Grissom v. Cohen

821 S.E.2d 454, 261 N.C. App. 576
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 2, 2018
DocketCOA18-66
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 821 S.E.2d 454 (Grissom v. Cohen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grissom v. Cohen, 821 S.E.2d 454, 261 N.C. App. 576 (N.C. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STROUD, Judge.

*577 Plaintiff Amy S. Grissom ("Mother") appeals from the trial court's order holding that defendant David I. Cohen ("Father") is not in civil contempt of a prior custody order based upon the refusal of the parties' daughter, Mary, 1 to return to the physical custody of Mother. The trial court first entered an order denying Mother's motion for contempt on 17 August 2016, but this order did not include findings of fact necessary to permit review by this Court, so we vacated that order and remanded *578 for the trial court to enter a new order including findings of fact to support its conclusion. We affirm.

I. Background

This appeal arises from an exceptionally contentious and prolonged custody battle between Mother and Father, beginning in January 2007 and continuing, with a few lulls, ever since. The parties are the parents of two children; the oldest, their son John, had just turned 18 before Mother filed her contempt motion, and the contempt motion and order *456 in this appeal applies only to their daughter, Mary, now age 17. We will not recount the details of this battle leading up to the order on appeal, but in brief summary, the first custody order entered in 2009 granted sole legal and primary physical custody to Mother and secondary custodial time to Father. 2 Father's decision-making authority regarding the children was severely curtailed by this order based upon Father's misdeeds as described in the order. There were some relatively minor legal skirmishes after the 2009 order, with no major changes to the custodial arrangement until 9 March 2015, when the trial court entered an order modifying the 2009 custody order ("2015 Modified Custody Order"). Generally, the 2015 Modified Custody Order found that Father's behavior and relationship with the children had improved and the children wanted to spend more time with him. The 2015 Modified Custody Order allowed Father to have greater visitation time with the two children.

On 10 June 2016, Mother filed a motion she calls an "Omnibus Motion," comprising a motion for civil and criminal contempt, a motion for a temporary restraining order ("TRO") and preliminary injunction, and a motion for "judicial assistance." The Omnibus Motion is single-spaced and 17 pages long. Five and a half pages summarize the procedural history, including quotes from portions of prior orders, with particular emphasis on any findings unflattering to Father. The substantive portion of the Omnibus Motion begins at the bottom of page 5 and is entitled "Withholding of Plaintiff/Mother's Physical Custodial Time and Alienation." Mother then makes four pages of allegations, some "upon information and belief," of Father's actions and statements she alleges are part of his "campaign to alienate the children from Plaintiff/Mother," which has "intensified after the Court's most recent Custody Order and *579 has resulted in the children being severely alienated from Plaintiff/Mother." 3 She stresses her belief that Father has encouraged the children not to return to her and that he has not "caused the children to face any consequences for their failure" to return to her home. She alleged that in January 2016, she received an email from John, which was copied to Father; Dr. Shulstad, the children's pediatrician; Samantha Bosco, the guidance counselor at Mary's high school, and Janani Buford, the guidance counselor at Mary's middle school. John said Mary had confided to him a few days before that she was self-harming by cutting herself, and she had been doing this for about a year. He believed that she "needed serious help" and needed "to be in as positive of an environment as possible." John also stated:

After almost ten years of moving back and forth constantly, and my 18th birthday coming quickly, I feel that I am mature and reasonable enough to make my own decisions. I have spoken with [Mary] and I feel that it is best if we spent time solely with Dad. [Mary] and I both love you very much. I would still like to see you and sustain a good relationship with you, but this current situation is just too difficult for me and [Mary] to cope with. I hope that you will understand and respect our decision just as we have understood and respected yours for almost a decade.

John claimed Mary asked Mother if she could see a therapist but her Mother ignored her; Mother denied that Mary ever requested to see a therapist. At the time of this email, the children had been with Father since 28 December 2015 for holiday visitation and they did not return to Mother's home afterwards except for some brief visits; they did not stay overnight. Mother alleged this email was another example of Father's campaign *457 to destroy her relationship with the children. She alleged that Father was encouraging the children not to return to Mother's home and that he gave them no consequences for their refusal. She alleged that despite the children's refusal to return to her home, he "rewards" Mary by continuing to allow her to have sleepovers with friends, buy clothing, keep her phone, and take vacations. She alleged that the children were "hostile" and "cruel" to her, just as Father has been. *580 The next section of the motion is entitled "Refusal to Support [Mary's] Attendance in Therapy, Failure to Apprise Plaintiff/Mother of [Mary's] Condition, And Attempt to Obtain [Mary's] Therapeutic Records." Mother describes her efforts to find a therapist for Mary after receiving the email from John and Mary's opposition to seeing the therapist she selected, alleging that Mary's reluctance was caused by Father's "influencing [Mary] to further his own goals." Mary did ultimately see the therapist Mother selected, Ms. Reed, although she "continues to be reluctant." She alleged that on 2 February 2016, Mary "refused to leave school to attend an appointment with Ms. Reed," and Mother took her to see Dr. Shulstad, who discovered eight or nine "fresh cuts on [Mary's] leg." She notes this cutting occurred while Mary was with Father. Dr. Shulstad encouraged Mary to see Ms. Reed, and although she refused at times, she attended some appointments "when forced to do so by Dr. Shulstad or when she wants something (such as medical authorization to attend a summer camp)."

The next section of the motion is entitled "Interfering with Educational Decisions" and includes about a page of allegations of the parties' disputes regarding Father taking Mary to tour boarding schools during the previous summer. The following section is entitled "Motion for Contempt." It has five paragraphs, alleging his willful violation of the order and requesting that Father be held in civil and criminal contempt.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
821 S.E.2d 454, 261 N.C. App. 576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grissom-v-cohen-ncctapp-2018.