Davison and Schafer

479 P.3d 1108, 308 Or. App. 513
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJanuary 13, 2021
DocketA172998
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 479 P.3d 1108 (Davison and Schafer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davison and Schafer, 479 P.3d 1108, 308 Or. App. 513 (Or. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Argued and submitted December 2, 2020, reversed and remanded January 13, 2021

Aaron Scott DAVISON, Petitioner-Respondent, and Shannon Renae SCHAFER, Respondent-Appellant. Washington County Circuit Court C141979DRA; A172998 479 P3d 1108

In this second appeal of a domestic relations action, mother challenges an order significantly increasing father’s parenting time and decreasing the amount of child support that mother receives. Mother argues that the trial court erred in structuring the parenting-time plan such that father, the noncustodial par- ent, was granted more parenting time than mother during daughter’s nonschool waking hours. Mother also contends that the trial court erred in calculating the child support award based on mother’s potential income, without considering that mother is a full-time student and provides after-school care to daughter. Father did not appear on appeal. Held: The trial court abused its discretion when it improperly considered mother’s decision to move several years prior to this action as evidence of mother’s unwillingness to facilitate daughter’s relationship with father. Additionally, the trial court erred in determining mother’s potential income without considering that she is a full-time student and provides after- school care to daughter. Reversed and remanded.

Ramón A. Pagán, Judge. George W. Kelly argued the cause and filed the brief for appellant. No appearance for respondent. Before Lagesen, Presiding Judge, and James, Judge, and Kamins, Judge. KAMINS, J. Reversed and remanded. 514 Davison and Schafer

KAMINS, J. Mother appeals an order granting father, the non- custodial parent, the majority of parenting time during the nonschool waking hours of their seven-year-old daughter and decreasing the amount of child support that mother receives. Father does not appear on appeal. We reverse and remand. This is the second time that this case is before us. Mother and father separated in 2013, and mother was sub- sequently awarded sole custody of their then-infant daugh- ter. Although the couple lived in Beaverton prior to their separation, both parents have moved: mother and daughter to Hood River and father to West Linn.1 In the first proceed- ing before us, father sought a court order requiring mother and daughter to move closer to him. The trial court ordered mother and daughter to move from Hood River, where they have lived since daughter was a toddler, to within a 10-mile radius of father. Mother did not immediately move, instead appealing the order, and father initiated this pro- ceeding by moving the trial court to award sole custody to father. Father contended that mother had refused to move near him in “direct violation of the court” and that mother had “unreasonably withheld parenting time from [f]ather.” Before father filed that petition, however, the Appellate Commissioner stayed the trial court order that required mother to move closer to father.2 We reversed the trial court’s order requiring mother’s relocation, observing that ORS 107.159(1) requires a parent to notify the other parent and the court of a move only if it exceeds 60 miles.3 Davison and Schafer, 306 Or App 555, 557, 475 P3d 125 (2020). Because “the legislature intended for parents to have the latitude to make moves of 60 miles or less, unrestricted by even a notice requirement,” we 1 Mother had previously sought to transfer this case to Hood River County, a motion that was denied although no party to the case still resides in Washington County. 2 Mother’s appeal was timely, and the order was stayed before the deadline the trial court had set for mother to relocate. 3 Mother moved approximately 70 miles to Hood River in 2015; she acknowl- edged that she failed to provide notice to father of the move. Davison and Schafer, 306 Or App 555, 556, 475 P3d 125 (2020). Cite as 308 Or App 513 (2021) 515

reasoned that the trial court lacked the authority to order mother to orbit father within a 10-mile radius. We further acknowledged that, although mother’s move violated the terms of the then-existing parenting plan, “neither father nor the court sought to remedy it at the time” and that the court had entered a number of subsequent orders over the years recognizing Hood River as the primary residence of mother and daughter. Id. at 556. The hearing on father’s motion, which was held before our opinion issued, did not go well for mother. At the outset of the hearing, the trial court recognized that, because its order requiring mother to move had been stayed, it could not use mother’s refusal to move as a basis to change custody. Nevertheless, the court observed: “* * * [W]e got here because you just unilaterally moved, when there was a judgment that didn’t contemplate you moving 60 or 120 or 180 miles away, and completely shut- ting off the other parent.

“So those dynamics still exist here even if you have a stay on that order.

“So the question I have today is: Okay, what’s actually been happening, how’s the parenting time going, and what modifications can I make to the parenting time with you living there at least for the time being so that—it’s going to have to be something like that, [father] just gets every weekend, he gets the full winter break, gets, you know, the holidays, all of spring break, pretty much as soon as sum- mer starts, the child moves over to [father] * * *[.]

“* * * * *

“* * * [Y]our case is literally just ignoring court orders. And full of evidence of you telling other people that you intend to ignore court orders. Literally. It’s like every- where, you’re unusually defiant to court orders.

“You just left and went 180[4] miles away to another town, you went to another town, to another town.

4 The trial court’s reference to “180 miles” was based on its apparent belief that mother relocated to Bend, but the court later acknowledged that the move was to Hood River. 516 Davison and Schafer

“And then when you were ordered to move again, you not only didn’t do it, you then took the child to counsel- ing and told the counselor in front of the child that you had no intent of doing it, and that you would suffer the consequences.” The trial court’s final ruling was consistent with its view at the outset of the hearing, with one exception. As relevant to its question as to how parenting time had been going, the court observed that mother had “actually gen- erally been abiding by the parenting time that does exist.” Nevertheless, the court ordered a parenting-time schedule that granted father drastically more parenting time during daughter’s nonschool waking hours than mother, including every single weekend during the school year, two-thirds of every summer, and every spring break. The order also required mother to obtain father’s approval prior to sign- ing daughter up for activities (although no corresponding requirement was imposed on father). The court explained its rationale as follows: “The reality is, is it seems to me, this seems to be a clear case of mother lives in Hood River because it’s best for her. It’s best for her. I guess she sounds like she’s escaping dad, generally speaking, but there’s nothing in this that’s best for [daughter]. “Yes, of course, a child gets used to a school, that doesn’t mean it’s the best school for them, they’re just used to it. Yes, they make friends, that means that the child is socia- ble, that doesn’t mean it’s the best place for them or the best friends for them. * * * “* * * * * “* * * This seems to me to be a case where if the parents were close to each other, [daughter] would have pretty much 50/50 parenting time with both parents, there would be almost no barrier to that. And that’s kind of the crux here is that the parenting time that mother has created is the barrier.

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Bluebook (online)
479 P.3d 1108, 308 Or. App. 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davison-and-schafer-orctapp-2021.