Elizabeth A. Haring, f/k/a Elizabeth A. Hackmer v. Michael J. Hackmer

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedNovember 8, 2005
Docket2846044
StatusUnpublished

This text of Elizabeth A. Haring, f/k/a Elizabeth A. Hackmer v. Michael J. Hackmer (Elizabeth A. Haring, f/k/a Elizabeth A. Hackmer v. Michael J. Hackmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Elizabeth A. Haring, f/k/a Elizabeth A. Hackmer v. Michael J. Hackmer, (Va. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judge Clements, Senior Judges Willis and Annunziata Argued at Alexandria, Virginia

ELIZABETH A. HARING, F/K/A ELIZABETH A. HACKMER MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 2846-04-4 JUDGE JEAN HARRISON CLEMENTS NOVEMBER 8, 2005 MICHAEL J. HACKMER

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY Robert W. Wooldridge, Jr., Judge

Robert G. Culin, Jr. (Culin, Sharp, Autry & Day, P.L.C., on briefs), for appellant.

Michael D. Sawyer (Moyes & Levay, P.L.L.C., on briefs), for appellee.

Sylvia W. Voreas (The Law Office of Sylvia W. Voreas, on briefs), Guardian ad litem for the infant child.

(John R. Roberts, County Attorney; John W. White, Assistant County Attorney, on brief), for Loudoun County Department of Social Services. Loudoun County Department of Social Services submitting on brief.

Elizabeth A. Haring (mother) appeals from an order of the trial court awarding sole legal

and physical custody of the parties’ child (child or daughter) to Michael J. Hackmer (father).

Mother contends the trial court erred in finding that an award of sole custody to father was in child’s

best interests. Prior to oral argument on this case, we asked the parties, the guardian ad litem, and

the Loudoun County Department of Social Services (DSS) to brief whether mother’s failure to

give notice to DSS of this appeal is a procedural flaw requiring us to dismiss. We find that the

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. failure of such notice is not a procedural bar to appellate review under the particular

circumstances before us, and decline to dismiss this appeal. We further hold on the merits that

the trial court did not err in awarding sole legal and physical custody to father, and therefore

affirm.

As the parties are fully conversant with the record in this case, and because this

memorandum opinion carries no precedential value, this opinion recites only those facts and

incidents of the proceedings as are necessary to the parties’ understanding of the disposition of this

appeal.

I. BACKGROUND

The facts in the present appeal were determined by the trial court after ore tenus hearing,

and are not challenged by mother on appeal. The parties are the separated parents of child, born

May 31, 1999, each of whom at the time of the ore tenus hearing had filed for divorce and sought

custody in the trial court. On January 6, 2004, while the trial court proceedings were pending and in

response to a Child in Need of Services petition, the Loudoun County Juvenile and Domestic

Relations District Court awarded temporary physical custody to DSS. Thereafter, on May 28, 2004,

DSS was made a party to the trial court custody proceedings, and the trial court approved a DSS

foster care service plan establishing a goal of returning child to the custody of the parents. The

proceedings in the Loudoun County Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court were then

dismissed.

Following the ore tenus hearing, the trial court found that child had had some emotional

difficulties that were somewhat alleviated during a period of foster care, including toilet training

problems and the demonstration of inappropriate interpersonal boundaries. She had also made

several allegations of sexual abuse that after full investigation were determined to be unfounded.

The trial court found that an “over-sexualized atmosphere” contributed to child’s problems.

-2- In addition to father’s failure to maintain continuous employment, several specific incidents

led the trial court to question father’s ability to function as a custodial parent. He had two

extramarital sexual relationships while living with and married to mother. When his daughter was a

year old, he placed the hands of a one-year-old male child on his daughter’s chest and lap and made

sexual comments in the presence of the children’s mothers. He sent an e-mail to mother that

ascribed a sexual motive to a playground meeting between his daughter and another child. He often

referred to child’s breasts as growing “boobies.” Father once sent mother an inexplicably violent

and sexual e-mail poem meant to intimidate her. In sum, the trial court found that father failed “to

recognize his role as a parent and the extent to which his conduct [might] influence his child,” and

thus determined that father’s disposition to improper sexualized conduct had contributed to an

inappropriate atmosphere for rearing child.

Mother was also found by the trial court to have “created” the inappropriate and sexualized

environment in which child had been raised. She had subjected child to invasive questioning of a

sexual nature as well as at least three vaginal and anal medical examinations arising out of mother’s

multiple unfounded complaints to Child Protective Services (CPS) of father’s sexual conduct with

child. Mother had claimed that father had sexually abused child almost since birth, yet she made no

mention of sexual abuse in her Bill of Complaint, and even after initiating divorce proceedings she

continued a normal—and at times intimate—relationship with him. Since filing her Bill of

Complaint mother had reported to CPS two specific incidents she claimed were witnessed by third

parties of father’s sexual abuse of child. Each report was discredited in the hearing: in one

instance, the third party denied her claim, and the other account contained anachronism,

inconsistency, and bias. The trial court noted that the timing of many of mother’s unfounded

accusations of sexual misconduct by father had been, for various reasons, suspect.

-3- During the pendency of the divorce and custody proceedings and while child was in her

custody, mother twice failed to give thirty days’ notice of a change in residence as required by court

order. She had arbitrarily and unilaterally required father’s visitation with child be supervised by

third parties. Despite a sealed record in this case, she had released father’s psychosexual evaluation

to third parties. She had refused to accept agency and medical determinations inconsistent with her

accusations; rather, she had simply pressed her claims elsewhere. In this way she had improperly

involved several different government entities and health care providers in various Virginia and

Maryland jurisdictions, intentionally and with no apparent factual basis calling into question several

professional reputations. She had attempted to involve in this child custody determination

legislators and newspaper reporters, parties whose only possible role in this proceeding was to

impose an inappropriate political consideration on the judicial process. And, without any

foundation in fact, she had told child that father wanted to kill child.

Mother’s employment situation, though less than ideal, was more continuously stable than

father’s. Nevertheless, she had moved five times in the two and a half years preceding the custody

determination, whereas father had remained in the same home throughout. The findings of two

credible professionals showed that father’s parenting abilities are superior to mother’s.

During the proceedings, DSS took no position as to which parent should be awarded

custody. On October 25, 2004, after hearing several professional opinions consistent with the

position, the trial court found that it was “in the best interests of the child to be returned to the

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