In re Marriage of Rogers

2015 IL App (4th) 140765, 25 N.E.3d 1213
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 26, 2015
Docket4-14-0765
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2015 IL App (4th) 140765 (In re Marriage of Rogers) 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 Rogers, 2015 IL App (4th) 140765, 25 N.E.3d 1213 (Ill. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

2015 IL App (4th) 140765 FILED January 26, 2015 Carla Bender NO. 4-14-0765 4th District Appellate Court, IL IN THE APPELLATE COURT

OF ILLINOIS

FOURTH DISTRICT

In re: MARRIAGE OF LAUREN ROGERS, n/k/a ) Appeal from LAUREN BEAUDETTE, ) Circuit Court of Petitioner-Appellant, ) Edgar County and ) No. 09D2 TERRY ROGERS, ) Respondent-Appellee. ) Honorable ) Steven L. Garst, ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE STEIGMANN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Presiding Justice Pope and Justice Appleton concurred in the judgment and opin- ion.

OPINION

¶1 In January 2009, petitioner, Lauren Rogers—now known as Lauren Beaudette—

filed for dissolution of marriage from respondent, Terry Rogers. In March 2009, the trial court

entered a judgment (1) dissolving the parties' marriage; (2) awarding petitioner custody of the

parties' son, B.R. (born May 13, 2008); and (3) awarding respondent reasonable visitation. In

February 2012, respondent filed a motion to modify custody pursuant to section 610(b) of the

Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act (750 ILCS 5/610(b) (West 2012)), alleging

that (1) a change in circumstances occurred and (2) it was in B.R.'s best interest to be placed in

respondent's custody. In March 2014, following a six-day bench trial, the court denied respond-

ent's motion.

¶2 In April 2014, respondent filed a motion to reconsider, arguing that the trial court

applied an incorrect legal standard in denying his motion to modify custody. Specifically, re- spondent contended that the court improperly required him to prove that petitioner's acts and

conduct harmed B.R.'s welfare. In July 2014, the court granted respondent's motion to reconsid-

er, concluding that its original ruling erroneously "placed an additional burden on [respondent] to

show that the welfare of the child was adversely affected or harmed by the acts and conduct of

[petitioner] rather than considering the factors for the best interest of the child for modification."

Thereafter, the court transferred custody of B.R. to respondent.

¶3 Petitioner appeals, arguing that the trial court erred by granting respondent's mo-

tion to modify custody because respondent failed to prove that the change in circumstances ad-

versely affected B.R.'s welfare. We disagree and affirm.

¶4 I. BACKGROUND

¶5 The following pertinent facts were gleaned from the parties' pleadings, exhibits,

and evidence presented at the trial.

¶6 A. Events Preceding Respondent's Motion To Modify Custody

¶7 In January 2008, petitioner and respondent—then 24 and 31 years old, respective-

ly—married in the Bahamas. The couple's only child, B.R., was born in May 2008. In January

2009, petitioner filed her petition for dissolution of marriage, which the trial court granted in

March 2009. As part of its dissolution judgment, the court ratified the parties' settlement agree-

ment, which awarded custody of B.R. to petitioner and granted respondent reasonable visitation.

The settlement agreement further provided that if either party moved more than one hour away

from the other party, child visitation and sharing of transportation would be revisited.

¶8 In the summer of 2009, petitioner and respondent filed separate motions to modi-

fy visitation, both asserting that petitioner moved from Paris, Illinois—where she had lived with

B.R. and respondent during the marriage—to Naperville, Illinois. In January 2010, the trial court

-2- entered an order modifying visitation, which (1) provided alternate-weekend visitation for re-

spondent and (2) required the parties to meet in Gilman, Illinois, to transfer custody of B.R.

¶9 B. Respondent's Motion To Modify Custody

¶ 10 In February 2012, respondent filed his motion to modify custody, which he

amended in June 2012 and again in August 2013. Respondent's final amended motion alleged

that a substantial change in circumstances had occurred pertaining to petitioner and B.R., which

rendered it in B.R.'s best interest that custody be transferred to respondent.

¶ 11 C. Evidence Presented at Trial

¶ 12 The parties presented the following pertinent evidence at trial, which took place

over six days in January and February 2014. We note that the six-volume trial transcript consists

of lengthy testimony from 15 different witnesses, and the trial record includes voluminous doc-

umentary exhibits. In the interest of clarity, we summarize only the evidence pertinent to our

resolution of this appeal.

¶ 13 1. Petitioner's Postdivorce Life in the Chicago Suburbs

¶ 14 In July 2009, petitioner moved from Paris to her sister's home in Naperville,

where she began a full-time position at a video-rental store. In October 2009, petitioner quit her

job at the video store to work at the day care center that B.R. attended. Petitioner worked at this

day care center until March or April 2010.

¶ 15 In June 2010, petitioner married Shawn Beaudette, who at that time was an insur-

ance salesman for Liberty Mutual. The couple moved into a townhouse in Naperville and peti-

tioner began working part-time at a bar and grill. In August 2010, the family moved into a house

in Aurora. In October 2010, petitioner quit her job at the bar and grill and began working for a

social-service provider for adults with mental illnesses, where she stayed until March 2011.

-3- From March 2011 until April 2013, petitioner operated an unlicensed day care business out of

her home. Thereafter, petitioner and Shawn moved to a house in Oswego and petitioner became

a stay-at-home mother.

¶ 16 2. The July 2010 Handgun Incident

¶ 17 Petitioner and Shawn spent the evening of July 24, 2010, drinking with friends

and celebrating Shawn's thirty-sixth birthday. Sometime after midnight, the couple got into a

dispute after Shawn discovered text messages on petitioner's phone in which petitioner's former

video-store coworker told petitioner that he "wanted to hug and kiss her." According to petition-

er's statements to police, Shawn pushed petitioner down onto the couple's bed. Petitioner told

Shawn that if he did not leave her alone, she was going to get her handgun. After hearing this

statement, Shawn went to the bedroom closet to retrieve and unload petitioner's gun. Shawn

knew that the gun was loaded because during the previous night, petitioner loaded it and walked

around the outside of the townhouse after she thought she heard a noise. While trying to unload

petitioner's gun, Shawn accidentally fired a bullet into the couple's bed. At the time, B.R. was

sleeping in his room, one floor below the couple's bedroom. Officer Robert Carlson of the Na-

perville police department testified that if the gun had been aimed differently, the .40-caliber bul-

let could have gone through the floor into B.R.'s room. Although Shawn and petitioner testified

that B.R. was sleeping during the incident, neither of them went into B.R.'s room to check on

him.

¶ 18 After the shot was fired, Shawn left the townhouse on foot and went to a hotel in

the nearby town of Lisle, where he intended to spend the night. At 2:48 a.m.—roughly 45

minutes after the shot was fired—petitioner called the police to report the incident. (Petitioner

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2017 IL App (3d) 170472 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2017)
In re Marriage of Rogers
2015 IL App (4th) 140765 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2015)

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2015 IL App (4th) 140765, 25 N.E.3d 1213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marriage-of-rogers-illappct-2015.