Jamie Killian Coody v. John Allen Coody

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 12, 2020
DocketJAC-0020-0071
StatusUnknown

This text of Jamie Killian Coody v. John Allen Coody (Jamie Killian Coody v. John Allen Coody) 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
Jamie Killian Coody v. John Allen Coody, (La. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

20-071

JAMIE KILLIAN COODY

VERSUS

JOHN ALLEN COODY

**********

APPEAL FROM THE THIRTY-SIXTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF BEAUREGARD, NO. 2010-0168 HONORABLE C. KERRY ANDERSON, DISTRICT JUDGE

JONATHAN W. PERRY JUDGE

Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, Chief Judge, Candyce G. Perret, and Jonathan W. Perry, Judges.

AFFIRMED. Elvin C. Fontenot, Jr. Attorney at Law 110 East Texas St. Leesville, Louisiana 71446 (337) 239-2684 Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellant: Jamie Killian Coody

David L. Wallace Attorney at Law 518 N. Pine Street DeRidder, Louisiana 70634 (337) 462-0473 Counsel for Defendant/Appellee: John Allen Coody

Bobby Holmes Attorney at Law 1800 Ryan St., Ste. 107 Lake Charles, Louisiana 70601 (337) 221-3028 Counsel for the Minor Children: Remington Coody and Brycen Coody PERRY, Judge. In this child custody dispute, the mother appeals the trial court’s judgment

which rejected her claim for sole custody and maintained her as the domiciliary

parent but utilized the implemental order to designate the father with the authority

over medical treatment and the children’s extracurricular activities. We affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Jamie Killian Coody (“Jamie”) and John Allen Coody (“John”)1 were married

on February 3, 2003 and were granted a divorce in 2010. At the time of their divorce,

Jamie and John had two minor sons, Remington and Brycen,2 born on October 12,

2004, and July 11, 2006, respectively. Ever since their divorce, Jamie and John have

shared the joint custody of their two sons, and Jamie was designated as the

domiciliary parent with the authority to make all decisions regarding their sons.3

On September 3, 2014, after considering pleadings and evidence, the trial

court, among other incidental rulings, maintained joint custody and Jamie’s

designation as the domiciliary parent, but detailed the parents’ allocation of the time

periods during which each parent shall have physical custody of the children,

ordered the parents to mediate every twenty-eight days, and determined an amount

of child support and any unpaid medical bills that John may owe.

1 By virtue of Uniform Rules–Courts of Appeal, Rules 5-2 and 5-1, there is no requirement that we preserve the identity of the parties. Accordingly, we have referred to the parties’ given names. 2 The youngest son’s name is spelled differently throughout the appellate record. For consistency, we have chosen to refer to him as Brycen. 3 The record does not reflect whether the initial custody and visitation award was by agreement of the parties or a considered decree. However, the record does show the subsequent two judgments, that of September 3, 2014, and February 8, 2017, were considered decrees. Thereafter, on February 8, 2017, again after a trial on the merits, the trial court

found Jamie and John in contempt of court, 4 continued the requirement that the

parents meet with Mark Ifland (“Mr. Ifland”) every twenty-eight days, ordered the

two children to undergo individual and family counseling as needed, decreed that

the counselor report to the court after six months regarding recommendations as to

any modifications or changes to periods of physical custody, continued joint legal

custody and Jamie’s designation as the domiciliary parent, and tweaked the parents’

periods of physical custody yet again.

On February 23, 2018, John filed a rule to change the designation of Jamie as

the domiciliary parent or to return the periods of physical custody to that decreed on

September 3, 2014. He also requested that Jamie be found in contempt of court for

failing to allow him physical custody of the children on multiple occasions.

On March 1, 2018, John filed a motion for the issuance of a civil warrant for

the return of his sons for purposes of court-ordered visitation. Forming the basis of

this motion, John alleged that Jamie had recently denied him visitation with his sons

on February 27, 2018, that this course of conduct by Jamie had occurred on at least

three other occasions, and that he feared it would occur prospectively. Shortly

thereafter, on March 19, 2018, Jamie filed a motion seeking sole custody of the two

children.

The trial court conducted hearings on the cross-custody motions over three

days, November 28, 2018, January 11, 2019, and August 20, 2019. After providing

extensive oral reasons for judgment in which it found neither party proved a material

change in circumstances to alter either joint custody or Jamie’s designation as the

4 The record is unclear as to the basis of the contempt. However, the judgment of February 8, 2017, does show that the trial court gave the parties suspended jail sentences and provided that John could purge himself of contempt by providing insurance cards to Jamie within ten days, and Jamie could purge herself of contempt by cancelling the immediate income assignment order within ten days. 2 domiciliary parent, the trial court maintained its earlier judgments, awarding joint

legal custody of the two children to Jamie and John, designated Jamie as the

domiciliary parent, found Jamie in contempt of court, and ordered counseling for the

two children and the parents with Bruce Plauché (“Mr. Plauché”). Nonetheless, the

trial court modified the implementation order, designating John with the authority

and responsibility for making medical decisions regarding the children and for

making decisions about the children’s sports, band, and extracurricular activities.

Jamie appealed, contending that the trial court erred: (1) in modifying the joint

custody implementation order to designate John with the authority to make the

medical decisions as well as decisions about the children’s sports, band, and

extracurricular activities along with the responsibility for making certain the children

attend all activities in which they participate; (2) in finding a material change of

circumstance which affected the welfare of the children; (3) in failing to state for the

record any findings that established it was in the best interest of these minor children

to award domiciliary status to John over certain affairs of the children; and (4) in

denying Jamie’s request to modify the joint custody to sole custody to allow the

children to participate in normal, regular school activities as well as extracurricular

activities. 5

STANDARD OF REVIEW

The trial court’s factual conclusions are given substantial deference by

appellate courts in child custody matters. Steinebach v. Steinebach, 07-38 (La.App.

3 Cir. 5/2/07), 957 So.2d 291. Unless there is a legal error, “[t]he determinations

5 Although in her brief to this court Jamie makes passing reference to that part of the trial court’s judgment which found her in contempt of court for withholding her sons on five occasions (1/12/18, 2/16/18, 3/2/18, 9/28/18, and 10/12/18) from court-ordered physical custody with their father, she neither assigned this as an error nor argued in brief that such a decision was erroneous. She also makes no argument about the modified physical custody schedule the trial court imposed and the court-mandated counseling. Thus, these three aspects of the trial court judgment are not before us. 3 made by the trial judge as to custody . . . will not be set aside unless it clearly appears

[from the record] that there has been an abuse of discretion[.]” Nugent v. Nugent,

232 So.2d 521, 523 (La.App. 3 Cir. 1970); see also Mulkey v.

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