Jennie E. Aranovitch v. David E. Versel

2015 ME 146, 127 A.3d 542, 2015 Me. LEXIS 159
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 17, 2015
DocketDocket Yor-14-420
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2015 ME 146 (Jennie E. Aranovitch v. David E. Versel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jennie E. Aranovitch v. David E. Versel, 2015 ME 146, 127 A.3d 542, 2015 Me. LEXIS 159 (Me. 2015).

Opinion

JABAR, J.

[¶ 1] Jennie E. Aranovitch appeals from an order entered by the District Court (Biddeford, Janette,. J.) granting David E. Versel’s motion to modify the parties’ divorce judgment and awarding him primary residence of the parties’ minor children. Aranovitch challenges several of the court’s-findings and contends that the court’s'remaining findings are insufficient to support the ordered modification. She' also"argues that the court erred by failing to apply the correct legal standard. We reject these contentions, and affirm. ,

*544 I. BACKGROUND

[¶ 2] In December 2009, Aranovitch and Versel were divorced pursuant to a stipulated judgment that awarded Arano-vitch primary residence of, and Versel specific rights of contact with, the parties’ minor son and daughter. The judgment recited the parties’ agreement that neither would “cohabit with and, thereby, expose the minor children to anyone who abuses ... alcohol,” nor “allow the children to be passengers in a vehicle driven by someone whose reflexes and/or judgment is compromised due to ... alcohol consumption.”

[¶ 3] In December 2010, Versel moved to modify the divorce judgment, alleging that Aranovitch was cohabiting with Jacques Blais and thereby exposing the children to a person who abused alcohol. The court (Foster; J.) held a hearing on the motion in August 2011, and took the matter under advisement. The court’s order on that motion contains the following findings of historical fact.

[¶4] Aranovitch was in a relationship with Blais before the divorce was finalized, and Versel insisted on the judgment’s language regarding the children’s exposure to alcohol because he was concerned about Blais’s drinking. In 2010, Versel remarried and moved to Georgia. Aranovitch and Blais began cohabiting and devised strategies to minimize the impact of Blais’s drinking on the family. Despite these strategies, Blais was charged with operating under the influence (OUI) in February 2010, and again in August 2010. With regard to both charges, Aranovitch was convinced that Blais had not been intoxicated, and that his blood and breath tests were inaccurate. In August 2010, Blais pleaded guilty to the February OUI charge and his license was suspended for a period of ninety days.

[¶ 5] In the fall of 2010, Aranovitch arranged for the parties’ daughter to attend daycare for part of the day. She allowed the daughter to spend the remainder of the day at home with Blais, who had lost his job due to his OUI conviction. On October 27, 2010, while his license suspension was in effect, Blais picked the daughter up from daycare and drove her home without Aranovitch’s knowledge. The daycare provider smelled alcohol on Blais’s breath and the police were notified, resulting in a third OUI charge. Blais pleaded guilty to that charge and served twenty-three days in jail. When he learned about the daycare incident, Versel asked Arano-vitch not to allow Blais to resume living with her and the children. Aranovitch refused this request and permitted Blais to return to her home upon his release, explaining to Versel that Blais had been sober in jail and had enrolled in an outpatient program to maintain sobriety in her home.

[¶ 6] The court also noted that, during the August 2011 hearing, Aranovitch insisted that she had not violated the terms of the judgment, explaining that Blais used but did not abuse alcohol, and that he did not drink around the children because he only drank outside.

[¶ 7] In the resulting order entered in September 2011, the court stated that it was disturbed by Aranovitch’s “focus on explaining away the problem,” and concluded that it was “naiveté at best, and self-deception at worst, to believe that [Blais’s] long-term, serious substance abuse ha[d] been resolved through a short-term program.” The court found that Ar-anovitch had not complied with the divorce judgment, and that she would not comply in the future without “tighter strictures.” The court consequently amended the divorce judgment to specifically prohibit Blais from consuming alcohol, or being under the influence of alcohol in the resi *545 dence or in the presence of- the children, 1 and to prohibit Aranovitch from-allowing unsupervised contact between the children and Blais. The court also increased Ver-sel’s summer visitation with the children.

[¶ 8] ■ In the fall of 2013, Versel moved to modify the children’s primary residence, requested a prohibition on the children’s contact with Blais, and filed' a motion for “an emergency interim hearing;” Versel claimed that Blais drank regularly in-'Ara-novitch’s home, and suggested that Blais’s intoxication had caused an injury to the parties’ son. On October 31, 2013, a family law magistrate (Cadwallader.; M.) began an interim hearing and, after the first day, entered an order prohibiting Aranovitch from allowing Blais to be at her residence;

[¶ 9] After the interim hearing was completed in December 2013, the magistrate entered an interim order, finding that although “[b]oth parents are capable of providing primary residential care for the children,” she “continuefd] to have concerns about Mr. Blais.” The magistrate found that the children had likely' been exposed to Blais’s intoxication since the September 2011 order, and prohibited Ara-novitch. from allowing contact between the children and Blais.

[¶ 10] The court (Janette, J.) held a final hearing on Versel’s motion to modify in August 2014, and in an order dated September 8, 2014, granted Versel the right to provide the children’s primary residence, and prohibited Aranovitch from allowing any unsupervised contact between the children and Blais. In response to a timely motion for findings by Aranbvitch, the court issued the following findings, each of which is supported by evidence in the record.

2. Plaintiffs husband and the children’s step-father, Jacques Blais, is a lifelong profound alcoholic;
3. [Aranovitch] admits that she’s unable to detect when Mr. Blais is drinking.
4. The evidence reveals that there have been multiple occasions when [Arano-vitch] was out of the home when Mr. Blais, while intoxicated, was the sole adult on the scene responsible for' the care of the parties’ two children....
5. On September 2, 2011, the Court ... issued an order prohibiting Mr. Blais from having unsupervised contact with' [the children] and from drinking while with the children. Mr. Blais frequently ignored the Court’s order.
6. The evidence reveals that Mr. Blais, while intoxicated, drove the children. The evidence, while not fully conclusive, strongly suggests that on September 5, 2013 Mr. Blais, while intoxicated, caused an accident resulting in a serious injury to [the son’s] leg that required medical assistance.
7. Mr. Blais presents a danger to the children due to his longstanding alcoholism and his pattern of violating Court orders.
8. [Aranovitch], generally a very good and loving parent, has demonstrated a lack of insight with respect to [Blais’s] alcoholism and the risk that he poses to the children.
9.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2015 ME 146, 127 A.3d 542, 2015 Me. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jennie-e-aranovitch-v-david-e-versel-me-2015.