Dodi Deanne Gegumis Hamblin v. Leslie Brandon Allison

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedOctober 27, 2020
DocketNO. 2019-CA-01780-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Dodi Deanne Gegumis Hamblin v. Leslie Brandon Allison (Dodi Deanne Gegumis Hamblin v. Leslie Brandon Allison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dodi Deanne Gegumis Hamblin v. Leslie Brandon Allison, (Mich. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2019-CA-01780-COA

DODI DEANNE GEGUMIS HAMBLIN APPELLANT

v.

LESLIE BRANDON ALLISON APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/31/2019 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. VICKI B. DANIELS COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: DESOTO COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: JAMES BRANDON JUSTICE JOHN MATTHEW ORR ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: JERRY WESLEY HISAW DAVID CLAY VANDERBURG NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - CUSTODY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 10/27/2020 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE WILSON, P.J., LAWRENCE AND McCARTY, JJ.

McCARTY, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Following a trial, a woman lost a custody battle to her former boyfriend and was

accordingly required to yield sole and legal custody of their two children to him. On appeal,

she argues that a lack of custody recommendation from the guardian ad litem (GAL) and

testimony from a reunification therapist compromised the fairness of the trial. She also

claims that the chancery court erred in failing to include a summary of the GAL’s

recommendations and qualifications in her “findings of fact and conclusions of law.”

Finding no error, we affirm.

FACTS ¶2. The relationship between Dodi Hamblin and Leslie Allison produced two children,

K.A. and K.B.1 The couple separated. A rather complex and unpleasant custody battle

followed.

¶3. Allison initiated proceedings by filing a complaint for custody of the children.

Following a trial on the merits, the court decided that Hamblin was the more “fit” parent and

accordingly granted her physical and legal custody of both children. Allison, on the other

hand, was granted certain visitation rights and ordered to pay child support. Based on the

record, it appears that the two also informally agreed that Allison’s mother, Ginger, was

allowed to babysit the children.

¶4. A little over a year after the custody determination, Allison learned that Hamblin told

several people that Ginger sexually abused one of the children. The initial allegation

propelled a series of follow-up investigations, including visits to Allison’s home by social

workers, phone calls from a sheriff’s office regarding the allegation, a phone call from the

Department of Human Services, and a forensic examination of the allegedly abused child.

Additionally, Ginger was subsequently indicted on a felony fondling charge. In the interim,

Allison claimed that Hamblin denied him certain visitation rights, denied him access to

records pertaining to the children, and allowed a variety of men to stay overnight at her home

while the children were present.

¶5. The foregoing concerns prompted Allison to file a complaint for child custody

1 We use initials to protect minors’ identities.

2 modification. Hamblin responded by denying the complaint’s more damaging allegations

and counterclaimed that Allison allowed his mother to visit the children even after the sexual

abuse allegations were made.

¶6. The chancery court appointed attorney Ginger Miller as guardian ad litem to

investigate the allegations of abuse and make a recommendation as to abuse and neglect.

After her investigation, the GAL conferred with the chancellor and the parents at a pretrial

conference. Hamblin claims that during the conference, the GAL “testified that she would

recommend to the Court that the [m]other retain sole legal and physical custody of the minor

children.”

¶7. Some time prior to trial, the court also ordered reunification therapy to determine

whether, in light of the sexual abuse allegations, it was appropriate to allow Allison’s mother

to be near the children. The therapist in charge of the sessions, Joy Traylor, examined the

children closely as they interacted with their grandmother in a relaxed setting. Per the

request of the children’s stepmother, Traylor drafted a memorandum detailing her

observations from the therapy session and provided the stepmother a copy.

¶8. Meanwhile, the GAL had also visited the children on several occasions to further

investigate the abuse allegations. The child who was allegedly abused had recanted her

statement that her grandmother abused her. As a result, the charges against the grandmother

were dismissed. The GAL further learned that the medical examination of the allegedly

abused child returned no evidence of sexual abuse.

3 ¶9. At trial, Hamblin claims the GAL informed her attorney during a break that she would

not make any recommendation regarding child custody because the order appointing her did

not mandate her to do so. The GAL would later testify that based on her observations of the

children and her interviews with them, it seemed that both parents “coached” the children to

say certain things. For example, the GAL testified that at times when she asked one of the

children a random question about how her day was going, the child would immediately reply,

“Meme touched me.”

¶10. When questioned by Hamblin’s attorney, the GAL admitted that she initially drafted

a report in which she stated that the “disclosures” by one of the children during an

investigation were “consistent with sexual abuse.” However, she ultimately concluded the

allegations of sexual abuse were unsubstantiated. Further, when Hamblin’s attorney asked

the GAL what she thought was in the best interest of the children, the GAL replied that the

children needed to build a “rapport” with a therapist for consistent treatment “given what

[they’d] been through.” She also suggested that for the children’s sakes, the parents needed

some help in “getting along” because of the constant “back-and-forth.”

¶11. Traylor testified during the hearing about her findings with respect to the reunification

therapy. Specifically, she testified that the children showed no “hesitation” when interacting

with their grandmother and appeared to be elated to see her instead. For about an hour, the

children played with their grandmother and expressed their eagerness to see her again soon.

Most notably, the daughter, without any encouragement from Traylor, spontaneously asked

4 the grandmother if she was mad at her for lying about the sexual abuse. According to

Traylor, the grandmother tearfully replied that she was not mad at the little girl. Traylor also

gave the court a report detailing her findings.

¶12. The remainder of the trial appeared to expose Hamblin’s alleged neglect of the

children—specifically, her failure to attend to the children’s medical and educational needs.

In addition to artfully disclosing the alleged overnight visits from Hamblin’s boyfriends

while the children were present, Allison’s counsel also presented evidence that the son had

a painful, decayed tooth while in Hamblin’s care. Additionally, the daughter was not given

glasses despite her complaints of vision problems, and she failed kindergarten under the

mother’s care.

¶13. Both Hamblin and Allison testified concerning their plans to resolve these issues. But

in light of the allegations raised against Hamblin, and finding Allison’s plans more

persuasive, the chancery court found that Hamblin was no longer the more “fit” parent due

to a material change in circumstances and shifted full custody of the children to Allison.

Hamblin, on the other hand, was granted visitation rights and ordered to pay Allison child

support.

¶14. Aggrieved, Hamblin appeals. She asserts three main assignments of error: (1) that the

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Dodi Deanne Gegumis Hamblin v. Leslie Brandon Allison, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dodi-deanne-gegumis-hamblin-v-leslie-brandon-allison-missctapp-2020.