In re Marriage of Arulpragasam

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 9, 1999
Docket4-98-0231
StatusPublished

This text of In re Marriage of Arulpragasam (In re Marriage of Arulpragasam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Marriage of Arulpragasam, (Ill. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

April 9, 1999

NO. 4-98-0231

IN THE APPELLATE COURT

OF ILLINOIS

FOURTH DISTRICT

In Re: the Marriage of ) Appeal from

DARINI S. ARULPRAGASAM,          ) Circuit Court of

         Petitioner-Appellant, ) Champaign County

         and      ) No. 96CH80

CRAIG S. EISELE,     )

         Respondent-Appellee. ) Honorable

                   )    Harry E. Clem,

                              )    Judge Presiding.

_________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE GARMAN delivered the opinion of the court:

Petitioner mother, Darini S. Arulpragasam, appeals from the February 23, 1998, order of the circuit court of Champaign County, arguing that the circuit court abused its discretion by dismissing her petition for modification of custody.  We reverse and remand.

I.  BACKGROUND

The mother and respondent father, Craig S. Eisele, are the parents of two daughters, ages seven and nine at the time of this appeal.  The parties' marriage was dissolved by order of a court of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in 1993.  In April 1993, the parties were awarded joint custody of the girls, pursuant to their agreement, and the mother was given physical custody.  Their dissolution agreement also contains a provision requiring the mother to obtain "permis­sion" of the Berkshire County, Massachu­

setts, court prior to removing the children from the State of Massachu­setts.  Massachu­setts law does not mandate that a custodial parent seek such permission before removing children from the state, except in certain circumstances that do not apply to these children.  See Mass. Ann. Laws ch. 208, §30 (Law. Co-op. 1994).

In May 1994, the father filed a petition in the Massachu­

setts court seeking sole custody of the girls and, in August 1994, the mother filed a petition seeking permis­sion to remove the girls to Champaign, Illinois, where she had obtained employ­ment.  Without resolving either pending motion, the court granted her permission to temporarily remove the children to Illinois.  The mother and daughters moved to Champaign, Illinois, in late 1994 and continue to reside there.  

After granting several continuances on the father's motions, the Massachusetts court dismissed both petitions on May 24, 1996.  With regard to the petition for removal, the court found that it did not have jurisdiction to hear the matter.  The Massachusetts statute governing removal applies only when the child who is the subject of the petition was either born in Massachusetts or has resided in that state for five years.  See Mass. Ann. Laws ch. 208, §30 (Law. Co-op. 1994).  Neither provision applied in this case.  Thus, the court conclud­ed, it was without authority to enter a permanent order either allowing or denying the mother's request for permis­sion to remove the girls to Illinois, the "permission" provision in the parties' dissolution order notwith­standing.

  With regard to the May 1994 petition for modification of custody, the court found that it could exercise jurisdiction because Massachusetts was the home state of the children (see Mass. Ann. Laws ch. 209B, §1 (Law. Co-op. 1994)) at the time the petition was filed.  However, the Massachu­setts court exercised its option under Massachusetts law to decline jurisdic­tion upon finding that its assumption of jurisdiction would constitute an inconve­nient forum and that the court of another state would provide a more convenient forum.  See Mass. Ann. Laws ch. 209B, §7(a)(iii) (Law. Co-op. 1994).  The Massachu­setts court held that because the mother and children were, by then, Illinois residents, and because the father no longer lived in Massachusetts, it should decline jurisdiction in favor of an Illinois forum.

The Massachusetts court also noted that the father lived in Connecticut at the time the dissolution order was entered in 1992, lived in Pennsylvania when the petitions were dis­missed in May 1996, and had resided in Massachusetts with the children for only a few months.

On June 12, 1996, after the matter had been dismissed by the Massachusetts court, the mother filed a petition for modifica­

tion of custody in the circuit court of Champaign County, Illinois. On August 6, 1996, she filed a petition to enroll the Massachusetts judgment.  

The father filed a timely motion to reconsid­er the May 24, 1996, dismissal of his custody petition.  That motion was denied by the Massachu­setts court on July 9, 1996.  The father did not appeal the July 1996 denial of his motion to reconsider the Massachusetts court's ruling.  He did, however, file multiple com­

plaints in the Massachu­setts state court that were returned to him in November 1996 because he failed to comply with local rules of practice.  The father has also filed lawsuits in the federal courts of Massachu­setts, Pennsylva­nia, and Illinois, naming as defendants the mother, her employer, her attor­neys, judges, and others.  The father continued to file petitions and motions in the Massachusetts court throughout the pendency of the proceed­ings in Illinois.  He also filed several petitions in the Illinois action, including a petition to set visitation.  After a hearing on this petition, the Illinois court issued a temporary order permitting the mother, over the father's objections, to travel to Canada with the children for a vacation.  The father subsequently filed a motion for dismissal in the Illinois court, pursuant to the Illinois version of the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdic­tion Act (Illinois Act) (750 ILCS 35/1 et seq. (West 1996) (enacting the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Act (Uniform Act) (Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Act, 9 U.L.A. 115 (1988)))), section 8 of which permits dismissal on the basis of an inconve­nient forum (750 ILCS 35/8 (West 1996)).

On October 20, 1997, the circuit court of Champaign County granted the father's petition to dismiss, stating that Illinois is not a proper forum for the resolution of the disputes between these parties and, further:

"The exercise of jurisdiction by this Court over these disputes is antithetical to the purpose and provisions of the [Uniform Act] and violative of [the father's] [d]ue [p]ro­

cess rights."

The mother's motion to reconsider was denied after a hearing on February 23, 1998.  The circuit court opined that the home state of the children, for purposes of the Uniform Act (Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Act §2(5), 9 U.L.A. 133 (1988)), is the home state of the children at the time a custody proceed­ing is com­menced.  "Other­wise," the court stated:

"[T]here is every incentive to drag out the proceeding, relocate with the children and[,] if you can stay in somewhere other than the jurisdiction in which the case is initially filed for some period of time, divest that jurisdiction of the ability to hear the case."

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