Fabiola Ramirez v. Dominick Marzano

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedApril 3, 2024
Docket2023-1170
StatusPublished

This text of Fabiola Ramirez v. Dominick Marzano (Fabiola Ramirez v. Dominick Marzano) 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
Fabiola Ramirez v. Dominick Marzano, (Fla. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA FOURTH DISTRICT

FABIOLA RAMIREZ, Appellant,

v.

DOMINICK MARZANO, Appellee.

No. 4D2023-1170

[April 3, 2024]

Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Seventeenth Judicial Circuit, Broward County; Lorena V. Mastrarrigo, Judge; L.T. Case No. FMCE19- 007440.

Natalie P. Mescolotto of NM Legal, P.A., Fort Lauderdale (withdrew after filing briefs), and Tracy B. Newmark and Natalie S. Kay of Kelley Kronenberg, Fort Lauderdale, for appellant.

Robert J. Moraitis and Peter M. Raimondi of Moraitis & Raimondi, LLP, Fort Lauderdale, for appellee.

GERBER, J.

The mother appeals from the circuit court’s order granting the father’s verified ex parte emergency motion to temporarily suspend the mother’s overnight timesharing and/or to prevent the mother from removing the child from the jurisdiction. The mother also appeals from a non- evidentiary return hearing order which slightly modified the ex parte order.

The mother argues the circuit court’s orders violated her due process rights where: (1) the mother was previously made aware of the father’s allegations against her at an earlier hearing, and yet the circuit court verbally directed the father to file an ex parte emergency motion which could be granted without the mother having an opportunity to respond; and (2) after granting the father’s ex parte emergency motion, the circuit court did not provide the mother with a promptly noticed evidentiary hearing at which she could contest the father’s allegations.

We agree with both of the mother’s arguments and reverse both orders. Procedural History

The father filed a motion for contempt alleging the mother had violated a prior order compelling the mother to take the four-year-old child to school on her timesharing days unless the child was sick or some other emergency existed. The father set a hearing on his contempt motion. Both parties and their counsel attended the hearing. The circuit court indicated its belief that it could not consider the father’s contempt motion, because the mother had filed an appeal from the prior order, as well as a motion to stay the circuit court proceedings pending the disposition of that appeal.

The father’s counsel then orally requested the circuit court to hear emergency matters which the circuit court could consider despite the mother’s pending appeal. See Fla. R. App. P. 9.600(c)(1) (“In family law matters … [t]he lower tribunal shall retain jurisdiction to enter and enforce orders … necessary to protect the welfare and rights of any party pending appeal.”). The circuit court asked if the father’s counsel had notified the mother’s counsel of the emergency matters before the hearing. After the father’s counsel responded he had not, the circuit court replied:

How about both counsels go outside, you advise her of the emergency. [Addressing the father’s counsel] I mean, you know you can file it as an ex parte emergency motion, but try to inform her about it now. And it’s something that we can go forward while we are all here dealing with that instead of the other motion. We’ll deal with that now instead of the actual motion that it is set for. And if not, you can just file it as an ex parte emergency motion and I’ll deal with it as soon as you file it.

….

[Addressing the mother’s counsel] So go outside and talk because you know that [the father’s counsel] can just walk to his office, drive to his office, file an ex parte emergency motion and I can deal with that without you guys being here. Since you are here, I’m asking you guys to go outside and talk.

(emphases added).

The parties and their counsel stepped out of the courtroom as instructed, but returned a short time later. The father’s counsel argued the emergency matters arose from information which he had learned

2 during the mother’s deposition taken three weeks earlier. The father’s counsel learned that during the mother’s timesharing, instead of taking the child to school in Broward County, the mother had been taking the child to Orlando to stay with her at a man’s home. However, the mother would not divulge the man’s identity, background, or living arrangements.

The mother’s counsel responded that the father’s counsel had not noticed those emergency matters for hearing or by filing a petition. The mother’s counsel also responded that no emergency existed, not only in substance, but also because the father’s counsel had not raised those matters in the three weeks since the mother’s deposition. A few minutes later, the following exchange occurred between the circuit court and the mother’s counsel:

COURT: It doesn’t have to be an emergency matter, but it can, along with that and taking the child out of the county without agreement from the father, I think all of that combined, I’m sure [the father’s counsel] can write a nice emergency motion, ex parte emergency motion for me to address.

So we are here, so sometimes I think it’s better to be here and talk things out before everything has to be put in writing and then hand it over to me to decide.

MOTHER’S COUNSEL: Your Honor, without an opportunity to present evidence on the matter … without my client having an opportunity to present evidence and have opportunity to be heard, I don’t believe the Court can order emergency relief without it being --

COURT: I’m not doing it today. I’m not doing it today. But you know that [the father’s counsel] can actually file it as an ex parte emergency motion, which you would not receive notice for, and I would rule on my own in my chambers and then enter an order and that’s when you would be advised.

That’s why I’m saying, we are here, he’s made you aware of it, so if there’s some form of you guys agreeing to something instead of [the father’s counsel] actually going through the process and filing this ex parte emergency motion where you won’t be part of the decision-making, that’s why I asked you guys to go outside and talk to see if you can agree on

3 something instead of [the father’s counsel] having to go through the process of putting it in writing and then putting it in my hand, which he’s not required to give you notice on ex parte emergency motion, right?

MOTHER’S COUNSEL: Understood.

COURT: So that’s why I was trying to give you time to go talk instead of leaving it up to me when [the father’s counsel] properly does it in writing. So maybe you want to go talk again after I made that part clear.

MOTHER’S COUNSEL: Your Honor, I think we probably both agree that we are not going to make any progress on this --

COURT: Okay.

MOTHER’S COUNSEL: -- issue today.

COURT [addressing the father’s counsel]: Then file your motion … and I will rule on it when it’s in front of me.

Over the next few days after the hearing, the parties’ counsel communicated as the circuit court had directed, but no resolution was reached.

Thirteen days after the hearing, the father filed his ex parte emergency motion to temporarily suspend the mother’s overnight timesharing and/or to prevent the mother from removing the child from the jurisdiction. As the father’s counsel had mentioned at the hearing, the father’s ex parte motion alleged the mother had “continue[d] to travel to Orlando with the child which includes several overnights per week.” Notably, the father’s ex parte motion also alleged the child had told the father that “[she] sleeps in bed with [a grown man]” while in Orlando with the mother, and that the mother required the child to wear diapers during the four-hour drives back and forth to Orlando, causing the child to regress developmentally. Thus, the father’s ex parte motion alleged the father had “an immediate and well- founded fear for the child’s health, safety, and welfare.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Smith v. Crider
932 So. 2d 393 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2006)
Juliano v. Juliano
687 So. 2d 910 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1997)
Ashby v. Murray
113 So. 3d 951 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Fabiola Ramirez v. Dominick Marzano, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fabiola-ramirez-v-dominick-marzano-fladistctapp-2024.