Ex parte Aris Hale PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS

CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 10, 2023
DocketCL-2022-1253
StatusPublished

This text of Ex parte Aris Hale PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS (Ex parte Aris Hale PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Aris Hale PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS, (Ala. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Rel: February 10, 2023

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts, 300 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other errors, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published in Southern Reporter.

ALABAMA COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS OCTOBER TERM, 2022-2023 _________________________

CL-2022-1253 _________________________

Ex parte Aris Hale

PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS

(In re: Aris R. Hale

v.

Benitra C. Colvin)

(Montgomery Circuit Court, DR-21-900404)

FRIDY, Judge.

Aris Hale ("the father") filed a petition for a writ of mandamus

asking this court to direct the Montgomery Circuit Court ("the trial

court") to vacate its, pendente lite order entered on December 12, 2022, CL-2022-1253

awarding "primary physical custody" of A.S.H. ("the child") to Benitra C.

Colvin ("the mother"). For the reasons discussed herein, we grant the

petition.

Background

The materials submitted in support of and in opposition to the

father's petition indicate that in 2017 the Circuit Court of Johnson

County, Missouri ("the Missouri court"), entered a judgment divorcing

the parties and, by agreement of the parties, awarded the mother and the

father joint legal custody of the child and the father sole physical custody

of the child. That custody award modified a previous order that a German

court had entered regarding the child's custody. The father is in the

United States Air Force, and in 2019, he advised the mother of his intent

to move overseas with the child. The mother challenged the relocation of

the child and sought a custody modification in the Missouri Court

alleging, among other things, that the father had interfered with her

parenting time. On October 30, 2019, the Missouri court found that the

father's request to relocate was made in good faith but that such a move

would not be in the child's best interest. The Missouri court awarded the

mother and the father joint legal and joint physical custody of the child.

2 CL-2022-1253

However, because the father and the child then lived in Missouri and the

mother lived in Georgia, the Missouri court found that it was in the

child's best interest to continue to reside with the father subject to a

schedule of custodial periods set forth in the judgment.

At some point, which is not made clear in the materials before us,

the father and the child moved to Alabama. In June 2021, the father filed

a petition to register in the trial court the previous judgments of the

Missouri court. On July 12, 2021, the mother responded to the petition

saying that she consented to the registration of the Missouri court's

judgments; however, she filed a counterclaim seeking to hold the father

in contempt, alleging that he had failed to permit her to exercise her

court-ordered custodial rights and that it would be in the child's best

interests for her to have sole physical custody. That same day, the mother

filed a motion requesting an order directing the father to "immediately

relinquish" the child to the mother for her court-ordered summer

custodial period and asked for an expedited hearing.

The trial court held a hearing on July 16, 2021, and registered the

Missouri judgments. On July 23, 2021, the trial court entered an order

stating that the child had left the courtroom with the mother after the

3 CL-2022-1253

July 16 hearing. In the order, the trial court awarded the mother

visitation from July 16 until July 23, 2021, and again from July 25 to

August 4, 2021. The order directed the mother to allow the child to

communicate with the father if the child wished to speak to him.

On July 22, 2021, the father filed in the trial court a custody-

modification petition seeking sole physical custody of the child.

Additionally, he sought to have the mother held in contempt for allegedly

violating several provisions of the Missouri court's judgments regarding

her responsibilities during the child's visits with her, such as permitting

the child to communicate with him and keeping him informed of her

travels with the child during the child's visits. He also sought to have the

mother held in contempt because, he said, she had failed to pay him

court-ordered child support and to reimburse him for certain expenses

that he had incurred on behalf of the child.

On November 28, 2021, the mother filed in the trial court a new

motion seeking to hold the father in contempt in which she sought

temporary physical custody of the child, alleging that the father had

refused to allow her to exercise her custodial rights over Thanksgiving.

The father responded on December 20, 2021, saying that, despite his

4 CL-2022-1253

efforts, which he said had included having the child in counseling and

attempting to engage the mother in repairing what he said was the

estranged relationship between the mother and the child, the child did

not want to visit with the mother. Indeed, he requested that the trial

court suspend the mother's visitations until she worked with a counselor

to mend her relationship with the child.

On May 9, 2022, the trial court held an evidentiary hearing on the

issue of the father's alleged contempt for what the mother called the

"obstruction" of her visitation time with the child, who was then eleven

years old. At the hearing, the trial court pointed out that the visitation

issues raised in previous pleadings were moot because of the passage of

time.

The mother testified that she did not get to have the court-ordered

visitations for Thanksgiving and Christmas in 2021, adding that in

discussions with the father about those visitations, the father had told

her the child did not want to visit. For the Thanksgiving visitation, the

mother said, she traveled from her home in Stone Mountain, Georgia, to

LaGrange, Georgia, where the custody exchange was to take place, and

waited for the father to bring the child, but, she said, they never

5 CL-2022-1253

appeared. The mother said that she did not make the trip to LaGrange

for the scheduled custody exchange for her Christmas visitation after the

father told her that the child was not coming. The mother said that the

father's failure to comply with the Missouri court's visitation directives

had been an ongoing problem for several years.

The father testified that he knew that the court had ordered specific

visitation times for the mother, including the Thanksgiving and

Christmas visits that were missed, and that he had not forced the child

to make those visits. The child's counselor testified that it would not be

good for the child to be forced to take part in those visits.

The mother said that she had not had telephone or

videoconferencing contact with the child since July 2021. She said that

when she had attempted to reach the child through videoconferencing,

the father and the child were not online. The mother conceded that she

had not attempted to talk with the child since December 5, 2021, and that

she had not seen the child since the child's visit in summer 2021. She also

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Ex parte Aris Hale PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-aris-hale-petition-for-writ-of-mandamus-alacivapp-2023.