Ellis v. Lyons

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 11, 2016
DocketB264040
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Ellis v. Lyons, (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Filed 7/14/16 Certified for Publication 8/11/16 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FIVE

JONATHAN C. ELLIS, B264040

Respondent, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. KF004785) v.

CRYSTAL L. LYONS,

Appellant.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Rocky L. Crabb, Commissioner. Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded. Crystal L. Lyons, in pro. per., for Appellant. Kari Hong for amicus curiae on behalf of Appellant. Estelle & Kennedy, Michael Kennedy, for Respondent. Appellant Crystal Lyons (Mother) appeals the denial of her request for sole legal and physical custody of her minor daughter (Minor) and to reinstate child support from respondent Jonathan Ellis (Father). Father engaged in a physical altercation with his brother-in-law in a room where Minor was present. When informed of the altercation, Mother sought and obtained a temporary protective order in Massachusetts, her state of residence, that barred Father from contacting Minor. The Massachusetts court continued that order in force until the Los Angeles Superior Court—where the family law proceedings had originated—heard Mother‘s request to change the existing joint custody order. We consider whether the family law court abused its discretion when it denied Mother‘s request for sole custody of Minor, and in answering that question, we address what effect California law required the family law court to give to the Massachusetts court‘s findings.

I. BACKGROUND Minor was born to Mother and Father in February 2001. Mother and Father‘s relationship ended that same year, and in 2002, Father filed a paternity action. Pursuant to a November 2009 stipulated judgment, the parents share joint legal and physical custody of Minor, and she lives most of the year in Massachusetts with Mother, who has since remarried. Father lives in Southern California at his parents‘ home, and he has custody of Minor for five weeks every summer, on spring breaks, and on alternating winter breaks.

A. Father Gets in a Physical Altercation in Minor’s Presence In April 2014, Minor was in Southern California for her weeklong spring break visit with Father. Generally, Father and Minor would go shopping, play games, play softball and tennis, and go to the bookstore during her visits. While at Father‘s house, Minor would sleep on the sofa in his bedroom and Father would sleep downstairs.

2 On April 21, 2014, the day after her arrival, Minor witnessed an argument between Father and his adult brother-in-law Andy. Andy began to touch the cables behind Father‘s TV console, and Father asked him not to do so. Andy responded, ―I can do what I want. What are you going to do about it?‖ Andy‘s 12-year-old son Stevie then began to mishandle Father‘s video game controller, and Father became upset and repeatedly told him to stop. Father told Stevie to go into the other room until he ―learn[ed] to listen to instructions.‖ Andy became angry and told Father not to correct Stevie, adding that Father was acting like an ―asshole.‖ What transpired next was the subject of some disagreement between the parties, but the core facts are undisputed. Father and Andy engaged in a physical confrontation while Minor was still seated on a couch roughly three feet away. Father pushed Andy and Father used his fist to strike Andy in his face two or three times. During the altercation, which lasted only seconds, Andy‘s wife (Father‘s sister) jumped on Father‘s back in an attempt to separate both men. They did separate, and neither sustained significant injuries. Minor was not hit in any way during the altercation. When the altercation between Father and Andy ended, Father noticed Minor had left the room. Father saw an upstairs bathroom door was closed, and he found Minor inside on the phone. Believing Minor had called Mother, Father asked for the phone and instead heard a 911 operator on the other end asking for their address. Father told the 911 operator there was no need to send help because it was just a family squabble and no one had been hurt; as a result, the police did not respond to the home. After hanging up with the 911 operator, Father returned Minor‘s cell phone to her; she contended he did so only on condition that she promise not to call 911 again, but he said he willingly returned the phone without conditions. In the aftermath of the incident, Father and Minor discussed it, and Minor‘s grandmother (Father‘s mother) joined the conversation at some point. All parties agree that at some point during that discussion, Father threatened to slap Minor. The parties

3 disagree, however, about the timing of when the comment was made and what prompted it. According to Father, Minor began yelling, telling him that he was overweight, suffering from OCD (obsessive-compulsive disorder), unemployed, antisocial, and not her ―real father,‖ which caused him to lose his temper and tell her to stop speaking disrespectfully or he would slap her. Minor admitted telling Father he was overweight, suffering from OCD, and words to the effect that he was antisocial, but she said that was not what prompted his statement that he would slap her. Rather, according to Minor, Father said ―[w]ell, do you want me to slap you‖ earlier in the conversation when she told him that he should not have hit Andy. It is undisputed that Father apologized to Minor for the threat to slap her shortly after he said it. And Father did not hit Minor that day, nor was there any evidence before the family law court that he had hit her at any other time. The next two days were largely uneventful—Father and Minor went out to play tennis and softball, and they also watched television together. Mother called Minor the day after the altercation, but Minor did not tell her what had transpired between Father and Andy; according to Mother, Minor did say ―something was wrong‖ and that she would talk to Mother about it later when she could. The next day, Minor called Mother and told her about the confrontation between Father and Andy, explaining she was ―really scared.‖ Mother was concerned for Minor‘s safety and told Minor she would help Minor 1 ―get out of there,‖ i.e., the home where Father was living.

1 During the evidentiary hearing held by the family law court, Minor admitted it was not just the altercation between Andy and Father that made her want to leave. Rather, she agreed she also wanted to go back home to Mother because she did not want to be visiting Father to begin with. Father and Minor‘s grandmother also testified that during her visit, Minor said Mother had hired a lawyer and had started paperwork to shorten the time she had to spend visiting Father because Minor wanted to go to summer camp and spend time with friends. According to Minor‘s grandmother, Minor said her Mother had told her she could change the visitation schedule once she reached 13 years of age (which she then was).

4 B. The Massachusetts Protective Order Having learned of the altercation between Father and Andy, Mother contacted her attorney in Los Angeles, who on April 23, 2014, attempted to obtain an ex parte restraining order against Father in Los Angeles Superior Court. Mother‘s attorney sought the order not in the Pomona courthouse where the case had been litigated, but instead in another courthouse in downtown Los Angeles. The commissioner who heard the application for the ex parte order declined to issue an order without notice to Father and without Mother being present. The commissioner instead suggested Mother could notice the matter to be heard in the Pomona courthouse two days later, on April 25, 2014. Mother did not proceed as the court commissioner proposed; as she would later claim, she feared for Minor‘s safety if she gave notice to Father of her intention to seek a restraining order.

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Bluebook (online)
Ellis v. Lyons, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-v-lyons-calctapp-2016.