In the Matter of: Bret William Smith v. Timothy Patrick Lyons

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 9, 2017
DocketA16-727
StatusUnpublished

This text of In the Matter of: Bret William Smith v. Timothy Patrick Lyons (In the Matter of: Bret William Smith v. Timothy Patrick Lyons) 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 the Matter of: Bret William Smith v. Timothy Patrick Lyons, (Mich. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

This opinion will be unpublished and may not be cited except as provided by Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2016).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A16-0727

In the Matter of: Bret William Smith, petitioner, Appellant,

vs.

Timothy Patrick Lyons, Respondent.

Filed January 9, 2017 Affirmed; motion to dismiss denied; motion to strike granted in part Bratvold, Judge

Hennepin County District Court File No. 27-DA-FA-16-1720

Bret William Smith, Richfield, Minnesota (pro se appellant)

Ryan D. Anderson, Lubov & Associates, LLC, Golden Valley, Minnesota (for respondent)

Jackie Cardinal, Minneapolis, Minnesota (guardian ad litem)

Considered and decided by Worke, Presiding Judge; Stauber, Judge; and Bratvold,

Judge.

UNPUBLISHED OPINION

BRATVOLD, Judge

Appellant challenges the district court’s decision denying an order for protection

(OFP) on behalf of his then four-year-old son, arguing that the record evidence established

by a preponderance of the evidence that respondent harmed and/or failed to protect his son. 1 Respondent asks this court to dismiss the appeal because appellant’s brief fails to cite

any legal authority. In the alternative, respondent moves to strike the portions of appellant’s

brief that address matters outside of the record on appeal. Because this court has discretion

to consider inadequately briefed issues, we deny respondent’s motion to dismiss. This

court, however, will not consider matters outside of the record on appeal, therefore, we

grant respondent’s motion to strike. We conclude that the district court’s determination that

the evidence failed to establish that respondent harmed or failed to protect the child is not

clearly erroneous; thus, the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying the OFP

and we affirm.

FACTS

Appellant Bret Smith and respondent Timothy Lyons are involved in a custody

dispute regarding J.A.J, who is Smith’s son, and formerly, Lyons’s foster child. Smith

gained temporary custody of J.A.J. in September 2015, when J.A.J.’s biological mother

relapsed into chemical dependency. Smith initiated custody proceedings against mother.

With Smith’s consent, Lyons was a third-party intervenor in those proceedings, which were

pending at the time this appeal was submitted. Shortly after Lyons intervened in the custody

proceedings, he filed a third-party custody and visitation petition, and the district court

permitted Lyons to have visitation with J.A.J. based on the parties’ agreement.

1 The district court judge “dismissed and vacated” the amended ex-parte OFP issued on March 31, 2016. The district court also found that “the record as a whole” does not support a finding that respondent physically or sexually abused the minor child. Therefore, the district court also denied the petition requesting an extension of the OFP.

2 Lyons’s most recent visitation with J.A.J. occurred on January 15-17, 2016. Two

weeks later, on January 31, 2016, Smith emailed the guardian ad litem (GAL) alleging that

Lyons’s three-year-old daughter bit J.A.J. and stabbed him in the back with a toy knife.

Smith forwarded a cell phone photo of J.A.J.’s back and stated he would take J.A.J. to a

hospital to document the abuse and to “assist with eliminating visitation.” The GAL met

with J.A.J. and observed a single bruise on his back. J.A.J. told the GAL that Smith told

him to say that he no longer wanted to see Lyons. The GAL submitted a child protection

report, and Child Protective Services (CPS) determined that the injury did not warrant an

investigation.

The district court held an emergency telephone conference on February 5, 2016,

after the allegations of physical abuse arose. The district court ordered that visitation

continue with Lyons every other weekend.

On February 19, 2016, Smith reported to CPS that J.A.J. had said that Lyons had

“touched my pennies [sic] and my butt and put a finger in my butt.” Smith initially alleged

that the abuse happened on February 16, 2016, a date on which J.A.J. was not with Lyons.

Smith later claimed that the incident occurred on January 16, 2016, concurrent with the

events described above. CPS initiated a forensic interview; J.A.J. did not disclose any

sexual abuse to the interviewer. J.A.J. stated he liked Lyons and was not afraid of him. CPS

closed its investigation, making no findings of abuse, and did not restrict Lyons’s contact

with the child.

On March 9, 2016, Smith filed an OFP petition on behalf of J.A.J., alleging physical

and sexual abuse by Lyons. The petition was denied.

3 On March 22, 2016, Smith alleged that J.A.J. was physically abused at Hope Pre-

School. The teachers had informed Smith that J.A.J. was standing in a wagon when another

child pulled the wagon, causing J.A.J. to fall and he “was scratched on his face.” Smith

claimed that J.A.J. stated the child pulled him out of the wagon and threw him on the

ground. Smith removed J.A.J. from Hope Pre-School after this incident.

On March 23, 2016, Smith brought J.A.J. for a Sex Behavior Assessment with

Dr. Debbie Gerdes. Smith and J.A.J. “made identical reports to the evaluator,” including

that Lyons’s three-year-old daughter held J.A.J. down and pulled down his pants, and then

Lyons “sexually abused [J.A.J.].” Dr. Gerdes prepared a written assessment and Smith

forwarded this assessment to CPS; however, no investigation was opened.

On March 29, 2016, Smith filed an amended version of the previously-denied OFP

petition, alleging the same abuse incident by Lyons and his daughter, and attaching an

email from Dr. Debbie Gerdes stating that J.A.J. had disclosed sexual abuse to her on

March 23, 2016. The district court granted a temporary ex parte OFP, “[f]or the very short

time until April 4, 2016” and scheduled a hearing. The order also stated that Smith “appears

to be judge shopping.”

On April 14, 2016, the district court heard both parties on the amended OFP petition.

The district court received as evidence two photographs of J.A.J., taken with Smith’s cell

phone. Regarding the photographs, the district court observed:

one photograph, which [Smith] maintains he took on January 20, 2016, was downloaded as a bitmap file onto his computer that day. It depicts nine bruises across the child’s lower back and is annotated by [Smith] with comments such as “bite injury” and “stab injury.” It looks nothing like the

4 photograph [Smith] forwarded to the [GAL] on January 31, 2016, which depicted a single bruise. The other photograph, which [Smith] maintains he took with his cell phone and downloaded onto his computer as a jpg file on January 31, 2016, appears to be identical to the photograph sent to the [GAL] that day, except it contains annotations by [Smith] indicating the location of “healing” bruises, bites and stab marks that are not apparent on the photograph. [Smith] said he immediately deleted the original photographs taken on his cell phone.

The district court also heard testimony from Smith, J.A.J.’s grandfather, and Lyons.

Lyons testified that J.A.J. got along well with his children and denied that J.A.J. was held

down physically or sexually abused in his home. Lyons testified that over the weekend of

January 16, 2016, when he last saw J.A.J., the family visited a “bounce” house, J.A.J.

behaved normally, and did not report any injuries.

Additionally, the district court received Dr. Gerdes’s written assessment, which

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