In the Matter of Marriage of Brinkly and Brinkly

195 P.3d 405, 223 Or. App. 113, 2008 Ore. App. LEXIS 1460
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedOctober 15, 2008
DocketC032299DRC; A137235
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 195 P.3d 405 (In the Matter of Marriage of Brinkly and Brinkly) 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 the Matter of Marriage of Brinkly and Brinkly, 195 P.3d 405, 223 Or. App. 113, 2008 Ore. App. LEXIS 1460 (Or. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

*115 LANDAU, P. J.

In this domestic relations case, father appeals a supplemental judgment modifying custody and parenting time. We affirm.

Father filed a dissolution petition on June 16, 2003, and sought full custody of the parties’ son. The dissolution judgment was entered on December 20, 2004. At the time of the dissolution judgment, mother had a methamphetamine problem and had been a victim of domestic violence. The child had been removed from mother’s care in July 2004 and had been living with father since that time.

The trial court gave father custody of the child, who was nearly five years old at the time. Mother was awarded unsupervised parenting time with the child every other weekend, one evening during each week, and alternating holidays. The dissolution judgment required father to complete

15 months of parenting classes and 24 months of counseling for the child.

On July 26, 2007, mother moved to modify the dissolution judgment with regard to child custody and to award her sole custody of the child. At the hearing on October 8, 2007, Lilly, mother’s mental health counselor for the Hope Spring Transitional Housing Program, testified. Lilly explained that the program provides counseling, drug testing, and financial assistance to single mothers struggling with drug dependence and domestic violence. Since mother entered that program in May 2007, Lilly had met with her for 16 counseling sessions and nine sessions of a domestic violence group. Noting that mother had not used drugs in more than one year, Lilly diagnosed mother with “methamphetamine dependence in full, sustained remission.” Lilly did not diagnose mother with any other mental health issue. Lilly also testified that every time she had visited mother’s home it was neat, clean, and organized, and that mother’s attendance and preparation for their counseling sessions was always very good.

The drug and alcohol counselor for the Hope Spring Program, McClain, also testified on mother’s behalf. Mother had passed all of the program’s random drug testing except *116 for one in which she tested positive for opiates, which was consistent with mother’s pain medication and mother’s warning that she might test positive because of her medication. Mother attended a weekly group counseling session facilitated by McClain. McClain also conducted bi-monthly individual counseling sessions with mother in mother’s home. During those visits, McClain had observed mother’s parenting skills and believed that mother was loving and attentive, and set appropriate boundaries for the child. According to McClain, mother had been clean since August 20, 2006, and McClain had “no question about [mother’s] sobriety at this time.” Before joining the Hope Spring Program, mother had successfully completed two other drug recovery programs. Mother attended Narcotics Anonymous (NA) meetings twice each week and continued to work that program’s steps with a sponsor. Although McClain noted that methamphetamine use always requires an “ongoing recovery,” she testified that mother’s “prognosis is excellent” because mother had continued to work her recovery program.

Hauptman, who met mother during their participation in recovery programs, also testified. She had seen mother with the child and observed that mother had good parenting skills.

Mother also called father to testify. Mother questioned father about his methods of discipline, to which father responded that he “like[s] to grab [the child’s] ear and hold it, just to get his attention. I don’t try and pull it off” Father testified that, although he had completed the 15 months of parenting classes, he had kept the child in counseling for only 10 weeks because it became cost-prohibitive. The child attended four different schools in two years. The child attends daycare before and after school to accommodate father’s work schedule. The child has a half-sibling who also lives with father; the sibling is close in age to the child and shares a close relationship with the child.

Mother also testified. She stated that she had dramatically improved her life since the initial determination of custody: she had established her own residence; she had successfully completed an outpatient drug and alcohol program; and she was participating in a transitional housing program *117 to provide her with financial assistance while she developed the professional skills that she needed to be self-sufficient. She was the primary physical custodian for the child during eight of the previous 15 months, except for every other weekend when the child visited with father. Mother had seen father slap the child’s face on three occasions. Mother had told the child that he has two dads and that father is not his “real” father. Mother smokes cigarettes; although she usually smokes outside, she occasionally smokes in her bedroom. The child has a 16-month-old half-sibling who lives with mother.

Father responded by calling one witness, his childcare provider, McClees. McClees testified that, over the course of the year that the child had attended her daycare, she had never seen any signs of abuse on either of father’s children. She stated that she believed that father is a fit parent.

After excusing McClees, the trial court asked father if he had “[ajnything further,” to which father responded, “That should do.” The trial court then stated, “You have a right to make a closing argument, and I’m not going to welcome it, because I think I’ve heard everything I need to hear from both of you. I think I know your positions.” The parties made no closing statements.

The court found that a substantial change in circumstances had occurred since the initial dissolution judgment in two ways. First, the court determined that father’s failure to complete the required 24 months of counseling for the child constituted a substantial change in circumstances. The court also determined that, in light of the fact that mother’s methamphetamine dependence was key to the initial custody determination, mother’s “fairly long-term recovery” constituted a substantial change in circumstances.

The court then analyzed whether the custody change would be in the best interests of the child. The court found that, although father is “perhaps more financially stable than Mother,” mother provides a more nurturing environment for the child. The court drew attention to father’s testimony that he routinely grabbed and held the child’s ear as a form of discipline. Although father denied ever striking the *118 child, the court found credible mother’s testimony about seeing father slap the child on three occasions. The court also noted that mother had been a physical custodian for the child during the past year or so.

For those reasons, the court entered a supplemental judgment modifying custody and parenting time to award full custody of the child to mother, with parenting time for father. The supplemental judgment prohibited the following: physical discipline of the child by either party, mother’s smoking in her home and vehicle, and mother’s statements to the child suggesting that father is not his “real” father. The change in custody became effective on October 21, 2007, and has been in place since that time.

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Related

In Re Marriage of Sconce
274 P.3d 303 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2012)
Long and Leduc
241 P.3d 340 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2010)

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Bluebook (online)
195 P.3d 405, 223 Or. App. 113, 2008 Ore. App. LEXIS 1460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-marriage-of-brinkly-and-brinkly-orctapp-2008.