K. Robin Laing v. Stephen D. Walker

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedNovember 7, 2000
Docket1288003
StatusUnpublished

This text of K. Robin Laing v. Stephen D. Walker (K. Robin Laing v. Stephen D. Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
K. Robin Laing v. Stephen D. Walker, (Va. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Willis, Frank and Clements

K. ROBIN LAING MEMORANDUM OPINION * v. Record No. 1288-00-3 PER CURIAM NOVEMBER 7, 2000 STEPHEN D. WALKER

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF MONTGOMERY COUNTY J. Howe Brown, Jr., Judge Designate

(K. Robin Laing, pro se, on briefs).

(Harwell M. Darby, Jr.; Glenn, Feldmann, Darby & Goodlatte, on brief), for appellee.

K. Robin Laing appeals from an order of the Montgomery County

Circuit Court (the court) denying her petition for change of

custody of her daughter Dana (d.o.b. 11/15/87) and son Eric

(d.o.b. 6/19/89). 1 The court ruled that custody of the two

children should remain with their father, Stephen Walker. Laing

contends the court erred in excluding the children's in camera

testimony from the record and in denying her petition for custody.

Upon reviewing the record and the briefs of the parties, we

conclude that this appeal is without merit. Accordingly, we

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. 1 Laing did not seek custody of the parties' eldest daughter, Kelly. summarily affirm the judgment of the circuit court. See Rule

5A:27.

I. Background

The court awarded appellant custody of the parties' three

children after the couple's 1991 divorce. In 1994, at Kelly's

request, her custody was transferred to Walker. Shortly

thereafter, Walker successfully petitioned for custody of Dana and

Eric.

In November 1996, Walker verbally informed Laing that he

would be moving with the children from Lafayette, Louisiana, to

Ava, Missouri, where Walker was purchasing a farm. In a December

3, 1996 letter to Laing, Walker provided further information

regarding the upcoming move. Walker included with his letter

photographs of the area, brochures about the community, and

information about the local schools.

On May 30, 1997, citing the move to Ava, Laing filed a

petition to regain custody of Dana and Eric. The juvenile and

domestic relations district court ordered that home studies of the

parties' homes be performed. A Virginia social worker conducted

Laing's home study, a Missouri social worker conducted Walker's

home study, and neither social worker contacted both parties.

Both social workers had favorable impressions of the party they

reviewed. The Missouri social worker reported that Dana and Eric

wished to remain with Walker, while the Virginia social worker

- 2 - indicated the two children wanted to live with Laing. Neither

social worker included a custody recommendation in her report.

On October 31, 1997, the juvenile and domestic relations

district court denied Laing's petition for custody. Laing filed a

timely appeal to circuit court, but no significant action was

taken in the matter until the summer of 1999.

In a January 25, 2000 report, the guardian ad litem

recommended that custody of the children remain with Walker. In

preparing her report, the guardian ad litem spoke to the parties,

their partners, Ava school officials, and all three children.

Although conceding that Dana and Eric expressed a desire to live

with Laing, the guardian ad litem noted that the children did not

express "any reason they wanted a custody change for their own

benefit." The guardian ad litem concluded it was her belief that

the children wanted to live with both parents and did not want to

have to decide which one they preferred.

The parties appeared before the court and presented evidence

on April 4, 2000. Both described the suitable living arrangements

they could offer the children. They detailed their positive

relationships with the children, as well as the constructive

relationships the children had developed with the parents'

respective partners (Laing's husband and Walker's fiancée).

Laing testified that her work schedule was flexible enough to

permit her to attend to the children's needs. She emphasized that

she had been very cooperative with Walker when she was the

- 3 - custodial parent and that she would continue this openness if

custody of Dana and Eric was awarded to her. Laing asserted that

Walker had not cooperated with her ever since he got custody of

the children. She complained that Walker had failed to provide

her with the children's school and medical records, but conceded

that she had not requested any such records, except the children's

blood types.

Social worker Kira Holland, who had performed the 1997 study

of Laing's household, recommended that custody of the children be

awarded to Laing. She conceded, however, that she had not

communicated with Dana and Eric in three years and that she had

not made a recommendation at the time she completed her home

study.

Walker testified that he gave up his job with an oil company

in Lafayette to buy a farm in Ava. He stated that he selected Ava

not only for the suitable farmland it possessed, but also because

of the advantages the community afforded Kelly, Dana, and Eric.

He presented evidence that Dana and Eric were doing well in school

and were active in extracurricular activities.

At the time of the hearing, Walker worked forty hours a week

as a production engineer, in addition to his farm duties. He

stated that his farm duties consumed between one and a half and

five hours per day, depending on the time of the year. The

children frequently accompany Walker when he performs farm chores.

- 4 - Walker's mother, who was his business partner in the farming

operations, lived with him. His fiancée was going to move into

the residence after the couple's April 10, 2000 wedding.

After speaking to the parties' three children in camera, the

circuit court noted that Dana and Eric had expressed a preference

to live with Laing. Nevertheless, the court concluded that,

especially considering the children's ages, their desires were not

dispositive.

The court was impressed that the children's well-being was a

significant consideration when Walker decided to relocate to Ava.

And it commented favorably on the quantity of information Walker

provided to Laing about Ava, even if he had relocated there

without proper notice. 2 The court found no significant difference

between the educational opportunities available to the children in

Ava as opposed to Laing's hometown of Christiansburg, Virginia.

In denying Laing's petition, the court concluded that there was no

"justifiable reason to change custody at this time."

II. In Camera Proceedings

The court's final order provided that the children's

testimony was not to be transcribed except by order of the court.

Laing concedes she agreed that the children's testimony be taken

2 Code § 20-124.5, enacted in 1994, requires that the court include in any custody order a provision requiring a party to provide thirty days advance notice of an intent to relocate. Such a provision was not included in the August 25, 1994 order awarding custody of Dana and Eric to Walker. The original custody order is not part of the appellate record.

- 5 - in camera. She did not advise the court that she objected to the

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