Douglas Leonard v. Maryanne Carmella Leonard

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 22, 2022
Docket359382
StatusUnpublished

This text of Douglas Leonard v. Maryanne Carmella Leonard (Douglas Leonard v. Maryanne Carmella Leonard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Douglas Leonard v. Maryanne Carmella Leonard, (Mich. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

DOUGLAS LEONARD, UNPUBLISHED December 22, 2022 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 359382 Oakland Circuit Court Family Division MARYANNE CARMELLA LEONARD, also LC No. 2020-502459-DC known as MARYANNE CARMELA BOGDAN,

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: JANSEN, P.J., and SERVITTO and GADOLA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Defendant, Maryanne Carmella Leonard,1 also known as Maryanne Carmela Bogdan, proceeding in propria persona, as she did in the trial court, appeals as of right the trial court judgment of custody, which awarded sole legal and physical custody of the parties’ minor child, CL, to plaintiff, Douglas Leonard. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

The parties met in Michigan at their place of employment and started a relationship in 2014 or 2015. The two married in South Dakota on September 6, 2015. The parties lived in Windsor, Ontario, and their son, CL, was born in 2017. After CL was born, plaintiff continued to work in Michigan, but defendant stopped working to care for CL. The family eventually moved to Troy, Michigan, in November 2019, to be closer to plaintiff’s work.

According to plaintiff, he was unaware of any marital issues until February 6, 2020. On that date, defendant was supposed to pick plaintiff up from work. When plaintiff called her, defendant said that she was in the parking lot. When plaintiff went to the parking lot, their vehicle

1 Defendant’s middle name is misspelled as “Carmella” in plaintiff’s complaint. Her middle name is actually spelled as “Carmela” (with only one “l”).

-1- was there, but it was empty and CL’s car seat was gone. Plaintiff tried to contact defendant, but she did not answer her phone.

On February 13, 2020, defendant filed a petition in Livingston County for a personal protection order (PPO) against plaintiff. Although one was initially issued ex parte, it was terminated after a subsequent hearing. During that PPO hearing, plaintiff learned that defendant and CL had moved to South Dakota.

On May 4, 2020, defendant filed an action for divorce in South Dakota. In that petition, defendant acknowledged that the parties were married on September 6, 2015, and had one child together, CL. Plaintiff contested jurisdiction in South Dakota and filed his own complaint for divorce in Michigan on May 12, 2020, in LC No. 2020-500333-DM. On June 12, 2020, the South Dakota court held a hearing at which all parties were physically present. At this hearing, the South Dakota court “entered its oral decision and Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law on the record.”2

The very next day, June 13, 2020, defendant took CL to Alaska. Defendant believed that she could take CL anywhere, and that not all the provisions of the subsequently entered South Dakota order were mentioned or incorporated in the court’s June 12, 2020 oral pronouncements. Defendant’s purported “domicile” in Alaska was a home in Wasilla, Alaska, which was owned by Clinton DesJarlais, but defendant lived in a home in Fairbanks, Alaska, which was owned by Leslie Zerbe, a Baptist missionary. DesJarlais, his wife Sarah Buchhorn, their six children, Zerbe, defendant, and CL all lived in the Fairbanks home.3

On June 15, 2020, the South Dakota court entered its order declining jurisdiction over the custody issue. The court stated that South Dakota was an inconvenient forum and that Michigan instead “is a more appropriate forum for the custody determination.”

On June 16, 2020, defendant filed a petition for annulment in Alaska. In that petition, defendant asserted that she and plaintiff were never legally married. This was the first time that plaintiff became aware of allegations pertaining to the validity of their marriage. Although the petition contained many allegations, defendant’s principal theory was that her marriage to plaintiff was void because plaintiff had been married twice before and failed to terminate either of those marriages.4 Defendant also alleged that “Clinton DesJarlais [and] Sarah Buchhorn are acting as legal guardians to the child as granted from [defendant] to them and they willfully accept.”

2 Although a transcript of the June 12, 2020 hearing was not produced, the court’s order states that the court declined to exercise jurisdiction over the issue of custody, leaving Michigan to address that issue. According to the record, the South Dakota judge conferred with the Michigan trial judge in LC No. 2020-500333-DM, in accordance with the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act. 3 Zerbe was married, but according to defendant, Zerbe’s wife was living in Costa Rica. 4 This petition was admitted into evidence at the trial in this case as Exhibit 4.

-2- Defendant further asserted that both DesJarlais and Buchhorn “have agreed to fully legally adopt” CL. Defendant described DesJarlais as her “brother in Christ.”

On June 25, 2020, the trial court in the divorce action in Michigan, LC No. 2020-500333- DM, entered an order stating:

After taking testimony from the parties,[5] the Court finds that it is the appropriate court to make the initial custody and parenting time determination. Based on the testimony from the parties, the record in this case, and having considered the best interest factors, the Court awards Plaintiff-Father temporary sole legal and physical custody of the child . . . , with Defendant-Mother having supervised parenting time at Impact [Counseling Services]. Defendant-Mother is ordered to return the child to the marital home in the State of Michigan immediately.

Despite the Michigan court order, defendant did not return CL to Michigan. On the same day the Michigan order was entered, Alaska State Troopers, under the auspices of a welfare check, met up with defendant as she was in a vehicle heading to Fairbanks with DesJarlais and CL The troopers took CL into custody, where he was subsequently placed in foster care. Following hearings in Alaska on June 28 and June 30, 2020, the Alaska court entered an order permitting plaintiff to remove CL from the state of Alaska.

When plaintiff first saw CL in Alaska, plaintiff barely recognized CL because of the poor condition he was in. CL was unkempt, there was something wrong with his left eye, his teeth were black, and he had open sores that were bleeding. The Alaskan Child Protective Services supervisor and foster mother gave plaintiff medication for CL. Plaintiff thereafter took CL back to the home in Michigan.

Back in Alaska, defendant was impregnated the day after CL was released to plaintiff. She claimed that she used a sperm donor “through a friend from somebody,” but did not have the person’s name. Defendant gave birth prematurely to another child in March 2021.6

On September 8, 2020, the Michigan trial court in LC No. 2020-500333-DM granted plaintiff’s motion to voluntarily dismiss the case, in light of defendant’s argument that the 180- day jurisdictional residency requirement set forth in MCL 552.9(1) had not been satisfied. 7 That

5 A transcript of that proceeding in LC No. 2020-500333-DM was not produced below and thus is not part of the lower court record in this case. 6 Defendant claimed that there was no governmental documentation for the child’s birth. 7 MCL 552.9(1) states, in pertinent part, that “[a] judgment of divorce shall not be granted by a court in this state in an action for divorce unless the complainant or defendant has resided in this state for 180 days immediately preceding the filing of the complaint. . . .” According to the record, plaintiff moved to Troy sometime in November 2019, and filed his complaint for divorce on May 12, 2020.

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Douglas Leonard v. Maryanne Carmella Leonard, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/douglas-leonard-v-maryanne-carmella-leonard-michctapp-2022.