Jones v. Willis

996 So. 2d 364, 2008 WL 4225918
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 17, 2008
Docket43,608-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 996 So. 2d 364 (Jones v. Willis) 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
Jones v. Willis, 996 So. 2d 364, 2008 WL 4225918 (La. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

996 So.2d 364 (2008)

Gary JONES, Plaintiff-Appellee
v.
Wilson WILLIS and Lam Willis, Defendants-Appellants.

No. 43,608-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

September 17, 2008.

*365 David C. Hesser, Melissa L. Benoit, Alexandria, for Defendants-Appellants.

*366 Teresa Culpepper Carroll, Jonesboro, for Plaintiff-Appellee.

Before BROWN, STEWART and GASKINS, JJ.

GASKINS, J.

In this custody dispute, the maternal grandparents appeal from a trial court judgment awarding custody of their late daughter's eight-year-old son to the stepfather who has raised the boy since he was two years old. We affirm.

FACTS

Bernice Willis had three children: Christa (born in 1993), Tianna (born in 1995), and Jimmy (born in June 2000). Each child had a different father; Jimmy's father is Jerald Ashton.[1] Bernice and the children lived with her parents in North Carolina. On June 4, 2002, Bernice married Gary Jones; this was her only marriage. Thereafter, Bernice and Gary lived in Winn Parish in Louisiana with Tianna and Jimmy. Christa, who had been adopted by the maternal grandparents, came to live with them for two periods of time which amounted to less than two years.

Bernice, who had lupus, died October 12, 2007. On October 16, 2007, Gary filed a petition seeking custody of Jimmy. Named as defendants were the maternal grandparents, Wilson and Lam Willis, who live in North Carolina. According to the petition, the grandparents had announced their intent to keep the boy in North Carolina with them after a memorial service for Bernice; therefore, Gary requested temporary custody of the child pending a hearing. Gary also asserted that Jimmy's biological father was agreeable to his having legal custody of the boy and eventually adopting him. The trial court granted Gary temporary custody and set the matter for hearing.

The matter was tried on October 31 and November 2, 2007. On October 31, 2007, the grandparents filed a petition of intervention on behalf of Christa, asserting that she wished to intervene because she had a "fundamental liberty interest in preserving the family unit with her grandparents."[2] The trial judge stated in open court that he would accept this pleading.

On November 2, 2007, the second day of the hearing, the grandparents filed a petition for custody and tutorship and an accompanying memorandum. They alleged that custody of Jimmy should be awarded to them because they already had custody of his sister Christa and were suitable relatives with whom he had previously lived. They further contended that due to their daughter's death, Gary was no longer Jimmy's stepfather and thus not a relative under La. Ch. C. arts. 622 and 683.[3] As to Jimmy's biological father, they asserted that since their daughter was awarded custody of Jimmy when his parents divorced, Jerald had no legal authority to appoint Gary as the child's tutor.[4] The grandparents *367 maintained that they should be named Jimmy's tutors pursuant to La. C.C. art. 263. In open court, the trial judge stated that he would not receive any petitions filed during the course of the proceeding; however, he accepted the memorandum.

During the hearing, Gary testified that he and Jimmy had a close, loving father/son relationship. Although his current employment involved working on oil derricks, he had arranged for his father and stepmother to care for Jimmy when his job required him to be absent. He expressed a willingness to find a job closer to home if he was awarded custody of Jimmy. He and Jimmy lived in a trailer that had a living room, a kitchen, three bedrooms, and two bathrooms. While Jimmy was repeating the first grade, Gary testified that his grades and conduct had improved in the current school year and that he communicates with Jimmy's teacher. Gary stated that he was about to sign Jimmy up for speech therapy at school for a speech impediment. He admitted spanking Jimmy with his hand or a belt but insisted that he had never left marks on the child. He also testified that he resorted to corporal punishment when taking away toys and imposing time-outs failed. He stated that he had intended to adopt Jimmy before Bernice's death, but the matter had not been pursued due to Bernice's ill health and hospitalizations.

Among other witnesses, Gary presented the testimony of his own former wife, who stated that she had no recent contact with him; however, during their marriage, her nieces and nephew had come to live with them and Gary had helped her provide them with a loving home.[5] Sergeant Jerald Ashton, Jimmy's biological father, also testified for Gary, stating that he wished him to have custody of Jimmy and verifying that he had signed papers to release the boy to be adopted by Gary. Jerald also recounted that he did not want the maternal grandparents to have custody, citing an incident when the grandfather physically struck him and Bernice when she told him that she was pregnant with Jimmy. Gary's father and stepmother testified about their love for Jimmy as their grandson and their willingness to help Gary care for him.

The maternal grandparents emphasized that Bernice and her children lived with them in North Carolina until her marriage to Gary when Jimmy was two years old. After moving to Louisiana, Bernice and her family came to visit them at Thanksgiving and Christmas and during the summer. However, the grandparents testified that they never visited their daughter in Louisiana because she did not want them to do so. They both admitted that about two years before the court proceedings they were separated for at least a year.[6] The maternal grandmother testified that she, like Bernice, has lupus.

The maternal grandparents also testified that they have a four-bedroom, two-bathroom house surrounded by a large yard and that the grandmother does not work outside of the home. Additionally, the grandparents stated that they would arrange for Jimmy to have a private speech therapist to work on correcting his speech impediment. The grandfather denied ever *368 striking Bernice and insisted that he hit Jimmy's father for not caring about the child.

Christa testified on behalf of her grandparents. She stated that she was not close to her mother and that she did not like Gary. However, she said she was close to her grandparents and to her two half-siblings. As to the periods when she was in Louisiana with her mother and Gary, she testified that they lived in a trailer that had problems with its generator and septic tank; the generator problems sometimes resulted in inadequate air conditioning, which aggravated Bernice's lupus. (Gary, on the other hand, testified that these housing issues were of short duration.)

Christa testified that her mother and Gary argued a lot and that he once struck Bernice after she slapped him. (Gary admitted this incident but insisted that after Bernice slapped him, he only "glanced" her shoulder in reaction. Additionally, he stated that the incident arose when Bernice tried to leave with the children; he took the car keys from her because she was in no condition to drive.) Christa testified that the police had come to her mother and Gary's residence between five and 10 times for domestic disturbances; she named the responding officers as Deputy Jeremy Underwood of the Winn Parish Sheriff's Office and Pat Ashley, the Dodson police chief. However, when these officers testified, each recounted only one such incident. According to the officers, both incidents involved minor arguments and no charges were filed.

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Bluebook (online)
996 So. 2d 364, 2008 WL 4225918, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-willis-lactapp-2008.