Edgar v. Firuta

100 So. 3d 255, 2012 Fla. App. LEXIS 19146, 2012 WL 5416432
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedNovember 7, 2012
DocketNo. 3D11-1182
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 100 So. 3d 255 (Edgar v. Firuta) 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
Edgar v. Firuta, 100 So. 3d 255, 2012 Fla. App. LEXIS 19146, 2012 WL 5416432 (Fla. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

SALTER, J.

Patricia Edgar (Mother) appeals a final judgment granting her former husband’s (Father’s) motion for contempt and his amended petition to modify their parenting plan and child support obligations. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings.

I. Procedural History

The parties were married in 1996. They had four children at the time of their divorce in North Carolina in 2005. Although the North Carolina judgment identified the four children — then ages ten, nine, seven, and four years old — it did not include any provisions regarding custody, parental responsibility, visitation, or child support. So far as the record reflects, there was no parenting plan.

At some point in 2007, the Mother and Father resumed living together with the children in various locations in and near Key West, Florida. The Mother and Father did not remarry. In 2009, the Department of Children and Families (DCF) office in Monroe County sought and obtained protective supervision over all four children. In 2010, finding that the Mother had complied with her case plan, DCF sought (and the circuit court granted) an order terminating protective supervision.

In the latter part of 2010, the Father filed a “supplemental petition to modify parenting plan and other relief’1 in the Monroe County circuit court, attaching a copy of the 2005 North Carolina “Absolute Divorce Judgment.” The Father’s petition did not ask for any relief regarding the three older children. It alleged that the current parenting plan for the youngest child (then ten years old) was “shared parental responsibility,” that the youngest child wished to stay with the Father in Key West, and that the Mother was engaging in erratic behavior and placing the child in dangerous situations. The petition sought sole parental responsibility of the youngest child for the Father, with limited supervised visitation for the Mother. Finally, the Father’s petition sought a temporary injunction to prevent removal of the youngest child from the jurisdiction, based on a fear that the Mother or others would take the child to North Carolina.

The following day, the Monroe County circuit court entered a form order for a case management conference and prospective referral to the general magistrate. The day after that, November 3, 2010, the Mother filed an emergency motion to enforce her alleged custody of the youngest child and another minor child. The Mother alleged that she had custody of all four children under the final order and case plan in the DCF dependency case, and that the Father was refusing to return two [257]*257of the children to the Mother after visitation. In a Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (UCCJEA) Affidavit filed with her emergency motion, the Mother reported that all four children had resided with her since October 1, 2010, at a residence in Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina.

On November 9, 2010, the parties and their attorneys appeared in the circuit court for a hearing on the Mother’s emergency motion to enforce custody. Although it does not appear that a written order was entered, the court minutes prepared by the deputy clerk and made a part of the record state that the trial court declined to change any custody (so that the youngest child would remain with the Father) until the trial court had a chance to speak with the child and to consider a psychological evaluation of the child. At a hearing a week later, the court denied the Mother’s emergency motion for contempt, authorized time-sharing visitation, and ordered that the youngest child “cannot leave State at this time.”2

A series of allegations and cross-allegations over visitation details,' with nearly weekly hearings, followed. On November 80, 2010, the Mother filed a “notice of intent to relocate with children,” proposing that the youngest child join the Mother and the other three minor children at their home in North Carolina. The notice included specifics regarding the proposed relocation, pursuant to section 61.13001, Florida Statutes (2010), as well as a detailed parenting plan. The Father filed -written objections and a request for a temporary order “restraining the relocation of the child pending final hearing.” A mediation to resolve all issues impassed, and the court directed the parties to attempt again to mediate, with particular emphasis on visitation and travel during the upcoming December holidays. After yet another emergency hearing, the trial court entered an order on December 17, 2010, authorizing the Mother to have time-sharing in North Carolina with the youngest child from December 20, 2010, through January 2, 2011, with the Father to have daily Skype communication with the children during that time, and authorizing the Father to have time-sharing with the older three children in Key West during their spring break.

Meanwhile, a Key West psychiatrist interviewed the youngest child and both parents, and provided a relocation evaluation report to the court. The psychiatrist reported that: the youngest child wanted to live with her mother and siblings in North Carolina; “it is not recommended to separate siblings at her developmental stage”; the Father, his girlfriend, and the youngest child were then in a one bedroom apartment in Key West, with no plan for what the arrangements might be when the Father’s lease ended; and a mediated settlement allowing relocation of the child to North Carolina, with reasonable visitation terms and abstinence from alcohol on the part of the Mother (with monitoring), would be in the best interest of the child.

In January 2011, there were additional cross-motions for contempt for alleged violations of time-sharing directives. In early February, the trial court appointed an experienced former chief circuit court judge as a special magistrate to interview the youngest child and provide a report to the court. The special magistrate interviewed the child in camera and filed a report and recommendation on February 7, 2011, that the court consider the child’s preference “to live with her mother and be with her [258]*258siblings in North Carolina” in ruling on the request for relocation. A hearing scheduled before the special magistrate for the afternoon of February 10, 2011, was abruptly taken off the calendar when the Father filed a written objection to the assignment of the special magistrate.

The following day, the Mother filed an emergency motion to set a preliminary hearing on relocation, alleging that the parties had reached a mediated agreement allowing relocation (but the Father had refused to sign it) and that the Mother had been forced to remain in Monroe County while the three older children remained in North Carolina. The Father denied that an agreement had been reached and denied that he was intentionally delaying the proceedings. On February 15, 2011, the Father also filed a motion for the appointment of a guardian ad litem for the youngest child, asserting that her interests “are adverse to those of her mother.” On February 18, 2011, the Mother supplemented her second motion for contempt with allegations that the Father was engaging in “self-help” and was willfully in violation of the time-sharing order. The Key West police were called and returned the youngest child to the Mother.

The significance of the many motions and cross-motions — and this opinion has omitted the scandalous allegations hurled by the parties against each other and by the Mother against the Father’s girlfriend — pales in comparison to what happened next.

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Related

Dickson v. Dickson
169 So. 3d 287 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2015)
Edgar v. Firuta
165 So. 3d 758 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2015)
Shacker v. State
106 So. 3d 36 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 So. 3d 255, 2012 Fla. App. LEXIS 19146, 2012 WL 5416432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edgar-v-firuta-fladistctapp-2012.