Fuqua v. Fuqua

57 So. 3d 534, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 67, 2011 WL 230338
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 26, 2011
DocketNo. 46,118-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 57 So. 3d 534 (Fuqua v. Fuqua) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fuqua v. Fuqua, 57 So. 3d 534, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 67, 2011 WL 230338 (La. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

MOORE, J.

12Rodney Keith Fuqua (“Keith”) appeals a judgment granting his former wife Shelly Fuqua’s petition to relocate the couple’s three minor children from Lincoln Parish to Madison County, Mississippi. For the reasons expressed, we affirm.

Factual Background

Keith and Shelly got married in 1997. They had three children: Mary Taylor in 1999, Margaret (“Maggie”) in 2001, and Hayes in 2006. For reasons not disclosed in the record, Keith left the marital home, a large house on a 1.5-acre lot in Creek’s Edge Subdivision in Lincoln Parish, and moved into a rental house owned by his [536]*536parents, Rodney and Betty Fuqua (sometimes referred to herein as “the Fuquas”). The children remained with Shelly at the Creek’s Edge house, but also spent generous amounts of time with their grandparents, the Fuquas.

Keith filed for an Art. 102 divorce and incidental matters in June 2008. By the parties’ agreement, the court appointed Dr. Sally Thigpen to | .^conduct a custody evaluation. Keith also agreed to pay the two mortgages on the Creek’s Edge house (about $3,500 a month), insurance, and other stated expenses.

Keith’s stream of income, however, ran almost dry in the economic downturn, dropping from over $17,000 a month in 2007 to about $2,000 a month by early 2009.1 He fell behind in his agreed payments, and Shelly filed a contempt rule; after a hearing in January 2009, the court ordered him to pay $1,924 in arrears.

On March 9, the parties stipulated that they would accept Dr. Thigpen’s “Plan 4,” which basically split custodial time each week but alternated Saturday nights between the parties.

At trial in August 2009, Shelly did not contest the Art. 102 divorce but pressed a claim for child support. The court found Keith voluntarily underemployed and ordered him to pay support of $2,419 a month. He appealed; this court affirmed the finding of voluntary underemployment but reduced the amount to $2,084 to reflect a more realistic projection of interest income.

On January 4, 2010, Shelly filed another contempt rule, alleging Keith was behind in child support and in the home mortgages, resulting in default. By this time, Keith had left the rent house and moved in with his parents. On |4January 19, Shelly advised him by certified letter that she wanted to relocate the children with her to Madison, a suburb of Jackson, Mississippi, where her flaneé, Tom Welch, lives.

Meanwhile, Keith’s father, Rodney, had formed an LLC called Creeks’ Edge Properties. Rodney contacted the second mortgagee on the Creek’s Edge house, Community Trust Bank, and bought the second mortgage, which was in default. He transferred this paper to his LLC, which obtained a writ of seizure and sale on the house. He then bought the property at sheriffs sale. On February 21 or 22, the LLC’s attorney served Shelly with notice to vacate the property by February 27. Shelly did so, taking the children to a new subdivision in Monroe, about 30 miles away.

Keith did not respond to Shelly’s notice of proposed relocation, so on February 22 she filed the instant petition for relocation. She alleged that she and Tom Welch planned to get married on June 5, and wanted to move the children after they finished the spring semester at their private school, Cedar Creek. She added that Keith had repeatedly stated he could no longer afford to send them to Cedar Creek, the Fuquas had orchestrated the scheme to get her evicted from the Creek’s Edge house, and because of “continuous ^conflicts and problems” with exercising custody, the children’s best interest would be served by the move.

Keith answered that the house was foreclosed on because of nonpayment of the mortgages; Shelly was the “only party that has been obstreperous and contentious”; and all the children’s connections (especially with the Fuquas) were in Lincoln Parish. He argued that it was not in [537]*537the children’s best interest to move, even if it was in Shelly’s.

Synopsis of Trial Testimony

The matter proceeded to a two-day trial in April 2010.2 It was generally agreed that both parties loved the children dearly and had been very active in their upbringing. However, each offered a litany of incidents to prove the other’s poor parenting. Shelly complained that when Keith had the children, they actually stayed with the Fuquas, who would intercept or block her phone messages, and Betty often disparaged her to the girls; Rodney’s scheme to get her out of the Creek’s Edge house had been particularly cruel; Keith had never been current with support; in emails, Keith threatened to prolong the litigation. She also testified that even though her fiancé did not make a lavish living, he was earning at least twice as much as Keith claimed to earn.

| fiTom Welch testified that he had met Shelly’s three children around Christmas 2008, and they were a “joy.” He also testified that he has split custody of a 12-year-old daughter from his previous marriage and felt that the public schools in Madison County are excellent.

Keith testified that sometimes Shelly left Hayes in his room, crying for 30 to 45 minutes, even though the child would take a toy and pummel the door to the point of breaking off the doorknob; once, at Creek’s Edge, he fell in the nearby creek while Shelly was inside; once, in Monroe, Keith’s attorney saw the boy on a trike near the front gate of the subdivision, unattended; one of the girls has a mild learning disability which is under control because of a tutor, Mrs. Allen, in Ruston; Shelly often sleeps too late to fix the kids a hot breakfast, so they have to eat fruit and microwaved pastry in the car while riding to Cedar Creek; Shelly tends to drink a lot; even though the family had been attending First Baptist Church of Ruston for several years, Shelly candidly told him she would. start attending Tom’s Episcopal church. The pastor of First Baptist of Ruston also testified to confirm the wholesomeness of their church home.

Dr. Thigpen, the court-appointed expert, testified that she had been in the case since September 2008 and had interviewed all the involved persons. She found Keith confrontational, and even though the girls said they wanted |7to stay in Ruston, she strongly suspected that Keith and the Fu-quas were coaching them. She used a relocation risk assessment model from Family Court Review;3 and described in detail each step of the process. For instance, the move is not a financial necessity but would be a financial benefit for Shelly and the children; the 2]é-hour distance from Ruston to Madison would actually ease the situation between the parents, and remove the “negative influence” of the Fuquas; the girls are of an age that they can easily adjust to a new environment, and the boy could frequently talk to his dad by Skype, a software for making long-distance voice calls over the Internet; and according to her online research, the public schools in Madison County are very highly rated. She conceded that her assessment model was not scientifically validated, Cedar Creek is an above-average school, the children have never lived in the Jackson area, and there is uncertainty in [538]*538any move. However, she felt the proposed relocation was more beneficial than detrimental, and recommended approving the request.

After an argument with Dr. Thigpen, Keith had gone to Monroe and hired his own child psychologist, Dr. E.H.

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Bluebook (online)
57 So. 3d 534, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 67, 2011 WL 230338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fuqua-v-fuqua-lactapp-2011.