Henderson v. Henderson
This text of 537 So. 2d 125 (Henderson v. Henderson) 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.
Opinion
Mary K. HENDERSON, n/k/a Mary K. Puttkammer, Wife, Appellant,
v.
Hal HENDERSON, Husband, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
*126 Elliott Zisser and Nancy N. Nowlis of Zisser, Robison, Spohrer & Wilner, P.A., Jacksonville, for appellant.
Barry A. Bobek, Jacksonville, for appellee.
ZEHMER, Judge.
Appellant, Mary K. Henderson, appeals an order that modifies the final judgment of dissolution of her marriage to appellee, Hal Henderson, in that it transfers physical custody of the parties' twin daughters, Paula and Hanna, to appellee. We reverse on the ground that the evidence of record is legally insufficient to support the finding of a change of circumstances required to modify the final judgment and to establish the compelling circumstances required to support an order separating the twins, age 5, from their younger sister, Jessica, age 2.
In May 1985 the parties separated and appellant, who was pregnant, and the twins moved from Jacksonville to Indiana to live with appellant's parents. Appellee admits that his failure to support his wife and children occasioned the move. In December 1985, a few days after the birth of their youngest child, Jessica, the parties were divorced by the entry of the final judgment of dissolution. The judgment decreed that the parties would have shared parental responsibility for their three daughters, but awarded appellant responsibility for providing the primary residence for the children. The court ordered appellee to pay appellant child support and any non-insured medical expenses relating to Jessica's birth.
Appellee subsequently started a painting business and married his present wife, Elaine, who is a second-grade teacher. Meanwhile, appellant continued to live with her elderly parents and provided her and her children's support by working as a "temporary," earning approximately $6 per hour. Her child-care expenses were $110 per week and she incurred various debts, including hospital and obstetrician bills related to the birth of Jessica. Appellee failed to send appellant any child support[1] from the time of the parties' separation until November 1986 and also failed to pay the non-insured medical expenses relating to Jessica's birth. Because of her financial difficulties, appellant called appellee in October of 1986 and asked if he would take the twins for three months or, at most, until it was time for them to start kindergarten. Appellant hoped to pay off her debts and get back on her feet during this period. Appellee agreed to take the twins temporarily and went to Indiana, where he picked them up. They returned to Florida and the twins began living with him and his new wife in November 1986.
Appellant tried to contact the twins several times after their move, but appellee frustrated her attempts. Finally, she wrote appellee a letter asking him to return the girls in June 1987, on their fifth birthday. Appellee responded that it would not be convenient for him to return the twins at that time. In July 1987 appellant purchased airline tickets so she could travel to Florida to retrieve the twins. Appellee allowed appellant to visit the twins in his home, but refused to allow her to take them back to Indiana. He then filed a petition for modification of custody, requesting that the court transfer permanent custody of the twins to him.
In December 1987, with the financial assistance of her new husband, Mark Puttkammer, appellant traveled to Florida and hired an attorney to help her regain physical custody of the twins. The attorney filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus, and the twins were taken from school to attend a hearing. They appeared to be upset by this episode. Upon learning that the petition for modification of custody was pending in another division of the court, *127 the judge dismissed the habeas corpus action.
The hearing on the petition for modification was not held until March 1988. The twins' kindergarten teacher testified that when the twins first began school, they appeared insecure, scared, and unkempt. She stated that their condition had significantly improved during the time they had been living with their father. Appellee's minister corroborated the teacher's testimony, as did appellee's new wife.
The court found that a "change in circumstance" had occurred and that modifying the final judgment of dissolution to provide appellee with physical custody of the twins would be in the twins' best welfare and interest. This determination was based on findings that the twins were "insecure, scared, and unkempt" when they began living with appellee, and that their condition had significantly improved while under appellee's care. The court found that the twins' condition indicated that appellant had provided them with "less than adequate care." The court further found that the events surrounding the habeas corpus proceeding distressed the twins and blamed that distress on appellant, stating that it indicated a "lack of sensitivity."
We reverse the appealed order for several reasons. The allegations of appellee's petition for modification of custody were plainly insufficient to support any modification. A noncustodial parent who petitions for modification of child custody carries an extraordinary burden to allege and prove that a material change in circumstances has occurred warranting a change in custody and that such a change would be in the best interests of the child. Evans v. Evans, 490 So.2d 1035 (Fla. 1st DCA 1986). Although appellee's petition contained a general allegation of a substantial change in circumstances, the only fact alleged as a basis for that change was that the twins were then living with appellee and "thriving" in his care. This fact cannot support a finding of a substantial change in circumstances, however, because appellant agreed to this arrangement only on the understanding that appellee would return the twins to her during or before June 1987. To allow appellee to benefit from a change he induced by promising to keep the twins only temporarily would be inequitable. Evans v. Evans, 490 So.2d at 1036. Furthermore, allowing this agreement to serve as a basis for transferring custody would have the deleterious effect of discouraging cooperation between parents when they agree to make temporary changes in their children's living arrangements to serve their children's best interests. Hood v. Hood, 479 So.2d 269 (Fla. 1st DCA 1985). "The law should endeavor to promote such cooperation, rather than sanction use of the act of cooperation as a basis upon which to order a change in custody... ." 479 So.2d at 272.
Notwithstanding the legal insufficiency of the petition, appellee was permitted to introduce without objection evidence of the facts recited above. We find that evidence legally insufficient to support the court's finding that appellant provided the twins with less than adequate care during their residence with her. No witness other than appellant and her mother testified as to the care and condition of the twins while in the appellant's custody, and that testimony was supportive of appellant as a fit and caring mother. The evidence relied upon by the court came from appellee's witnesses, who were able to testify regarding only their observations of the twins' condition after they arrived in Florida with their father and began living with him.
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537 So. 2d 125, 1988 WL 133959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderson-v-henderson-fladistctapp-1989.