Jamarcus Thomas v. Louina Denis Thomas

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 22, 2017
DocketCA-0017-0295
StatusUnknown

This text of Jamarcus Thomas v. Louina Denis Thomas (Jamarcus Thomas v. Louina Denis Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jamarcus Thomas v. Louina Denis Thomas, (La. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

17-295

JAMARCUS THOMAS

VERSUS

LOUINA DENIS THOMAS

**********

APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-SEVENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF ST. LANDRY, NO. 16-0576 HONORABLE A. GERARD CASWELL, DISTRICT JUDGE

PHYLLIS M. KEATY JUDGE

Court composed of John D. Saunders, Billy Howard Ezell, and Phyllis M. Keaty, Judges.

JUDGMENT RENDERED AND OTHERWISE AFFIRMED.

Jamarcus Thomas In Proper Person 1241 Crochet Street Opelousas, Louisiana 70570 (337) 501-8933 Plaintiff/Appellant

William C. Vidrine Vidrine & Vidrine 711 West Pinhook Road Lafayette, Louisiana 70503 (337) 233-5195 Counsel for Defendant/Appellee: Louina Denis KEATY, Judge.

A father, in proper person, appeals a judgment concerning the custody, child

support, and visitation of his minor son. For the following reasons, we amend and

render.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY1

This matter has been pending since February 12, 2016, when Jamarcus

Thomas, through counsel, filed a petition for divorce from Louina Denis, whom he

married on October 9, 2015. In an amended petition, Mr. Thomas requested the

issuance of a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) to prevent Ms. Denis from

coming near his home or place of business. According to the pleadings filed by

Mr. Thomas, no children had been born of the marriage before the parties

separated in January 2016. In an answer and reconventional demand, Ms. Denis

asserted that she was “currently pregnant and due to give birth on July 2, 2016.”

She sought, and was granted, a TRO on April 27, 2016, preventing Mr. Thomas

from harassing her and from going to her home and place of business. Ms. Denis

gave birth to a son, Isaiah Jovan Thomas, on June 25, 2016. Paternity testing later

revealed a 99.99% probability that Mr. Thomas is Isaiah’s biological father.

According to court minutes dated July 11, 2016, the trial court vacated the earlier

granted TRO and entered a reciprocal order prohibiting the parties from harassing

each other and allowing the father limited visitation with the child. In early July

2016, Mr. Thomas’s original counsel filed a motion to withdraw on the basis that

Mr. Thomas had retained other representation. On July 25, 2016, Mr. Thomas, in

proper person, filed a motion for him and Ms. Denis to undergo mental health

evaluations pursuant to La.R.S. 9:331.

1 We will limit our historical analysis to matters relevant to this appeal. The parties appeared before a hearing officer (“HO”) on July 26, 2016,

following which the HO filed recommendations into the record. Among other

things, the HO recommended that the parties share joint custody of Isaiah, with

Ms. Denis being the domiciliary custodial parent and Mr. Thomas exercising

visitation according to a detailed schedule. Mr. Thomas was ordered to pay $246

per month in child support.2 Several days later, Mr. Thomas filed an objection to

the recommendation made by the HO. Following a September 12, 2016 hearing,

the trial court made the HO’s recommendations the interim order of the court,

subject to a few minor modifications regarding the visitation schedule.

Beginning in mid-August 2017, Mr. Thomas, in proper person, filed

multiple rules for contempt alleging that Ms. Denis committed various acts

interfering with and/or preventing his court-ordered visitation. He also filed a

motion to modify interim custody and child support. Contrarily, after Mr. Thomas

failed to pay a single penny of child support to her, Ms. Denis filed a single motion

for contempt against him.

The judgment being appealed was signed following a January 18, 2017

hearing at which Ms. Denis was represented by counsel and Mr. Thomas appeared

pro se. Before addressing the merits, the trial court noted that Mr. Thomas’s

current counsel had filed a motion to withdraw that morning, indicating that

Mr. Thomas no longer wanted his services. Upon having Mr. Thomas confirm his

desire to terminate counsel, the trial court signed the motion to withdraw, but

advised Mr. Thomas that his lack of representation could put him at a disadvantage.

After some discussion, the parties agreed to continue all issues regarding contempt

to a later date and to go forward with the issues of child support, custody, and

2 The HO calculated the amount of child support on a Joint Obligation Worksheet which was attached to the recommendations filed on July 26, 2016. 2 visitation.3 The hearing was then recessed to give the parties an opportunity to

reach an agreement regarding those matters. Upon resumption of the hearing, the

parties put a stipulation on the record agreeing to share joint custody of Isaiah, with

Ms. Denis being named the domiciliary parent and Mr. Thomas being entitled to

reasonable visitation. The parties also had an agreement as to when Mr. Thomas

would exercise visitation from March 2017 forward. The trial court then assisted

the parties in working out an agreement regarding Mr. Thomas’s visitation

schedule in January and February 2017 in light of some upcoming changes in his

work schedule. With the help of the trial court, the parties also came to an

agreement regarding the amounts of past and future child support owed from

Mr. Thomas to Ms. Denis. Mr. Thomas was sworn in and agreed on the record to

each item relating to visitation and child support. At the conclusion of the hearing,

the trial court ordered the mother’s attorney to prepare a judgment and send it to

the trial court and the father. The trial court explained that it would not sign the

judgment for five days to give Mr. Thomas the opportunity to dispute any part of

the judgment. In such case, Mr. Thomas was directed to telephone the trial court,

and if it determined that the “problem [wa]s real,” it would attempt to fix the

problem with the mother’s attorney or reset the matter for hearing.4 The trial court

stated that it would sign the proposed judgment if five days passed without any call

from Mr. Thomas.

3 According to the transcript, the trial court observed that the father had filed more than ten motions for contempt when the alleged violations could have all been presented in a single motion. Thereafter, the father admitted that he was aware that his “filings for contempt [we]re kind of absurd.” In addition, when questioned about a motion for contempt filed on behalf of the mother, Mr. Thomas admitted that he had not paid any child support up until that time. He explained that his nonpayment was due to the fact that Ms. Denis had referred to Isaiah by her last name rather than “Thomas” on the child-support paperwork. 4 Mr. Thomas was told not to send the trial court a letter or file a motion if he disagreed with any part of the proposed judgment. 3 A judgment prepared by Ms. Denis’s attorney was signed on February 9,

2017. The judgment referenced a joint custody plan which was attached to and

made a part of the judgment. Mr. Thomas timely appealed and is now before this

court, in proper person, asserting that: 1) the judgment did not reflect what the

parties agreed to with regard to January and February 2017, thus conflicting with

his work schedule and making it impossible for him to exercise visitation during

those months; 2) the judgment did not incorporate the parties’ agreement that he

would be furnished with a bill showing the cost of the child’s day care; and 3)

although he called the trial court to point out the inconsistencies between the

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Jamarcus Thomas v. Louina Denis Thomas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jamarcus-thomas-v-louina-denis-thomas-lactapp-2017.