Jennifer L. v. Geoffrey G.

CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 2021
DocketS17698
StatusUnpublished

This text of Jennifer L. v. Geoffrey G. (Jennifer L. v. Geoffrey G.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jennifer L. v. Geoffrey G., (Ala. 2021).

Opinion

NOTICE Memorandum decisions of this court do not create legal precedent. A party wishing to cite such a decision in a brief or at oral argument should review Alaska Appellate Rule 214(d).

THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

JENNIFER L., ) ) Supreme Court No. S-17698 Appellant, ) ) Superior Court Nos. 1WR-15-00001/ v. ) 1WR-17-00036 CI ) GEOFFREY G., ) MEMORANDUM OPINION ) AND JUDGMENT* Appellee. ) ) No. 1830 – May 19, 2021

Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, First Judicial District, Wrangell, Kevin Miller, Judge pro tem.

Appearances: David C. Campbell, Campbell Law, LLC, Lake Oswego, Oregon, for Appellant. Geoffrey G., pro se, Petersburg, Appellee.

Before: Bolger, Chief Justice, Winfree, Maassen, Carney, and Borghesan, Justices.

I. INTRODUCTION The parents of three children separated in 2014 and lived in different communities following their divorce. The initial custody order awarded primary physical custody of the children to the mother, but the order was subsequently modified several times. The most significant modification occurred in 2020, when the superior court found a substantial change in circumstances and awarded primary physical custody to the father. The mother appeals.

* Entered under Alaska Appellate Rule 214. We conclude that the superior court’s findings regarding a substantial change in circumstances are in part clearly erroneous and are otherwise inadequate for our review. We also conclude that it was error for the superior court to fail to make detailed findings about a number of alleged incidents of domestic violence by the father when weighing the best interests factors and deciding whether there was a history of domestic violence for purposes of the statutory presumption against awarding custody to the perpetrator. We therefore vacate the 2020 custody award and remand the case for further proceedings. II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS A. Early Proceedings Geoffrey G. and Jennifer L. had three children together: two sons, born in 2006 and 2009, and a daughter, born in 2012. Geoffrey and Jennifer lived together until their separation in 2014. At some point thereafter Geoffrey moved to Petersburg, while Jennifer stayed in Wrangell. In 2015 the court entered an order awarding primary physical custody to Jennifer, finding that all the statutory best interests of the child factors1 either favored her or were neutral. The court noted a number of instances of possible domestic violence on Geoffrey’s part, citing Jennifer’s testimony that he once “broke into her apartment[] and damaged her television” and another time “pushed [her] in front of the children,” though the court found “no evidence that [Jennifer] suffered a ‘physical injury’ or was ‘placed in fear of imminent physical injury.’ ” The court also noted the “considerable evidence that [Geoffrey] [was] verbally abusive to [Jennifer] by calling her degrading names, threatening injury to people that [Jennifer was] dating[,] as well as threatening suicide,” and that in one instance, according to Jennifer, “she called search and rescue because of

1 See AS 25.24.150(c)(1)-(9). -2- 1830 her concern that [Geoffrey] would follow through with his threat.” The court nonetheless decided that it could not “find on the existing record that [Geoffrey] ha[d] a ‘history of domestic violence.’ ” It did observe, however, that Geoffrey’s “inability to constructively deal with the end of his relationship with [Jennifer] combined with his hostility toward[] her and his abuse of alcohol are legitimate concerns and warning signs of the potential for future violence.” The court granted Geoffrey custody of the children every other week from Monday to Wednesday and ordered him to pay Jennifer child support. In 2016 the court issued an order mostly reaffirming the 2015 order’s findings and structure. On the issue of domestic violence, the court noted its earlier concerns about Geoffrey but concluded that his new relationship with a woman he was engaged to marry, as well as “the length of time between the breakup and today[,] have gone a long way toward ending [Geoffrey’s] past [abusive] behaviors.” The court ruled that Jennifer would continue to have primary custody of the children but Geoffrey would have custody every other weekend during the school year and longer blocks of custody during the summer. The parties filed other custody motions in April and June 2017. Jennifer alleged that Geoffrey’s domestic violence and verbal abuse had continued and asked that his visits be supervised. She described recent incidents of violence: “[Geoffrey] . . . cornered me in his mother[’]s bathroom, then shoved me out after I would not have intimate relations with him, then came after me with a shovel” while threatening both her and her boyfriend. She alleged that he threw the shovel at her car while she was backing out of the driveway, denting her bumper. She also alleged that while she and her children were on her boyfriend’s boat, Geoffrey circled them in his boat and threatened to ram them.

-3- 1830 A few weeks later Jennifer filed a petition in district court for 20-day and long-term domestic violence protective orders; this was a separate case from the custody case but assigned to the same judge. The petition contained many of the same allegations as her custody modification motion, as well as allegations that Geoffrey had sexually assaulted her twice in 2015. She also presented a friend’s account of seeing Geoffrey throw a plate of food at Jennifer’s head at a Little League game. The court granted Jennifer a 20-day domestic violence protective order on June 27, finding probable cause to believe that Geoffrey had committed or attempted to commit the domestic violence crimes of assault or reckless endangerment and criminal mischief. Three days later the court issued an order in the custody case, advising the parties that an evidentiary hearing was required because the court had now “been presented with information that was not presented [in earlier custody proceedings],” specifically (1) “the current domestic violence allegations that resulted in the ex parte order in [the separate domestic violence proceeding]” and (2) evidence of another domestic violence proceeding involving Geoffrey’s new wife, which, although it was no longer being pursued, had resulted in a “criminal charge in Petersburg alleging that [Geoffrey] violated that protective order.” The court noted “the importance of these issues” for determining the applicability of the presumption against awarding custody to a parent with a history of domestic violence;2 the court said that it therefore “want[ed] to give [Geoffrey] the opportunity to be heard before ruling.” The evidentiary hearing took place on July 6; both parties appeared without counsel. The court asked them about the domestic violence protective order Geoffrey’s

2 “There is a rebuttable presumption that a parent who has a history of perpetrating domestic violence against the other parent, a child, or a domestic living partner may not be awarded sole legal custody, sole physical custody, joint legal custody, or joint physical custody of a child.” AS 25.24.150(g).

-4- 1830 current wife had obtained and about text messages Jennifer had submitted to support her claims of verbal abuse. But the court did not ask either party about Jennifer’s other allegations of domestic violence — the ones raised in her motion and her domestic violence petition involving the shovel, the boat, the thrown plate of food, and the sexual assaults. The court’s written order concluded that the evidence did not justify a finding that Geoffrey “pose[d] a risk of harm to the children” and allowed his visitation to continue unsupervised.

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