Hager v. Hager
This text of 591 S.E.2d 177 (Hager v. Hager) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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In the instant ease we reverse a ruling of a circuit court judge sitting as a special family court judge, and return legal custody of a child to the child’s mother.
I.
Most of the convoluted procedural and substantive history of this contested divoree/child custody case, which has gone on since 1997, is of no importance to the substantive issues before this Court. Consequently we omit its recital.
II.
The principal contested issue in the instant case has been, for a number of years, whether the appellant, who is the child’s mother and who lives in Florida with her fiancé, is entitled to legal custody of her daughter — or whether the appellee, who is the child’s father and who lives in Lincoln County, West Virginia, is entitled to custody.1
The father’s principal ground for asserting that he should have custody has consistently been the alleged unfitness of the child’s mother, and this claim has been primarily [621]*621based upon an alleged danger to the child from the mother’s flaneé. Leaving aside the mother’s relationship with her flaneé, the record does not contain substantial evidence upon which a proper finding could be made that the mother, who was originally awarded custody, is not a fit parent.
The most recent ruling in this case on the custody issue was on June 21, 2002, by a circuit judge who had been designated as a special family court judge. The judge found, reviewing exceptions to a family law master’s recommended order retaining custody in the father, that the mother’s flaneé “... is a potentially violent person and places the infant child in harm’s way, which fact is supported by police records of his violent criminal record and witnesses who testified to his reputation for violence.”
The record discloses that the mother’s fl-aneé was arrested in 1970, when he was 17, possibly for stealing, and that he was once fined $300.00 for cursing in public during a domestic dispute. We are not cited to any other evidence that supports the circuit court’s finding of a “violent criminal record.” The other evidence in the record that the father says shows that the flaneé is a “potentially violent person” and has a “reputation for violence” is in the form of anecdotal evidence from clearly biased witnesses. This evidence, at best, could support the conclusion that the flaneé has, on several occasions, used hot words and acted intemperately. It could not support a finding that the flaneé is in fact a dangerous and violent person.2
This Court stated in Syllabus Point 3 of S.H. v. R.L.H., 169 W.Va. 560, 289 S.E.2d 186 (1982) that “neither remarriage nor an extramarital relationship per se raises any presumption against continued custody in the parent originally awarded such custody.” In Porter v. Porter, 171 W.Va. 157, 159, 298 S.E.2d 130, 132 (1982), this Court stated that, “[tjhere must also be a showing that the parent’s relationship with another adult has a deleterious effect upon the child and that the child will materially benefit from the change of custody,” evidence of which has been noticeably absent from the proceedings at bar.
In J.B. v. A.B., 161 W.Va. 332, 345, 242 S.E.2d 248, 256 (1978), this Court stated that “[t]he award of child custody, however, should not be an exercise in the punishment of an offending spouse. In punishing the offending spouse one may also punish the innocent child, and our law will not tolerate that result.”
In Judith R. v. Hey, 185 W.Va. 117, 405 S.E.2d 447 (1990), a circuit court directed that the mother had thirty days from the date of the hearing to either marry the man [622]*622with whom she was cohabiting or to move out and establish separate living arrangements for her and her daughter. In that ease, the court further ordered that if neither alternative was met within such time period, custody of the parties’ fourteen-year-old daughter would be granted to the father. This Court reiterated that a careful review of the whole record in the Judith R. ease was void of any evidence that she was an unfit parent or that her conduct had created any deleterious effect on the child.
In the instant case, the mother was required, when she originally received custody, not to have her fiancé around the child. She violated this requirement. The record suggests that this requirement was grounded in the fact that she was not married to her fiance, and not in any proven danger that the fiancé posed to the child.
For violating this requirement, the mother argues (and we agree), she was effectively “punished” by having her child’s custody changed to the father/grandparents. When the mother sought to have this custodial ruling changed, the court refused — based upon the finding discussed herein that the fiancé posed a danger to the child.
We have reviewed the entire record, including the transcripts of numerous hearings, and we find that — even giving due deference to the fact that the lower tribunals saw the witnesses — the finding of the fiance’s dangerousness to the child is so contrary to the weight of the evidence that it cannot be sustained on appeal.
III.
The father argues that the child is now “well-adjusted” in the father’s parents’ home, and we have no reason to doubt this claim. But this fact does not undercut the underlying error in this case of denying custody to the mother, based on an improper finding of her unfitness to have such custody, simply because she was living with her fiancé. The existence of “well-adjusted” conditions for a child — “facts on the ground” that are based on erroneous court determinations — simply cannot themselves carry the day in custodial determinations. There is nothing in the record upon which it may be concluded that the child is not likely to also have a well-adjusted life in her mother’s custody.
Based on the foregoing, we reverse the circuit court’s order and award custody of the child to the appellant. We remand the case with instructions that the Family Court Judge of Lincoln County enter such order as is appropriate to promptly and peacefully effectuate a physical change of custody. Thereafter, both parties are to submit appropriate parenting plans, and proposals for visitation, financial arrangements, etc. and to participate in such proceedings as are determined to be proper by the Family Court Judge.
Reversed and Remanded.
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591 S.E.2d 177, 214 W. Va. 619, 2003 W. Va. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hager-v-hager-wva-2003.