In the Interest of R. R.

474 S.E.2d 12, 222 Ga. App. 301, 96 Fulton County D. Rep. 2490, 1996 Ga. App. LEXIS 634
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 18, 1996
DocketA96A0410
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 474 S.E.2d 12 (In the Interest of R. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Interest of R. R., 474 S.E.2d 12, 222 Ga. App. 301, 96 Fulton County D. Rep. 2490, 1996 Ga. App. LEXIS 634 (Ga. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinions

Birdsong, Presiding Judge.

This is a discretionary appeal from a final judgment on modification of child custody and child support.

Appellee Valerie Lynn Vann Rountree brought this modification action against appellant William D. Rountree. Appellee and appellant were divorced in December 1993; the settlement agreement incorporated into the divorce decree provided appellant would have sole custody over the couple’s three-year-old son, R. R., until the child attained age eighteen. Appellee, a school teacher, was awarded visitation rights subject to certain conditions. R. R. had been in the care of appellant since October 1992 while appellee mother had been in various inpatient and outpatient treatment facilities for alcohol abuse. At the time of the divorce, appellant worked for an Atlanta-based software company performing specialized computer programming services involving the use of the computer language COBOL.

In November 1994, appellant accepted employment with United Parcel Service in Louisville, Kentucky; he testified this job offered long-range employment opportunity, would not require him to travel, provided an opportunity to gain increased work experience, and resulted in an increase in his salary. He further testified that he did not attempt to find a job in the Atlanta area immediately before accepting the out-of-state job, and that he had a restrictive covenant in his employment contract with the Atlanta firm. There exists [302]*302uncontroverted testimony of record regarding R. R.’s secure and loving relationship with his father. Appellant testified that following the move he was willing to work out a new visitation schedule. Appellee testified and admitted her prior history of alcoholism, the course of her treatment, and that she is in recovery; she has remained sober and without any alcohol since March 1993. At the time of her divorce appellee, who was then in the early stages of recovery, recognizing her situation and, in part, being influenced by her addictionologist, agreed to let appellant have sole custody of R. R. in exchange for frequent visiting privileges. Under the terms of the agreement, appellee was granted liberal visitation with R. R. every second and fourth and every other fifth weekend; overnight visitation every Wednesday; and every Friday afternoon from 4:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m., and specified holidays and summer visits. Appellee further testified that because of the distance involved in appellant’s move, R. R. is now being denied the same degree of access to his mother and to his maternal and paternal grandparents that he previously experienced. As a result of R. R.’s sudden relocation, he informed appellee that he did not believe she loved him anymore and had abandoned him; appellee discussed this matter at length with R. R. and assured him this was not so. She calls R. R. nightly but frequently only gets the answering machine. Appellee acknowledged there has been no decline in appellant’s ability to take care of R. R. or to be a good parent to him due to the relocation.

Appellant abruptly moved R. R. during the December holiday season, after securing out-of-state employment, without giving any prior notice either to appellee or R. R. Appellant contends this was due to his concern about appellee’s adverse reaction to the move and his belief that prior knowledge of the move would cause R. R. to be upset.

The trial court orally stated on the record: “I’m going to consider there has been a change of condition. It would be ridiculous for me to say that taking a child who . . . grew up here with the family and then to go from coming home from visiting with mom to moving out-of-state overnight, to say, Well, there’s not been any change of condition. He’s still with the dad who’s raised him and loved him.’ Which he is, but there’s a change. . . . It’s a significant change in that child’s life. . . . [T]hat move has for all practical purposes, put a huge roadblock in the continued relationship with the child and his mother, which both of those people have a right to. As well as the relationship with [appellant’s] parents and [appellee’s] parents, which [is] a very important thing to a child — their relationship -with their grandparents. So, yes, there’s a significant change in conditions. And, based on that change in conditions I’m going to change the custodial arrangement between these two parents to one of joint [303]*303legal custody. . . . And what I’m going to say is, joint legal custody . . . with the father being the primary physical custodian so long as he lives within Gwinnett County or within ten miles of the borders of Gwinnett County. . . . Now, in the event. . . the father is not living in Gwinnett County or within ten miles of its border, or if at some point in the future he were to move out then the mother would become the primary physical custodian.” The court explained its ruling as follows: “My concern is to give [R. R.] some stability and to allow him to have a relationship with both of his parents. . . . For your nearly 39 years of life [appellant has] primarily lived in Atlanta, worked here, [he is] in an industry that has a lot of opportunities everywhere and it’s not the case you [the appellant] set out. . . . There’s not been a history of peripatetic action in this family. . . . Furthermore, I think [OCGA] § 19-9-1 clearly makes it the obligation of the person who’s going to move to let the other person know and why. . . . Now we’re in a position of the mother coming in and saying . . . ‘they’re in Louisville and I’m having to drive half way around the country to see my [child] every two weeks.’ And dad’s saying, ‘But he’s doing fine here.’ . . . Not that I’m not saying that [R. R.’s] not doing fine. . . . But the relationship that he should have with both parents is what’s important here and I’m giving you a chance to reestablish here so he can have that relationship.” The juvenile court concluded there has been an adverse effect or change of condition which is the destruction of the relationship between the child and one parent, or conduct that was “tantamount to the destruction of it,” by appellant having moved so that the child “was not able” to see his mother and visit with her with the same frequency as before the move. Subsequently, the juvenile court issued its written final judgment, and made the following written findings of fact: (a) both parents are fit and proper persons to have custody of the minor child; (b) appellee is a recovering alcoholic and is currently sober; (c) there has been a substantial change of condition “due to the father’s removal of his residence and the residence of the minor child . . . from Georgia to Kentucky”; and (d) there has been a change of conditions which is the “destruction of the relationship between the child and one parent.” The court awarded joint legal custody of the child to both appellant and appellee. As to physical custody the court ruled that if appellant resides in Gwinnett County or within ten miles thereof by July 6, 1995, he shall be the primary physical custodian of the child and that the mother would have visitation rights as stated in the final judgment; but if appellant was not living in Gwinnett County or within ten miles thereof, appellee shall be the primary physical custodian and the father would have visitation rights as stated in the final judgment. Held:

1. (a) Once a permanent child custody award has been entered, [304]*304the test for the trial court to use in change of child custody suits is whether there has been a change of conditions affecting the welfare of the child.

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In the Interest of R. R.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
474 S.E.2d 12, 222 Ga. App. 301, 96 Fulton County D. Rep. 2490, 1996 Ga. App. LEXIS 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-r-r-gactapp-1996.