to start college.

During the summer of 2014, the amount of time that Father requested for visitation with J. D. was far less than the minimum parenting time specified in the divorce decree. Nevertheless, toward the end of the summer, Father reviewed the parenting plan and began threatening J. D. that he would take her and Mother to court if J. D. did not abide by the minimum visitation schedule. The atmosphere of mistrust and resentment created by the party and its aftermath, and Father’s demanding approach in asserting his visitation rights, made J. D. increasingly reluctant to stay with him. J. D. proposed to Father that she have visitation with him every other weekend, which would keep her from having to divide her time *765 between two households during the school week, but Father rejected her proposal out of hand.

(c) On August 11, 2014, J. D.’s first day of tenth grade, Father filed, in the divorce action, a pro se petition for contempt against Mother. He alleged, among other things, that Mother had denied him visitation with J. D. by “allow[ing] the minor child to be unavailable for pick up at the designated times in the Parenting Plan,” by permitting J. D. to make plans during his visitation time, and by failing to encourage J. D. to stay in touch with him and to keep him informed about what was going on in her life. Father requested among other things that Mother be jailed, that he be given “make up” visitation time with J. D., and that the court order that J. D. undergo therapy with a clinical social worker or psychologist chosen by F ather.

In September 2014, the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra locked out its musicians in a labor dispute that lasted for the next two months, and between the end of September and the middle of November, Father missed six weeks of visitation with J. D. Father’s explanation was that he could not exercise any visitation because he was working various jobs out-of-state.

Meanwhile, on October 3, 2014, Mother filed a complaint for modification of Father’s visitation rights as a civil action separate from the divorce action in which Father had filed his contempt petition. Supported by an affidavit by J. D.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
791 S.E.2d 20, 299 Ga. 762, 2016 Ga. LEXIS 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dallow-v-dallow-ga-2016.