Jaide v. Jaide

CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 2017
DocketA-17-311
StatusPublished

This text of Jaide v. Jaide (Jaide v. Jaide) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jaide v. Jaide, (Neb. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL (Memorandum Web Opinion)

JAIDE V. JAIDE

NOTICE: THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PERMANENT PUBLICATION AND MAY NOT BE CITED EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY NEB. CT. R. APP. P. § 2-102(E).

CHARISS N. JAIDE, APPELLANT, V.

JOSHUA L. JAIDE, APPELLEE.

Filed December 5, 2017. No. A-17-311.

Appeal from the District Court for Webster County: STEPHEN R. ILLINGWORTH, Judge. Affirmed. Mitchell C. Stehlik, of Lauritsen, Brownell, Brostrom & Stehlik, P.C., L.L.O., for appellant. Joshua L. Jaide, pro se.

MOORE, Chief Judge, and INBODY and BISHOP Judges. BISHOP, Judge. Chariss N. Jaide appeals from the Webster County District Court’s decree dissolving her marriage to Joshua L. Jaide. Chariss appeals only the court’s determination related to custody of the parties’ minor children. Finding no abuse of discretion, we affirm. BACKGROUND Chariss and Joshua were married on July 2, 2011; they have two children: a daughter, Kaylen, and a son, Hunter. Chariss filed for divorce on May 11, 2016, and her complaint indicates she was living in Hastings, Adams County, Nebraska, and Joshua was living in Bladen, Webster County, Nebraska. Chariss filed a motion for temporary custody and child support shortly after filing her complaint.

-1- A hearing on “[t]emporary matters” took place on July 25, 2016. Chariss appeared with counsel; Joshua appeared pro se. The court received Chariss’ affidavit, then put Joshua under oath to answer questions. Joshua testified he lived with his parents, along with his girlfriend and one of her children in a 4-bedroom house. He indicated his mother took care of the children while he worked from 7 a.m. until approximately 5 p.m., “like a day care.” At that time, the children were ages 6 and 3. Joshua argued he should have temporary custody because “the kids have grown up in Bladen their whole life[,]” and “it is a safer community.” He claimed there would be a number of sex offenders living within one mile of where his children would be living if in Hastings, whereas, there were “zero sex offenders in Bladen.” Joshua also indicated he or his mother had provided care of the children since “day one,” and since separation, “the kids have been under the house that [Joshua] live[s] in, and [he] has taken complete control of them.” Chariss’ affidavit stated she had been the primary caregiver for the children since their oldest child’s (Kaylen’s) birth until the parties separated in 2015. Since Kaylen had started school at the time of the parties’ separation, the children stayed with Joshua and his parents so Kaylen could go to school in Bladen. She and Joshua had “roughly a 50/50 custody” until later in 2015 when Chariss moved to Hastings for further work opportunities. The children stayed with Joshua and his parents. Chariss claimed Joshua’s mother “essentially took care of the children for the entirety of the time.” And although Joshua “does care for the children,” Chariss asserted he did not provide much of the daily care. Chariss indicated she worked 40 hours per week (night shift, 10 p.m. to 5 a.m.) at Casey’s General Store in Hastings and lived in a 2-bedroom apartment there with her boyfriend. She alleged she had a babysitter (her aunt) “next door” who could provide daycare if the children were with her. Chariss’ affidavit also asserted Joshua refused to allow her to see the children unless she “signed some sort of agreement.” (Joshua testified he wanted her to sign an agreement that she would “have the kids back at a certain time and have that notarized.”) Chariss was also sworn in and in response to a question from the court, testified her boyfriend did not have a criminal record. She also indicated her suggestion for parenting time was much like Joshua’s request for alternating weekends and holidays, although rather than 6 weeks in the summer, she preferred keeping the summer the same schedule but adding one evening a week “to come and visit them.” Before concluding the hearing on temporary matters, the district court stressed to the parties that a “pretty common dynamic among young people getting a divorce” is, “Whoever gets custody thinks they own the kids. They do not. You’re both parents of these children. You’re to treat each other with respect around these children, not say bad things about each other in front of those children.” A temporary order was entered August 1, 2016, which awarded joint legal custody to the parties, with Joshua having primary physical custody. Chariss was given alternating weekend parenting time, a couple hours one weeknight, and alternating holidays. Chariss was ordered to pay $326 per month for child support, and the parties were ordered to engage in mediation within 60 days of the entry of the temporary order. Following a pretrial hearing on October 17, 2016, trial took place on November 17. Chariss appeared with counsel; Joshua again appeared pro se. Evidence adduced at trial pertinent to custody (the only issue challenged on appeal) is summarized next.

-2- Chariss testified that until she and Joshua separated in the middle of May 2015, she “normally” took the children to appointments and met with teachers, and Joshua “did a lot of the cooking,” while she “did most of the work with the kids.” Immediately following separation, Chariss had the children on Wednesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays, and every other weekend, while Joshua had Mondays and Tuesdays and every other weekend. They followed this schedule until Chariss moved to Hastings about 5 months later, or “late 2015.” This caused a change in parenting time in that Joshua now added Wednesdays, while Chariss had Thursdays and Fridays. At that time, Kaylen was attending school in Bladen. In March or April 2016, Chariss suggested the children begin attending school in Hastings, but Joshua disagreed. Chariss claimed that after she made this suggestion, Joshua would not allow her parenting time with the children any more. She said she had to wait for the temporary order to see the children again, although Joshua did let the children call her “once a week for a couple minutes.” (On cross-examination by Joshua, Chariss clarified that Joshua did offer to allow her to see the children so long as she would sign an agreement stating when she would have the children and when she would have them back to Joshua.) Chariss was still living in an apartment in Hastings with the same boyfriend by the time of trial. She offered, and the court received without objection, photographs of her 2-bedroom apartment. Her apartment is within 5 blocks of the elementary school Kaylen, a first grader, would attend; Hunter, not yet of school age, would “go to the Headstart.” By the time of trial, Chariss had been working at Casey’s General Store about 10 months, working 40 hours per week, with “typical hours” of 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. Her options for child care are her boyfriend, and also her aunt, who lives next door. Chariss acknowledged that her boyfriend owns handguns, and that he had carried a handgun when around the children in the past. He no longer carried a handgun when around the children, because according to Chariss, “Josh didn’t like the idea of the gun being on [the boyfriend’s] leg when the children were around.” So she and her boyfriend had a discussion and they decided that “it was better just kept up and away from them.” The guns are kept in a locked gun safe in their home. Chariss said Joshua was a hunter, and he had guns and knives when she lived with him and he had them around the children. Chariss discussed fun activities she did with the children, like going horseback riding, going to the state fair, and going to parks and walking around. “We read a lot at my house. Especially before bedtime. We come up with a lot of games.” Chariss testified about daily routines with the children, as well as her use of a “time-out chair” for discipline.

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Bluebook (online)
Jaide v. Jaide, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jaide-v-jaide-nebctapp-2017.