Hunt v. Hunt

65 S.W.3d 572, 2002 Mo. App. LEXIS 213, 2002 WL 100666
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 28, 2002
Docket24167
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 65 S.W.3d 572 (Hunt v. Hunt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hunt v. Hunt, 65 S.W.3d 572, 2002 Mo. App. LEXIS 213, 2002 WL 100666 (Mo. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

KENNETH W. SHRUM, Presiding Judge.

In this domestic relations case, Father and Mother filed separate motions asking that a dissolution decree (which purportedly gave them joint legal and physical custody of their children) be modified by eliminating joint custody provisions and adjusting child support. Specifically, each asked to be named sole custodian, that the other have visitation rights, and the noncustodial parent be ordered to pay child support. The trial court, however, did not grant relief to either party according to their request. Rather, it adjudged that the “joint legal and physical custody” be continued, but included a specific written parenting plan that listed when the children would reside with each parent. Mother appeals, presenting two claims of trial court error. This court affirms.

FACTS

Jason Hunt (“Father”) and Michelle Lynn Hunt (“Mother”) were married on October 31, 1992. The children born of this marriage are Ashton Grace Hunt, born March 12, 1998, and Avery Vincent Hunt, born June 11,1994.

After the parties separated in 1997, they signed a “Separation Agreement.” The agreement, which was incorporated into their December 30, 1997, decree of dissolution, provided Father and Mother were to have joint legal custody and joint physical custody of Ashton and Avery. However, the terms of their written plan of joint physical custody lacked specificity, i.e., it simply provided that Father and Mother were “to share joint physical custody of the children whereby the children ... share as much time as practicable, one-half of the time together with each parent.” In addition, the decree required Father to pay $162 per month in child support. The original decree also provided when a parent “has actual physical custody of the children, he or she shall not have overnight guests, a person of the opposite sex to whom he or she is not married, who is not related by blood or marriage.”

Father’s and Mother’s testimony at trial differed regarding their success at sharing *574 physical custody on an equal basis. Mother testified that from “the beginning” they did not share custody equally, whereas Father claimed that until August 1999, they followed various schedules that gave them “equal time” with the children. Without recounting the evidence, each party’s testimony (standing alone) reveals the parties followed a joint physical arrangement, i.e., the children resided with or were under the care and supervision of each parent for significant periods during the post-dissolution period. In effect, the parties operated under a changing, non- ■ written, and non-specific joint physical custody plan until they became embroiled in this modification litigation.

As part of the parties’ original property settlement agreement, Mother was to have possession of the parties’ marital house until it sold and was to make the mortgage payments. However, she quit making the payments in August 1999 and moved into the home of her fiancee, Steven Dodson. 1

At this time (August 1999), the parties’ eldest child (Ashton) was about to start first grade. Mother and Father decided that shifting Ashton from one home to another during the week was not providing sufficient stability for her; consequently, they agreed Mother would have the children during the week and Father would have them on certain weekends. Exactly when the children resided with Father under the August 1999 arrangement is not entirely clear from the record. It is clear, however, from August 1999 through early February 2000, the children resided with Mother on school days and that the three of them were living in the home of Dodson.

Father testified that Mother’s living arrangement for herself and the children with Dodson ended on February 4, 2000. On that date, shortly after midnight, Mother and Dodson got into an argument and altercation. As a result, the children began living with Father. According to Father, from February 5, 2000, through mid-March 2000, the children stayed with him during the week and every other weekend. Moreover, Father testified that Mother stayed at his apartment an average of four times a week during that period. As Father explained it, “there were a lot of evenings that [Mother] would ... leave and go to Steve’s house ..., sometimes leaving and coming back the next morning. But ... primarily she was staying at my place.” 2

At the time of trial, Mother was living with her mother and stepfather in Lockwood, Missouri, and was unemployed. As to that living arrangement, Husband testified Mother did not trust her mother “to keep the kids” because she drank “too much.” Mother denied ever making such remarks to Father. As to her future living arrangements, Mother testified she was still engaged to Dodson, and they had planned to get married in June 2000. However, they had put off the marriage because of the custody dispute and pending hearing.

On August 28, 2000, while the parties’ motions to modify the decree were still under submission but undecided, Father *575 filed a Motion to Modify the temporary custody order. See n. 2. He alleged that Mother had unilaterally decided to enroll the children in a public school in Golden City, Missouri, rather than send them to the Trinity Lutheran School at Monett, Missouri, where they had been attending and were already enrolled. Following a telephone hearing, the court modified the temporary custody order by temporarily increasing the amount of time the children were to reside with Father and ordered the children be placed in the Monett school. In doing so, the Court noted: “[G]iven the testimony at trial that [Mother] would be marrying and moving back to Monett, the enrollment at Golden City would not serve the children’s best interest for stability.”

On February 27, 2001, the court filed its judgment that awarded Father and Mother joint legal and joint physical custody but included a specific written parenting plan. Under the Court’s plan, the children were to reside with Mother thirty-five to forty percent of the time and with Father the remainder of the time. 3 In addition, the court ordered Mother to pay Father child support of $185 per month and Father to maintain health insurance coverage for the children. Mother’s appeal from the judgment followed.

DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS

Mother’s first point advances five reasons why the trial court allegedly committed reversible error when it entered the judgment described above. We reproduce those five reasons as listed in Mother’s point relied on:

“a. [Father] failed to meet his burden of proof of showing any substantial, continuing change of circumstances in relation to [Mother] or the minor children herein which requires a modification of the prior custody Decree;
“b. The trial court ignored the presumption that [Mother] is a suitable parent to have primary custody of the minor children herein;
“c.

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Bluebook (online)
65 S.W.3d 572, 2002 Mo. App. LEXIS 213, 2002 WL 100666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-v-hunt-moctapp-2002.