James Andrew Peck v. Courtney Ann Peck

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 7, 2019
Docket344124
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
James Andrew Peck v. Courtney Ann Peck, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

JAMES ANDREW PECK, UNPUBLISHED February 7, 2019 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 344124 Oakland Circuit Court COURTNEY ANN PECK, LC No. 2014-822939-DM

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: GLEICHER, P.J., and STEPHENS and O’BRIEN, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Since the parties’ 2014 separation, the circuit court has entered several orders governing custody of the parties’ two daughters. Defendant appeals the court’s most recent mandate—a May 17, 2018 order granting permanent sole legal and physical custody to plaintiff and continuing to limit defendant’s parenting time to two hours of weekly visits supervised by a therapist. Defendant contends that Oakland Circuit Court Judge Karen McDonald, who took over the proceedings on December 30, 2016, should have been disqualified as she previously worked at the law firm that represented defendant in related proceedings. In relation to the current order, defendant challenges the circuit court’s exclusion of certain evidence and contends that the court misrepresented that its evidentiary hearing regarding custody and parenting time would only pertain to the admissibility of evidence. She also contests the court’s judgment that its custody order is in the children’s best interests. We discern no errors and affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

Plaintiff filed for divorce on August 20, 2014, after defendant accused him of domestic violence against her1 and falsely accused him of sexually abusing their children. Defendant’s parents had also initiated a probate court action to have defendant committed to a residential

1 Plaintiff was arrested on suspicion of domestic violence in June 2014 and was later convicted and sentenced to probation for “disorderly person.” facility to address alcohol, drug, and mental health issues. Before the divorce could be finalized, defendant had a baby boy with a Florida man with whom she had been having an affair. She was arrested for fleeing from the police at high speeds with her baby in her vehicle. Then, defendant kidnapped her daughters after an agreed-upon vacation to northern Michigan, fleeing to Florida. Ultimately, the court limited defendant to supervised parenting time with a therapist.

The court later revisited its parenting time order and determined that awarding sole legal and physical custody to plaintiff was in the children’s best interests. Specifically, defendant remained unemployed and had been living with her young son and an aunt. Defendant and her boyfriend had engaged in a physical altercation in her aunt’s garage. Her aunt summoned the police and evicted defendant. Defendant had since been living at a hotel. Defendant had also purchased a home on an Indian reservation in the Upper Peninsula. The court found reasonable plaintiff’s fears that defendant would abscond with the children to the Upper Peninsula if allowed unsupervised parenting time. The court also accepted the testimony of Dr. Larry Friedberg that defendant was not yet ready for unsupervised parenting time, let alone shared custody, of her daughters.

II. JUDICIAL BIAS

Defendant first contends that Judge Karen McDonald should have disqualified herself from these proceedings. Defendant notes that earlier in the proceedings, when Judge Elizabeth Pezzetti presided, the court’s rulings were not wholly against her. This tide appeared to change when Judge McDonald took over. Defendant contends that Judge McDonald was biased against her because the judge was previously a partner at Jaffe, Raitt, Heuer & Weiss. Defendant retained an attorney from Jaffe to represent her in “the involuntary committal and guardianship proceedings” initiated by defendant’s parents in the probate court. Jaffe terminated the relationship after only three months because defendant did not pay her bill. Defendant contends that Judge McDonald’s former employment allowed her access to the case file outside of her role as judge and suggests that defendant’s failure to pay her bill could have had a negative financial impact on McDonald, coloring her view of the case.

Had Judge McDonald been employed at Jaffe while defendant’s divorce proceedings were pending, and had Jaffe represented defendant in the divorce, further inquiry would have been required to gauge her knowledge of the matter. MCR 2.003(C)(1)(c)-(f) support judicial disqualification when the judge “has personal knowledge of disputed evidentiary facts concerning the proceeding,” was “consulted or employed as an attorney in the matter in controversy,” was a member of a law firm that represented a party “within the preceding two years,” or “has more than a de minimis economic interest in the subject matter in controversy.” However, Judge McDonald was elected to the Oakland Circuit Court in November 2012. 2 Defendant did not retain an attorney at the Jaffe firm until September 2014, almost two years later. As Judge McDonald was no longer connected with Jaffe when defendant hired the firm, the judge could have no personal knowledge of the facts underlying this case or the probate

2 See (accessed January 7, 2019).

-2- matter, could not have served as an attorney or been consulted regarding this matter, and could have experienced no financial impact from defendant’s failure to pay her bill.

Defendant argues that Judge McDonald should have been disqualified under MCR 2.003(C)(1)(e) because she was a partner or member of Jaffe within the two years preceding the filing of the divorce suit. However, Judge McDonald did not take over the case until December 2016, four years after she left her employ at Jaffe. Moreover, as soon as Judge McDonald discovered that defendant had briefly been represented by a Jaffe attorney, the judge disclosed her prior relationship with the firm:

The Court: I notice[d] that [defendant] w[as] represented at one time by Jaffe, Raitt, Heuer, and Weiss.

[Defendant]: I was.

The Court: That is my former law firm. I don’t remember ever meeting you and had nothing to do with your representation. Is that true, because I have a bad memory? I never met you, right?

[Defendant]: I wouldn’t know.

The Court: It was [Elizabeth L.] Luchenbach. I’ve never met [defendant]. I just wanted to make that clear. I needed to disclose that.

It is clear that Judge McDonald would not have met defendant in her role as an attorney at Jaffe as McDonald no longer worked at the law firm. Given the passage of time and the lack of any relationship between Judge McDonald and defendant, disqualification was not warranted under subsection (e).

In any event, defendant has cited no particular act demonstrating Judge McDonald’s alleged deep-seated favoritism or bias. Accordingly, we need not remand for further proceedings before a different judge.

III. ADMISSIBILITY OF FRIEDBERG REPORT

Defendant challenges the circuit court’s preclusion of a report prepared by Dr. Friedberg, documenting his observations during supervised parenting time sessions. In the fall of 2017, defendant filed a show cause motion against plaintiff because he failed to bring their daughters to a supervised parenting time session with Dr. Friedberg. It appears that Dr. Friedberg had recommended that supervised parenting time be moved to the home of defendant’s aunt in Bloomfield Hills. At the December 13, 2017 show cause hearing, plaintiff stated that he disagreed with the doctor’s recommendation because of defendant’s history of parental kidnapping and the danger that defendant would flee with the children to her Upper Peninsula home. Plaintiff also questioned Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
James Andrew Peck v. Courtney Ann Peck, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-andrew-peck-v-courtney-ann-peck-michctapp-2019.