Duncan v. Brickman

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedOctober 25, 2017
Docket2D16-4251
StatusPublished

This text of Duncan v. Brickman (Duncan v. Brickman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duncan v. Brickman, (Fla. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL

OF FLORIDA

SECOND DISTRICT

DAVID DUNCAN, ) ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) Case No. 2D16-4251 ) THALIA TATHAM BRICKMAN f/k/a, ) THALIA DUNCAN, ) ) Appellee. ) )

Opinion filed October 25, 2017.

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Hillsborough County; Richard A. Nielsen, Judge.

Allison M. Perry of Florida Appeals & Mediations, P.A., Tampa and Kendra R. Davis of Law Office of Kendra Davis, P.A., Tampa, for Appellant.

Mark A. Neumaier, Tampa, for Appellee.

LUCAS, Judge.

David Duncan, the father of a minor child, A.L.D., appeals from orders that

emanated from a contempt proceeding in which the circuit court curtailed his

timesharing with A.L.D. For the reasons that follow, we must reverse. I.

The protracted litigation between Mr. Duncan and A.L.D.'s mother, Thalia

Tatham Brickman, originated in 2006, when A.L.D. was sixteen months old.1 Initially,

the parties were able to settle several issues, including those relating to the distribution

of their property and debts. Disputes about the rearing of their child, however,

remained. In August of 2008, the trial court entered a temporary timesharing order

awarding majority timesharing to Mr. Duncan, while referring the final determination of

paternity, timesharing, and child support to a general magistrate.

The general magistrate would not conduct hearings on these issues until

the summer of 2010, two years after the referral, and those hearings would continue

into the spring of 2011 before a report and recommendation was issued that winter. Ms.

Brickman filed exceptions to the report and recommendation, and in the summer of

2012, now four years after the initial referral, the trial court held a hearing on those

exceptions. Following that hearing, the trial court referred the matter back to the

general magistrate for clarification of a procedural issue concerning rebuttal witnesses.

In the meantime, from September 2011 to September 2012, Ms. Brickman had filed five

1 This case began as a dissolution of marriage case. Ms. Brickman filed a petition for a dissolution of marriage against Mr. Duncan, seeking entry of a parenting plan, child support, and alimony. Mr. Duncan filed an answer and a motion to dismiss, claiming that the parties never entered into a valid marriage with the intent of being married to one another. He also filed a counterpetition for paternity, in which he acknowledged that the two parties had A.L.D. in common. Ms. Duncan filed an "amended petition related to minor child and complaint for damages and other relief," again seeking entry of a parenting plan and child support but also alleging one count of fraudulent inducement and one count of breach of contract. Ms. Duncan's civil claims were transferred to the lower court's circuit civil division, while the remainder of the amended petition became the operative pleading in this case. From the arguments presented to us, it appears that the question of whether this couple was ever married has been resolved.

-2- motions for contempt, each alleging that Mr. Duncan had violated the temporary

timesharing order, which, four years after its entry, was still the operative timesharing

order in effect. The trial court heard these motions in a consolidated fashion over the

course of two hearings, one held in the spring, and the other in the summer, of 2013.2

The hearings concluded, and the presiding judge informed counsel for the parties that

he would reserve ruling and render an order at a later time.

The court would not issue that order for three years.

After the contempt hearings concluded, this matter lay dormant for several

months until the spring of 2014, when the general magistrate—almost two years after

the matter was referred back to him as a result of Ms. Brickman's exceptions—issued a

new report and recommendation. Ms. Brickman filed exceptions to this new report and

recommendation as well, but for reasons unclear, the trial court did not rule on these

exceptions for another two years. While Ms. Brickman's latest exceptions remained

pending, the circuit court entered an order on her contempt motions on June 13, 2016.

In its order, the trial court found Mr. Duncan in contempt of the temporary

timesharing order, which, by now, had been in force for eight years. As part of its

contempt order, the trial court modified the parties' timesharing with A.L.D. Mr. Duncan

had enjoyed majority timesharing for the past eight years, but the contempt order

purported to grant both parents equal timesharing. In that regard, the order stated:

The prior order relating to temporary time-sharing is modified in the following respects. Mr. Duncan shall no longer have temporary majority time-sharing. Instead, temporary time- sharing shall be shared such that Mr. Duncan shall have fifty

2 We note that several of the alleged violations concerned conduct on the part of Mr. Duncan that would have occurred two years before the hearing on the contempt motions.

-3- percent time-sharing with the Minor Child and Ms. Brickman shall have fifty percent time-sharing with the Minor Child. ...

Mr. Duncan is again admonished to refrain from exercising sole parental responsibility and from conduct that is not conducive to effective co-parenting. Further sanctions may be imposed if Mr. Duncan's improper conduct continues.

This new timesharing arrangement would only last for two months,

however, as in August of 2016, the trial court denied Ms. Brickman's exceptions to the

general magistrate's second report and recommendation. Unfortunately, the trial court

then proceeded to confuse matters through the entry of conflicting orders—the likely

result of the prolonged delays in issuing its rulings. On August 19, 2016, the trial court

entered a final order of paternity adopting the report and recommendation entered by

the general magistrate five years prior. That report and recommendation had

recommended that Mr. Duncan receive majority timesharing. As a result, although Mr.

Duncan had been stripped of his majority timesharing just two months earlier in the

contempt order, the previous timesharing schedule that gave him majority timesharing

was effectively reinstated.

Ms. Brickman filed a timely motion for rehearing and clarification of the

final order of paternity, pointing out that the court's final order of paternity was based on

evidence taken in 2011, while the contempt order had been based on evidence taken in

2013. Thus, Ms. Brickman argued, it was no longer proper for the trial court to fashion a

timesharing schedule on the general magistrate's report and recommendation since the

magistrate's findings were based upon stale evidence (in comparison to the evidence

adduced during the 2013 contempt hearing). The trial court apparently agreed and on

August 29, 2016, as A.L.D. turned eleven, entered an order on Ms. Brickman's motion in

-4- which it explained that the timesharing provisions of the contempt order "supersede and

control over" those in the final order of paternity—in effect, implementing the

timesharing schedule the trial court awarded in its 2016 contempt order.

Mr. Duncan now appeals the clarified final order and the order of contempt

that preceded it. We have jurisdiction.3

II.

This paternity case has become something of a procedural quagmire, but

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