In re the Marriage of: Nathan Francis Gregor v. Dawn Marie Buttera Gregor

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 8, 2016
DocketA14-1920
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re the Marriage of: Nathan Francis Gregor v. Dawn Marie Buttera Gregor (In re the Marriage of: Nathan Francis Gregor v. Dawn Marie Buttera Gregor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota 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: Nathan Francis Gregor v. Dawn Marie Buttera Gregor, (Mich. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

This opinion will be unpublished and may not be cited except as provided by Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A14-1920

In re the Marriage of: Nathan Francis Gregor, petitioner, Respondent,

vs.

Dawn Marie Buttera Gregor, Appellant.

Filed February 8, 2016 Affirmed; motion granted Stauber, Judge

Olmsted County District Court File No. 55-FA-08-2925

Amber M. Lawrence, Dittrich & Lawrence, P.A., Rochester, Minnesota (for respondent)

Dawn B. Gregor, St. Paul, Minnesota (pro se appellant)

Considered and decided by Halbrooks, Presiding Judge; Stauber, Judge; and Reyes,

Judge.

UNPUBLISHED OPINION

STAUBER, Judge

In this custody dispute, pro se appellant argues that (1) the district court erred in

evaluating two of the statutory best-interests factors; (2) the district court erred in

granting father sole legal and physical custody of the parties’ child; (3) appellant should

be granted unsupervised parenting time; (4) the district court acted improperly by meeting with the child in chambers without meeting the statutory safeguards of Minn.

Stat. § 518.166 (2012); and (5) the district court erred in its evidentiary rulings and was

biased against appellant. We affirm the district court’s decision, and we grant

respondent’s motion for attorney fees.

FACTS

The parties have one minor child together, B.G., born December 27, 2002. The

parties were divorced by stipulated judgment and decree on April 24, 2008. Under the

judgment and decree, the parties shared joint legal and physical custody of B.G. and were

awarded equal parenting time. On February 17, 2012, a stipulated order was entered

modifying the parenting-time schedule. Under the modified schedule, respondent-father

Nathan Francis Gregor had parenting time every Monday and Tuesday overnight and

every other weekend, and appellant-mother Dawn Buttera Gregor had parenting time

every Wednesday and Thursday overnight and every other weekend.

In the spring of 2012, mother notified father that she intended to move with B.G.

and her younger daughter from the Rochester area to Minneapolis for employment

reasons. Father repeatedly objected to B.G. moving to Minneapolis and attending school

there. Mother pressured B.G. to become involved in the decision-making process,

causing B.G. to experience significant stress. Mother moved to Minneapolis, and B.G.

remained with father and attended school in Rochester. The parties participated in

mediation to work out a new parenting-time schedule. The mediated schedule granted

mother parenting time two weekends each month with weekends to correspond with any

days off from school.

2 Mother bought B.G. a cell phone, so they could have contact at all times. Mother

became angry with B.G. if he missed a call from her and did not immediately return it.

Two calls left B.G. in tears as a result of statements made by mother. Father eventually

took the cell phone away from B.G. because of the stress caused to B.G. by mother’s

calls.

Mother behaved inappropriately at parenting-time exchanges, causing B.G. to

experience significant stress. For example, in October 2012, mother became angry with

father and “yelled that he was a ‘terrible father and a weak and pathetic man’” and

attempted to hit him. B.G. witnessed the altercation from inside mother’s apartment.

Father left without B.G. Mother also interfered with father’s parenting time on other

occasions, picking up B.G. early from school on one occasion and going to father’s

residence and attempting to forcibly enter the house on another occasion.

On November 13, 2012, the district court issued an emergency interim order

granting mother parenting time over the weekends of November 22 and December 7,

2012, and scheduling a hearing for December 11, 2012. On November 15, 2012, mother

sent the police to father’s home to conduct a child-welfare check. The district court

found that mother’s “contact with the police does not appear to have been based on a

good faith belief that [B.G.] was endangered and the police visit to [father’s] residence

amounted to an effort to harass [father’s] family.”

At the December 11, 2012 hearing, the district court found that father had made a

prima facie case for custody modification. The court explained:

3 [B.G.] continued to be under significant pressure from the Mother to decide where he wanted to live and attend school. The Mother continued to place [B.G.] in the middle of the adult issues, even showing him e-mails between the Mother and the Father’s attorney. The Father observed [B.G.] was no longer himself; he was suffering from anxiety, he was always stressed about his potential move to the cities, seeing his Mother, and the information his Mother was sharing with him. [B.G.’s] teachers and principal also observed [B.G.] was struggling in school and was not himself. [B.G.] complained of headaches, stomach aches, and loss of appetite. [B.G.] was not sleeping well and was grinding his teeth. [B.G.] was becoming withdrawn and distressed. [B.G.] described the pressure from his Mother as feeling like “bricks on his back that kept regenerating.”

The district court ordered that B.G. reside with father subject to parenting time for mother

of up to three weekends a month with each weekend specified. The court also ordered

that the parties not involve B.G. in their disputes or decision-making and that B.G. return

to counseling. Father scheduled four appointments for B.G. to meet with the counselor in

January 2013, but mother canceled them.

In January 2013, mother enrolled B.G. in Whittier Elementary School in

Minneapolis on January 15. When the school secretary asked about the status of the

custody dispute, mother reported that father had abandoned B.G. On January 23, 2013,

the district court issued an emergency-interim order requiring that B.G. be immediately

returned to father’s care and custody, suspending mother’s parenting time, and requiring

that any contact between mother and B.G. be supervised at the Family Access Center

(FAC) until a court hearing scheduled for February 11, 2013.

At the February 11, 2013 hearing, the parties agreed that father would be awarded

temporary sole legal and physical custody subject to parenting time for mother every

4 other weekend with one weekend unsupervised at mother’s residence and the other

weekend supervised by mother’s parents at their home. Parenting-time exchanges were

to occur at designated police stations. The court appointed a guardian ad litem (GAL) to

make recommendations on permanent legal and physical custody and long-range

parenting time.

Mother continued to behave inappropriately at parenting-time exchanges, making

it difficult for B.G. to return to Rochester with father. The parenting-time exchange

following the first weekend that mother exercised parenting time at her parent’s residence

took over two hours and involved mother, her parents, father, B.G., and the police. B.G.

stated to the counselor that parenting-time exchanges are very difficult because mother is

upset about saying goodbye, he feels badly for his mother and sister when he leaves, and

he remains upset for a day or two after an exchange.

At the GAL’s recommendation, father filed a third motion for emergency relief,

requesting that mother’s parenting time be supervised at the FAC. On March 23, 2013,

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In re the Marriage of: Nathan Francis Gregor v. Dawn Marie Buttera Gregor, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-nathan-francis-gregor-v-dawn-marie-buttera-gregor-minnctapp-2016.