Guinn v. Guinn

223 So. 3d 139, 16 La.App. 3 Cir. 926, 2017 WL 2350974, 2017 La. App. LEXIS 1022
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 31, 2017
Docket16-926
StatusPublished

This text of 223 So. 3d 139 (Guinn v. Guinn) 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
Guinn v. Guinn, 223 So. 3d 139, 16 La.App. 3 Cir. 926, 2017 WL 2350974, 2017 La. App. LEXIS 1022 (La. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

COOKS, Judge.

[ ! Kimberly Beth Hensgens Guinn (Kimberly) filed a petition for divorce from Nathaniel Stuart Guinn (Stuart) on June 25, 2014, in which she prayed for joint custody of their three minor children.1 The three children are ages ten (M.K.G), eight (N.S.G.) and six (G.E.G.). She also asked to be named domiciliary parent with Stuart to have reasonable access to the children. Stuart filed an answer and reconventional demand on July 18, 2014 seeking joint custody and equal access to the children by both parents. On August 12, 2014, the parties appeared in open court and entered into the record a consent agreement on custody and visitation. The parties agreed to joint custody with Kimberly named as domiciliary parent. The agreement set forth an express schedule of visitation for Stuart covering the immediate future but left summer visitation “to be determined later.” The trial court instructed Kimberly’s attorney to prepare a judgment based upon the stipulations and directed Stuart’s attorney to prepare a “standard joint custody implementation plan.” The agreement also provided that neither party engage in any activity to alienate or adversely affect the children and provided “alternating holiday periods according to the school calendar.” Neither party filed any judgment or implementation plan with the trial court.

On November 5, 2014, Stuart filed a motion and order in which he asserted that the stipulation made in court on August 12, 2014, had never been reduced to a signed judgment. He attached a proposed implementation plan and a proposed judgment, and sought a. new court date for a hearing to determine custody and visitation of the three children. Two days later, November [141]*1417, 2014, Kimberly filed 19a motion to modify and/or claiify custody and visitation. She, too, asserted the stipulation of August 12, 2014 was not reduced to writing and she further alleged Stuart’s proposed judgment and proposed implementation plan did not conform to the agreement made in open court. Kimberly asserted the two proposed documents “expands to areas/issues not stipulated to by the parties nor raised in any pleading to date.” Kimberly sought to have the trial court adopt a joint custody plan.

Stuart and Kimberly once again appeared in court on December 16, 2014. According to the court minutes, following a pre-trial conference with -the parties and their attorneys present, the trial court entered an order on the record, in open court. The court minutes reflect that: “Both parties are present in the Courtroom and state that they have heard the stipulation, understand it and agree to it” (emphasis added). The judgment, signed on December 30, 2014, provided for joint custody of the minor children “with the parties having such custodial privileges and Christmas Holiday visitation, as specifically stated by and acknowledged by both parties in Open Court, this date, pending further order of this court” (emphasis added). The judgment also ordered that neither party “shall allow Paul Douglas Blank (Doug) to have any contact whatsoever with the minor children of the parties, pending further order of this Court.” The parties were also ordered to mediate the issues of custody and visitation and to develop “an appropriate Joint Custody Implementation Plan.”' The trial court continued all pending rules without date “pending the completion of the mediation hearing.”

Stuart next filed a petition on rule on April 28, 2015, alleging Kimberly was in contempt of the court’s ruling by allowing contact between the minor children and Doug six different times from March 14, 2015 to April 16, 2015. Stuart also prayed to be made domiciliary parent of the minor children and that the children be | ^permitted to continue living in Jennings.

Kimberly and Stuart next appeared in court on May 5, 2015. The trial court set a date for hearing because the effort at mediation failed. The trial court refused Kimberly’s request to remove the prohibition previously put in place forbidding Doug from being in the presence of the parties’ minor children. The trial court emphasized that the prohibition was “the Court’s order.” Kimberly and Doug share a child out of wedlock born prior to her marriage to Stuart, and they have a child recently bom out of marriage during the pendency of these proceedings. Kimberly and Doug were romantically involved before Kimberly met Stuart, and, when this child was almost a year old, Doug was incarcerátéd for seven years. Stuart raised this child as his own and has remained emotionally attached to the child. Kimberly and Doug do not permit Stuart to visit with this child.

Kimberly next filed a “Motion and Order to Amend Existing Orders” asking the court to allow the children to be in Doug’s presence because she was about to give birth to another child, fathered by Doug, and alleging Doug had received “in-house substance abuse treatment” with “continuing follow-up treatment.” Attached to Kimberly’s motion, in support of her contentions, was a written report by Eddie Windham, LCSW. The report includes a history of Doug’s drug abuse up to June of 2015, which we will discuss at length later.

On April 7, 2016, the trial court rendered judgment in the matter awarding joint custody of the three minor Guinn children to Stuart and Kimberly, and naming Stuart the domiciliary parent of all three children. Kimberly was awarded visi[142]*142tation on alternating weekends and every other Wednesday. Major holidays are to be alternated .between Stuart and Kimberly “with the understanding that these holidays shall take precedence over the visitation custodial schedule.” The trial |4court terminated interim periodic spousal support to Kimberly and, further found Kimberly was not free from fault in the breakup of the marriage. The judge denied her claim for periodic. final spousal support. The rule for . contempt filed by Kimberly •against Stuart .also was denied.. Stuart’s rule for contempt filed against Kimberly was granted. Kimberly was held in contempt of the court’s order prohibiting her from allowing the children to be in Doug’s presence. The trial court only issued a warning.to Kimberly admonishing her not to disobey the court’s order in the future. The trial court issued written reasons for its ruling stating “the Court finds at this time it is in the best interest of the minor children to live with their father.” Kimberly’s motion for new trial was denied. Kimberly appeals the judgment of the trial court asserting the trial court erred in:

1) Naming the father [Stuart] as the domiciliary parent, and granting the mother only limited visitations instead of equal time sharing between the mother and her children.
2) Finding the mother in contempt of a previous order denying all contact between the children of this marriage and the father of two of. her other children.

LAW AND ANALYSIS

Kimberly asserts that the judgment rendered in open court on December 16, 2014, and later reduced to writing, is not valid because “there was no testimony presented; no evidence produced; and no stipulations .offered; only a pretrial, conference was held.” We first note that Kimberly’s present counsel was not her attorney at this appearance. She was represented at that court appearance by Mr. Joshua Guillory. Kimberly’s current representation that “no stipulations [were] offered” at the hearing on December 16, 2014, is simply not true.

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Bluebook (online)
223 So. 3d 139, 16 La.App. 3 Cir. 926, 2017 WL 2350974, 2017 La. App. LEXIS 1022, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guinn-v-guinn-lactapp-2017.