In Re the Marriage of Nies

2003 MT 100, 68 P.3d 697, 315 Mont. 260, 2003 Mont. LEXIS 173
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 2003
Docket02-169
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 2003 MT 100 (In Re the Marriage of Nies) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court 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 Nies, 2003 MT 100, 68 P.3d 697, 315 Mont. 260, 2003 Mont. LEXIS 173 (Mo. 2003).

Opinion

JUSTICE RICE

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 When the marriage of Harold Edward Nies (Harold) and Sarah Elizabeth Cooper (Sarah) was dissolved in December of 1997, Sarah was named primary parent of their infant daughter. In November of 2001, the Thirteenth Judicial District Court, Yellowstone County, granted Harold’s motion to modify the parties’ parenting plan to make him the primary parent. Sarah appeals. We affirm.

¶2 The issues are:

¶3 1. Did the District Court abuse its discretion when it concluded the daughter’s best interest required the court to change custody?

¶4 2. Did the District Court abuse its discretion regarding Sarah’s motion in limine?

¶5 Harold and Sarah were married in 1995 and separated before their daughter was born the following year. When they separated, Sarah moved back to her own mother’s home in Seeley Lake, Montana, and Harold remained in Billings, Montana.

¶6 Harold and Sarah initially were granted joint custody of their daughter, with Sarah as the primary parent and Harold to have visitation on alternating weekends and holidays and for several weeks during each summer. In April of 2001, Harold moved for modification of the parenting plan, claiming Sarah had repeatedly frustrated his visitation. He also complained Sarah had raised allegations that he had sexually abused their daughter and, as a result, he had been allowed only supervised visitation for six months pending investigation by the Department of Public Health and Human Services (DPHHS). At the end of the investigation, the allegations were dismissed as unsubstantiated.

¶7 Both parents testified at the hearing on Harold’s motion for modification. Harold also presented testimony by Sarah Baxter, a clinical psychologist who had treated the parties’ daughter; Mike *262 Sullivan, the director of a sexual abuse treatment program who had evaluated Harold; Maile Ewalt, who had handled the DPHHS investigation of the sexual abuse allegations; and Jackie Adams, who baby-sat the daughter for Harold. In addition to her own testimony, Sarah called a family friend, Gregory McDonald, as a witness. The court also reviewed five depositions: a physician who had examined the daughter for signs of sexual abuse and found nothing; two psychologists who had evaluated and treated the daughter; and two DPHHS social workers who had been involved with the investigation of the allegations of sexual abuse.

¶8 After hearing the testimony and reviewing the depositions, the court granted Harold’s motion for modification of the parenting plan. Sarah appeals.

Issue 1

¶9 Did the District Court abuse its discretion when it concluded the daughter’s best interest required the court to change custody?

¶10 Our standard of review of findings of fact on the modification of a parenting plan regarding custody and visitation is that the district court’s findings will be sustained unless they are clearly erroneous. In re Marriage of Oehlke, 2002 MT 79, ¶ 9, 309 Mont. 254, ¶ 9, 46 P.3d 49, ¶ 9. We will reverse a district court’s decision regarding modification of custody only where an abuse of discretion is clearly demonstrated. Marriage of Oehlke, ¶ 9. Here, Sarah’s claims center on the factual determinations made by the District Court.

¶11 Sarah first claims the District Court failed to make specific findings that she frustrated Harold’s visitation, in violation of Rule 52(a), M.R.Civ.P. The court’s rationale for its decision is set forth in the findings it made in open court. The court stated in its oral findings, “I find specifically that [Sarah] has willfully and consistently refused to allow the child to have contact with dad, and attempted to frustrate or deny contact with dad.”

¶12 As Sarah points out, the court then directed Harold’s counsel to prepare the written order on its decision:

I find that [Harold’s] testimony about the frustrated visitation, and I guess, [Harold’s attorney], I’m going to ask you to put together an order and go through some of those details. I find that they’re legitimate and credible about the frustrated visitation in 1998, 1999, 2000, and 2001, whether it’s for the excuse of sickness, or lack of availability, or because of the allegation of sexual abuse, or whatever the reasons that were given, I find that *263 they’re just not credible and they’re not excusable.

Sarah contends this direction from the court required a written order including specific findings concerning frustration of visitation dates, times or places. The written order which the court later entered does not contain such findings of fact.

¶13 Rule 52(a), M.R.Civ.P., provides, “It will be sufficient if the findings of fact and conclusions of law are stated orally and recorded in open court following the close of the evidence^]” Therefore, to the extent Sarah is complaining about the absence of written findings that she frustrated Harold’s visitation, she has established no violation of that Rule. Sarah has cited nothing, and we are aware of nothing, which would require more specificity than is present in the court’s oral statement of its findings and its subsequent written order.

¶14 Sarah next asserts that, in making its oral findings, the District Court improperly relied upon its off-the-record notes from the earlier dissolution proceeding. The court stated that it had gone back to its notes from the 1997 dissolution proceedings, in which it had concluded that Harold was a good parent and that Sarah was overly dependent on her family.

¶15 Sarah is correct that the notes to which the District Court referred cannot be used to demonstrate a change in circumstances since that time, as is required for modification of custody pursuant to § 40-4-219(1), MCA. However, the court did not cite those notes as demonstrating a change in circumstances, but rather as a historical background to its findings that Sarah’s family exhibited problematic “successive enmeshing” and a “cycle of dependence. “We recently deemed it significant, in In re Marriage of Drake, 2002 MT 127, ¶ 25, 310 Mont. 114, ¶ 25, 49 P.3d 38, ¶ 25, that the district court had presided in previous proceedings involving a dissolution and parenting plan and “therefore had a working familiarity with this family upon which it could critically weigh evidence and decide what was in the best interests of the children.” Given the purpose for which the notes were used in this case, we conclude Sarah has not established that the District Court’s reference to its notes from a prior proceeding was improper.

¶16 Sarah states the court erred when it found that her hospitalization and surgeries for a forehead/bone infection were not a factor in loss of visitation. Sarah testified that, beginning in February of 2001, she was hospitalized in Seattle for a life-threatening staph infection that spread to the bone in her forehead, resulting in her temporary inability to accommodate Harold’s visitation rights.

*264

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Bluebook (online)
2003 MT 100, 68 P.3d 697, 315 Mont. 260, 2003 Mont. LEXIS 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-nies-mont-2003.