In re the Marriage of Jackson

936 P.2d 1043, 147 Or. App. 500, 1997 Ore. App. LEXIS 517
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedApril 16, 1997
DocketD092-408; CAA90838
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 936 P.2d 1043 (In re the Marriage of Jackson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Marriage of Jackson, 936 P.2d 1043, 147 Or. App. 500, 1997 Ore. App. LEXIS 517 (Or. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

HASELTON, J.

Father appeals from a judgment that denied his motion to modify custody of the parties’ two sons, granted mother’s motion to modify visitation, subject to conditions, and granted mother’s motion to hold father in contempt for failing to return the children to her following a scheduled visitation. We affirm the disposition as to custody and the finding of contempt but modify the disposition as to visitation.

The parties divorced in June 1991. The trial court awarded mother custody of the parties’ two sons, J.T., who was five, and Joel, who was three. Mother has two other sons from previous marriages: Leroy, her oldest son, who does not live with her, and Michael, who was 10 years old at the time of dissolution and who does live with her.

At the time of the dissolution proceeding, father sought custody, contending that Michael had sexually abused J.T. and possibly Joel. The trial court determined that those allegations were unfounded. Shortly thereafter, father renewed his efforts to obtain custody, asserting that Joel had been sexually abused in mother’s home. Again, the trial court found the allegations of abuse to be unfounded. In that context, the court, which was concerned about the effects of father’s conduct on the children, explicitly warned him:

“[I]’m not going to allow visitation if this — if the kids are going to be pumped or questioned or subjected in any way to conversations about their brother’s [Michael’s] behavior or what their mother does, or those kinds of things, during visitation. * * * And if it happens that they’re being pumped or that there’s reporting and it turns out like this situation, I’m not going to bother with supervised visitation, I’m going to take some real drastic action.”

Since 1993, mother, Michael, J.T., and Joel have been living with Ed Parrish, whom mother intends to marry.

The events that immediately precipitated this litigation began in December 1993, when J.T. and Joel visited their father, who was living in Reno, Nevada. Father claims that, during that visit, Joel told him that he had been sexually abused by Michael, his half-brother. Father called his [503]*503father, John Jackson, Sr., who then called Parrish. Parrish asked the Newberg Police Department to investigate.

On January 13, 1994, Detective Ken Summers of the Newberg Police Department conducted videotaped interviews of Michael, J.T., and Joel. During his interview, Joel gave fragmented and contradictory responses to questions about the alleged abuse. Michael denied that he had abused Joel, and J.T. told Summers that he did not believe that any abuse had occurred. Consequently, no further action was taken.

In August 1994, J.T. and Joel traveled to Reno for summer visitation. During that visit, Joel again told father that he had been abused by Michael.1 Also during that visit, both J.T. and Joel told father that they had been struck and threatened by mother’s companion, Parrish. At about the same time, father also learned that Parrish had been convicted of sexual abuse of an adult woman and had been found in contempt for violating a restraining order against his former wife. In addition, father learned that J.T. was suffering from a peptic ulcer, which father believed was the product of stress from conditions in mother’s household.2

Father did not return the children to mother at the conclusion of the visitation, on August 16. On August 18, father filed an ex parte motion for emergency temporary custody, which was denied. On August 22, father filed a motion for an order to show cause why he should not be awarded permanent custody of the children. He asserted, particularly, that modification of custody was warranted by three considerations, any or all of which constituted a substantial change of circumstances: (1) Michael’s alleged sexual abuse of Joel; (2) Parrish’s alleged physical abuse of J.T. and Joel; and (3) J.T.’s and Joel’s anxiety, including physical symptoms of that stress, which father attributed to conditions in mother’s household. Mother responded by seeking an order directing [504]*504father to immediately return the children. She also moved to have father held in contempt for wilfully refusing to return the children and further sought to terminate father’s visitation rights.

During a hearing on September 23, the court ordered father to return the children to mother, and father complied with that order. The court consolidated the remaining matters for trial. After receiving testimony from a variety of witnesses, including expert testimony by three clinical psychologists, the court found that there was no credible evidence that J.T. or Joel had been physically or sexually abused by anyone, particularly anyone in mother’s household — e.g., Michael or Parrish. The court also determined that, although J.T. and Joel were experiencing substantial stress, that stress and its symptoms were not attributable to conditions in mother’s household. Accordingly, the court denied father’s motion seeking modification of custody.

At the same time, the court granted mother’s motion to terminate father’s visitation, finding, in part, that the children’s stress is “associated with petitioner’s obsessive pursuit of custody of the boys.” The court terminated father’s visitation pending satisfaction of, and compliance with, specified terms and conditions:

“A. Petitioner’s visitation with the said minor children is terminated until such time that Dr. Dale Brounstein, the children’s therapist, in consultation with the children’s treating physician, determines that visitation by petitioner with the said minor children poses no medical or psychological threat to the said minor children’s well-being.
“B. Additionally, before any visitation by either petitioner or petitioner’s parents (Mr. and Mrs. John Jackson Sr.) is allowed;[3]
“1). Both petitioner and petitioner’s parents (Mr. and Mrs. John Jackson Sr.) must sign an agreement prepared by Dr. Brounstein with the assistance of respondent’s counsel, with this agreement specifying those topics and [505]*505treatment goals which both petitioner and his parents must comply with to assure a healthy visitation environment for the minor children.
“a). The cost for the preparation of the said agreement must be paid by petitioner in advance of any services being rendered by either Dr. Brounstein or respondent’s counsel associated with the said agreement.
“2). Petitioner shall surrender the minor children’s passports to respondent’s counsel.
“3). The Court must review and approve the aforesaid Agreement prepared by Dr. Brounstein.
“C. Additionally, the length and term of any visitation set forth in the aforesaid Agreement prepared by Dr. Brounstein shall be subject to review and approval by the Court, and the same shall be embodied in a subsequent Order.
“1). In the event that either petitioner or his parents fail to comply with the aforesaid Agreement or the Court’s Order, visitation shall cease immediately.”

Finally, the court held father in contempt for failing to return the children immediately after their summer 1994 visitation. The court determined that that violation was wilful.

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Related

In re the Marriage of Morales
159 P.3d 1183 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2007)
Meader v. Meader
94 P.3d 123 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2004)
Summers v. Binns
10 P.3d 294 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2000)

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Bluebook (online)
936 P.2d 1043, 147 Or. App. 500, 1997 Ore. App. LEXIS 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-jackson-orctapp-1997.