In the Matter of Marriage of Holcomb and Holcomb

888 P.2d 1046, 132 Or. App. 498, 1995 Ore. App. LEXIS 86
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJanuary 25, 1995
Docket15-92-08338; CA A80748
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 888 P.2d 1046 (In the Matter of Marriage of Holcomb and Holcomb) 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 Holcomb and Holcomb, 888 P.2d 1046, 132 Or. App. 498, 1995 Ore. App. LEXIS 86 (Or. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

*500 LANDAU, J.

Mother appeals a dissolution judgment in which the trial court granted custody of the parties’ 19-month-old child to father. We reverse.

Mother is 26 years old, and father is 34. The parties were married slightly less than two years. Mother has two college degrees and plans to complete a Ph.D. in marketing. Father has a Ph.D. and works as a toxicologist. While they were married, the parties lived in Corvallis. Father worked in Eugene and commuted to and from work each day. Mother worked full time in Corvallis. When the child was born, mother stayed home for six weeks and then returned to work part time. Mother took primary care of the child, including arranging day care and leaving work to visit and to breastfeed the child. The child was ill much of the time. Mother missed more than three weeks of work because of the child’s illnesses and, ultimately, quit work altogether because of the child’s health in order to care for the child on a full-time basis.

Father spent little time caring for the child. He went to the doctor with mother and the child once. He occasionally changed diapers. He also attempted to bottle feed the child, but the child preferred to be breast-fed. Father never bathed the child. He did other work around the house, but he testified that, because of his two-hour daily commute, he was often tired at the end of the day and did not do more.

The parties’ relationship soon disintegrated. Mother wanted to complete her education at Northwestern University in Illinois. She says that she and father discussed this, agreed to it and sent away for application material together. Father denies that any such discussions took place. Mother says that, when she took steps to follow through on those plans, father threatened to “get her.” Father denies ever saying that. Mother asserts that father verbally and physically abused her, that he grabbed her and dragged her across the floor, that he threw drawers, toys and other objects, and that, on one occasion, he grabbed mother’s purse out from under the child while she was nursing, all of which frightened the child. Mother kept a diary that shows a pattern of father’s fits of temper occurring about every two weeks. She says that when she and father had disagreements, it visibly upset the *501 child, who would often cry. Father denies any sort of abusive behavior.

Mother left home with the child to live in a women’s shelter and did not return until father no longer lived there. She obtained a restraining order requiring father’s visits with the child to be supervised and requiring him to stay away from mother entirely. Father refused to visit the child on a supervised basis. Ultimately the parties agreed to unsupervised visits, and father did visit the child regularly. Meanwhile, mother petitioned for dissolution and requested custody of the child. Mother intended to take the child with her to Illinois, where she had been offered a full scholarship, plus a stipend, to complete her education at the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University.

The parties selected a mutually agreeable evaluator who found no psychiatric reason why either could not be a custodial parent. However, the expert chose mother as the custodial parent because she is more nurturing, more ‘ ‘educative,” more likely to foster the child’s relationship with both parents, is the primary parent, is breast-feeding the child and, thus, it would cause a more traumatic upheaval to give custody to father. The expert found that mother’s relationship with the child is more animated, relaxed, has greater physical contact, is more reinforcing and that mother is better able to forecast the child’s needs. The expert found father, although a loving parent, is “highly defended,” “quite critical and judgmental,” more cautious, conservative, less flexible, and more restrictive and anxious with the child. The expert found that the child “was more regressed, more tentative, tended to be less creative in her play when she was in proximity to her father.”

The trial court awarded custody to father. In a letter opinion, the trial court expressed disapproval of mother’s plans to attend graduate school in Illinois. According to the trial court, those plans demonstrate that she is concerned only with her own best interests, to the exclusion of father’s interests in having a relationship with the child. The trial court acknowledged that the fact that mother was breastfeeding the child at the time presented a “serious obstacle.” Nevertheless, it concluded that “[t]hat circumstance is [mother’s] doing, not the court’s.” According to the trial *502 court, mother’s continued breast-feeding of the child simply-represented “a further example of her single-minded eagerness to pursue her own interests irrespective of their impact on the child and [father].”

Mother immediately moved to reopen the record. In an affidavit to the court, she testified that she was willing to forgo any educational opportunities in Illinois and that she feared for the child’s welfare if father is awarded custody. The trial court denied the motion with the following comment:

“The Court hereby recuses [itself] from all further matters in this case. This Court has lost confidence in [father]. He is not as wholeheartedly interested in maximizing the child’s time with her mother as the Court believed from his trial testimony. The Court has lost confidence in [mother]. The Court believed her testimony that her life’s ambition was to obtain a Ph.D. * * * Should she be awarded custody nothing[,] it is presumed, would prevent her from enrolling at the Kellogg School in [the] fall of 1994. For these reasons, the Court feels it can no longer hear matters on their merits in this case.”

The court then entered the dissolution judgment awarding father custody.

Mother appeals, assigning error to the trial court’s failure to award her custody of the child and to its failure to reopen the case before entering the final dissolution judgment.

We review the dissolution judgment de novo. ORS 19.125(3). We understand that the decision of the trial court in child custody cases is considered persuasive. Smith and Smith, 290 Or 567, 572, 624 P2d 114 (1981). Nevertheless, it does not bind us. As we said in Sleight and Cazone, 100 Or App 325, 328, 786 P2d 202 (1990):

“Our duty is to examine the evidence in the record and reach our own conclusions as to what is in the best interests of the child.”

Moreover, in this case, the trial court did not make any findings concerning the best interests of the child to which we may give deference. The trial court’s initial decision was predicated not on findings about the interests of the child, but *503 rather on its apparent disdain for mother’s educational ambitions and on her continued breast feeding of the child. In addition, the trial court later washed its hands of both parties upon ruling on mother’s motion to reopen.

ORS 107.137

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Bluebook (online)
888 P.2d 1046, 132 Or. App. 498, 1995 Ore. App. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-marriage-of-holcomb-and-holcomb-orctapp-1995.