In Re Ls

226 P.3d 1227, 2009 WL 3297572
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 15, 2009
Docket08CA1872
StatusPublished

This text of 226 P.3d 1227 (In Re Ls) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Ls, 226 P.3d 1227, 2009 WL 3297572 (Colo. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

226 P.3d 1227 (2009)

In re the Parental Responsibilities Concerning L.S., a Child, and Concerning Tatanjia Willard Spotanski McNamara, Petitioner-Appellee, and
Stacy Joe Spotanski, Respondent-Appellant.

No. 08CA1872.

Colorado Court of Appeals, Div. VII.

October 15, 2009.

*1229 Tatanjia Willard Spotanski McNamara, pro se.

William E. Zimsky, P.C., William E. Zimsky, Durango, CO, for Respondent-Appellant.

Opinion by Judge CONNELLY.

This dispute between Stacy Joe Spotanski (father) and Tatanjia Willard Spotanski McNamara (mother) involves custody of their minor daughter. Conflicting state rulings have created an untenable impasse: a Nebraska court has awarded father custody and issued a warrant to arrest mother for keeping the child in Colorado, while a Colorado district court has awarded mother custody and refused to enforce the Nebraska orders.

Father contends that Colorado courts must give full faith and credit to the Nebraska orders. The Colorado district court rejected this contention. It reasoned (1) only Colorado, not Nebraska, had child-custody jurisdiction because Colorado is the child's home state; and therefore (2) the Nebraska custody orders are unenforceable.

We agree with the district court's first premise. But the second does not follow inexorably from the first.

We hold the Nebraska court's jurisdictional and later rulings are binding on Colorado courts. We accordingly are constrained to reverse the district court's judgment. Nonetheless, we strongly urge the Nebraska court—and, if necessary, that state's appellate courts—to reconsider Nebraska's apparent lack of jurisdiction.

I. Background

A. Father breached the custody and visitation agreement.

The parties separated after having lived together in Colorado, with a daughter born in 2001. Father moved to Nebraska. In May 2004, he signed a written agreement stipulating that the couple's child had resided in Colorado since August 2003 and that all custody matters would be under Colorado jurisdiction. The agreement provided the child would continue to reside in Colorado with mother, but allowed father certain visitation rights.

*1230 In the summer of 2004, Father took the child to Nebraska for an agreed-upon visit. He later refused to return her to Colorado.

B. The Nebraska court awarded mother temporary custody.

In November 2004, father filed a separation action in Nebraska and asked to be awarded custody. In February 2005, following an evidentiary hearing in which both parties appeared with counsel, the Nebraska court awarded temporary custody to mother. It found mother had been "the primary caretaker" until father took the child to Nebraska. The court further found that father had "violated the agreement by refusing to return the minor child to Colorado." It ordered that father immediately return the child to mother.

C. The Adams County District Court dismissed mother's Colorado dissolution action.

Meanwhile, in December 2004, mother had filed a pro se action for dissolution of marriage in Adams County, Colorado. In January 2005, after a hearing in which mother was unrepresented by counsel, an Adams County district judge issued a minute order dismissing the dissolution action. The only explanation for the dismissal was that "the State of Nebraska has jurisdiction over the matter." The minute order made no reference to child custody.

D. The Nebraska court's final decree awarded father custody.

In September 2006, the Nebraska court issued a final decree dissolving the parties' marriage. The decree stated that father and his counsel had appeared personally at the final hearing but that the unrepresented mother had not appeared.

The decree addressed the court's "jurisdiction" without specifically finding anything about the child's home state. It stated that father had met Nebraska's residency requirements and that there was no other pending dissolution action. The court concluded it had "jurisdiction of both parties and the subject matter of the action."

The decree awarded father custody of the daughter. After finding that father could provide a stable home life for the child, whereas mother had been "evasive" regarding her address and living situation, the court found it was in the best interests of the minor child that custody be awarded to father. The decree provided visitation rights to mother.

Mother attempted to appeal the decree to the Nebraska Court of Appeals. That court dismissed the appeal, without reaching the merits, because mother failed to perfect the appeal in accordance with Nebraska procedural rules.

E. The Nebraska court specifically addressed child-custody jurisdiction in an April 2007 order.

It was not until an April 2007 order that the Nebraska court first specifically addressed its jurisdiction under the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (UCCJEA), as enacted in Nebraska. That order was issued in response to mother's motion to dismiss the Nebraska action for lack of UCCJEA jurisdiction. Mother testified in support of her motion that Nebraska was not the child's home state because father had not lived with the child there for the requisite six months before filing the action.

The court's order acknowledged that it "may have asserted jurisdiction based on facts that were not presented accurately and/or facts that were not presented at all." Nonetheless, it held that mother had "voluntarily submitted the issue of custody to the court" and had not raised the issue of UCCJEA jurisdiction until after the final decree awarding father custody. The court also noted that mother "had the opportunity to appeal the decision and did [unsuccessfully seek to] appeal the decision to the Nebraska Court of Appeals."

The court further ruled that it properly could exercise jurisdiction even if Nebraska was not the child's home state. It relied on a UCCJEA provision allowing another court to exercise jurisdiction if a court in the child's home state declines jurisdiction on the ground that the other court is the more *1231 appropriate forum and if the other court has significant contacts with a parent and the child. The court, in finding this provision satisfied, cited the dismissal of mother's dissolution action by the Colorado (Adams County) district court.

Mother attempted to appeal. The Nebraska Court of Appeals again dismissed her appeal on procedural grounds.

F. The child continues to reside with mother in Colorado.

Despite the Nebraska decree and subsequent orders issued by the court in Nebraska, the daughter continues currently to reside with mother in Colorado. Mother's failure to comply with the Nebraska orders has resulted in the issuance of a Nebraska warrant for her arrest.

G. The La Plata County District Court in Colorado exercised UCCJEA jurisdiction.

Mother, while continuing to challenge the Nebraska court's jurisdiction, filed a second action for dissolution of marriage in Colorado. This action was filed in late 2006 in La Plata County. The district court converted the dissolution action into a proceeding for allocation of parental rights and responsibilities.

The district court made an initial finding in December 2006 that it had UCCJEA jurisdiction because Colorado was the child's home state. In July 2008, a permanent orders hearing was held before a different judge.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
226 P.3d 1227, 2009 WL 3297572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ls-coloctapp-2009.