Jonathan Clark v. Perlita Clark

CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 26, 2012
DocketS14456
StatusUnpublished

This text of Jonathan Clark v. Perlita Clark (Jonathan Clark v. Perlita Clark) 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
Jonathan Clark v. Perlita Clark, (Ala. 2012).

Opinion

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

THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

JONATHAN CLARK, ) ) Supreme Court No. S-14456 Appellant, ) ) Superior Court Nos. v. ) 1KE-07-00273 CI and ) 1KE-10-00274 CI ) PERLITA CLARK, ) MEMORANDUM OPINION ) AND JUDGMENT* Appellee. ) ) No. 1438 – September 26, 2012

Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, First Judicial District, Ketchikan, William B. Carey, Judge.

Appearances: Deborah Burlinski, Anchorage, for Appellant. Notice of nonparticipation filed by Leif A. Thompson, Leif Thompson Law Office, Ketchikan, for Appellee.

Before: Fabe, Chief Justice, Carpeneti, Winfree, and Stowers, Justices, and Eastaugh, Senior Justice.**

I. INTRODUCTION Two parents disputed the custody of their minor children. At trial the father argued that the mother had a history of perpetrating domestic violence; the mother contended that the father had substance abuse problems that interfered with his care of

* Entered under Appellate Rule 214. ** Sitting by assignment made under article IV, section 16 of the Alaska Constitution and Alaska Administrative Rule 23(a). the children. The trial court decided that it was in the children’s best interests for the parents to have joint legal and physical custody. The court declined to find that any domestic violence committed by the mother was sufficient to trigger the statutory presumption against awarding custody to her. Because the court implicitly found that the mother did not have a history of perpetrating domestic violence and because this implicit finding was not clearly erroneous, we affirm the superior court’s decision. II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS Jonathan and Perlita Clark were married in February 2003 in the Philippines and moved to Ketchikan in March 2004. Their first child, Joshua, was born in Ketchikan in 2005. Perlita returned to the Philippines in 2007 to visit family, and Jonathan obtained a default divorce in her absence. The court in the divorce proceeding awarded the parties joint legal custody of Joshua, awarded Jonathan primary physical custody, and granted Perlita reasonable rights of visitation. After Perlita returned from the Philippines, the parties entered into a shared physical custody agreement giving Perlita an unspecified 30 percent custody. In early 2008 Perlita and Jonathan began living together again, but they did not remarry. They had a second child, Warren, in 2009. In 2008 Jonathan was arrested for felony driving under the influence (DUI). He was also charged with child endangerment because Joshua, who was three at the time, was riding in the vehicle’s back seat “not restrained in a child’s car seat.” As a result of this arrest, Jonathan participated in the Therapeutic Court program. According to the custody investigator, Jonathan was jailed “brief[ly]” in October 2010 for submitting Joshua’s urine instead of his own for a urinalysis. Jonathan acknowledged using methamphetamine at about the same time. There was some evidence that Jonathan also used methamphetamine in June 2011, but the court did not make an express finding that he had. The trial court noted that Jonathan had been arrested twice for possession of methamphetamine; the custody investigator reported that these arrests occurred in 1997.

-2- 1438 Shortly before the custody trial, Jonathan “submitted a diluted urine sample” and spent a short time in jail as a result. On April 27, 2010, Perlita was arrested for hitting Joshua in the face with a belt. According to the police officer who investigated the incident, Joshua had a red mark on one cheek and a crescent-shaped red mark near his jaw. Perlita was initially charged with fourth-degree assault but eventually pleaded to the lesser charge of harassment in the second degree. Jonathan filed a domestic violence case and obtained a domestic violence restraining order against Perlita based on the belt incident, but the domestic violence case was later dismissed.1 Before the domestic violence case was dismissed, Jonathan also filed a custody case and requested a custody order for Warren that was “similar to the order in effect regarding his brother Joshua.” On July 15, 2010, the court granted Perlita unsupervised visitation with the children every other weekend from Friday evening to Sunday evening and from Monday to Wednesday evening each week she did not have weekend visits. In October 2010 Perlita moved to modify custody in the divorce case based on, among other factors, Jonathan’s use of methamphetamine and his short incarceration for substituting Joshua’s urine for his own.2 The court held several hearings in the custody and domestic violence cases, including a half-day hearing in April 2011 and a trial in July 2011. At the April hearing, Jonathan testified that Perlita sometimes pinched him and Joshua and that the pinching hurt; he said he did not know the reason for the pinching. He also testified that Perlita threw things, such as a TV remote control and a

1 The record on appeal does not contain a copy of the restraining order. 2 At the time Perlita filed the motion to modify, staff at the Therapeutic Court were considering terminating Jonathan from the program.

-3- 1438 glass vase; according to Jonathan, she never hit him with the objects, but she broke the TV remote. Jonathan’s daughter from a previous marriage said that Perlita had thrown a telephone at her about four years before; she said that Perlita also struck her during that same time period. The daughter testified that the telephone hit her and that it “hurt a little bit.” Perlita generally denied these allegations, although she did admit to throwing the TV remote at Jonathan once or twice. Perlita testified that Jonathan hit Joshua with a belt for discipline and told her that Joshua did not respect her because she did not discipline him with a belt. At trial, Perlita presented testimony from a former coworker that Jonathan had called Perlita repeatedly at work to make sure she was there. The witness testified that she considered the telephone calls harassment. Jonathan denied calling Perlita excessively at work. Another witness, a counselor who saw the family twice for therapy, testified that Perlita reported that Jonathan had shoved her. The custody investigator wrote that the “reported incidents of domestic disturbances in the Clark[s’] relationship do not rise to the level of a legal finding of domestic violence.” Both the counselor and the custody investigator expressed concern about Jonathan’s controlling or demeaning behavior toward Perlita. In closing argument at trial Jonathan’s attorney said there was “a pretty good argument” that Perlita’s custody and visitation should be limited because of multiple incidents of domestic violence; to support this argument he pointed to the testimony about pinching and about Perlita throwing a telephone at Jonathan’s daughter, in addition to the conviction related to hitting Joshua with a belt. In its oral findings at the conclusion of the July 2011 trial, the court said it was “not prepared to find that [Perlita had] committed acts of domestic violence such as would limit her ability to have custody of the children.” The court was “concerned about the testimony about the pinching,” saying that it sounded “silly and maybe playful,” but

-4- 1438 that it was “apparently painful to somebody.” Noting Perlita’s completion of a parenting class and her efforts over the past year or so, the court said it thought she had “gotten past” any issue she may have had with domestic violence. The court did not make further oral findings about other allegations of domestic violence.

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