Kay S. v. Mark S.

142 P.3d 249, 213 Ariz. 373, 491 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 38, 2006 Ariz. App. LEXIS 105
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedSeptember 7, 2006
Docket1 CA04-0343
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 142 P.3d 249 (Kay S. v. Mark S.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kay S. v. Mark S., 142 P.3d 249, 213 Ariz. 373, 491 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 38, 2006 Ariz. App. LEXIS 105 (Ark. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

SNOW, Judge.

¶ 1 Kay S. (“Mother”) appeals the denial of her requests both to vacate the trial court’s rulings and to receive a new trial. Mother’s contention is based on an alleged appearance of impropriety that resulted from the service by the attorney for Mark S. (“Father”) as a judge pro tempore in the Maricopa County Superior Court division in which her dissolution proceeding was conducted. For the following reasons, we conclude that, on the facts of this case, an appearance of impropriety did exist. Because we cannot determine that the Presiding Family Court Judge’s failure to vacate the trial court’s rulings on the issues of which Mother complains was harmless, we remand those rulings for independent reconsideration by the family court with instructions.

BACKGROUND

¶ 2 In December 2002, Mother filed a petition for dissolution. Shortly thereafter she claimed a need for protection from Father for herself and the couple’s three children *375 because, she alleged, some years earlier Father had displayed suicidal ideations and, on one occasion, endangered the life of their oldest child during the course of either an attempt to feign suicide or an actual suicide attempt.

¶ 3 Mother had also recently copied the web history and accessed files from Father’s computer that established that Father had been viewing pornographic websites on the internet. Mother confronted Father with that use. She further alleged that the titles of some of the files copied suggested that Father might be viewing child pornography, thus putting her children in danger of molestation from Father. 1

¶ 4 Father denied any viewing of child pornography, any past attempts or current ideations of suicide or that he presented any danger to his children or Mother. He also denied regular or continuing viewing of pornography. To resolve Mother’s request for protection without conceding the facts alleged, the parties stipulated that Father would reside at his parents’ home during the period prior to trial and would have limited visitation with his children. The parties also requested the family court judge, Judge Ob-erbiUig, to set an early trial date and to dismiss the emergency order of protection entered against Father. The court set an early trial date for July 8, approximately four and a half months later.

¶ 5 The court subsequently appointed Dr. Marlene Joy as the court’s custody evaluator. In making her recommendation Dr. Joy had joint and separate counseling sessions with the children and the parents. She had access to relevant materials. She also consulted with Mother’s expert, Dr. Steven Gray, a specialist in pornography addiction and its effects.

¶ 6 Dr. Gray discussed with Dr. Joy research indicating that excessive use of pornography was correlated with an inability to achieve emotional intimacy and, if established in Father, would suggest a diminished ability to parent. He indicated to Dr. Joy that the extent of any potential problem could be in part determined by the extent and types of pornography Father viewed.

¶ 7 A month before trial, Dr. Joy participated in a conference call with Mother’s counsel, DeeAn Gillespie, and Father’s counsel, Steven Everts. In that conference call, the parties discussed how to address Mother’s concern about Father’s pornography viewing. Dr. Gray had recommended either a battery of psychological tests or obtaining a polygraph from Father. A third alternative was to obtain the hard drive on Father’s computer to assess the frequency and content of his viewing of pornographic websites.

¶ 8 After the conference call, Father’s counsel agreed to consider providing Father’s computer as the preferable way to address Mother’s concerns. Mother’s counsel made arrangements to have the computer hard drive analyzed by a forensic expert. However, when after a week, Father had not provided the computer, Mother filed, on June 16th, an expedited motion to continue trial for sixty days. She further subpoenaed Father’s computer from his employer. Father responded to Mother’s emergency motion to continue, and, on June 26, Judge Oberbillig denied Mother’s motion to continue without comment.

¶ 9 In her custody evaluation, which she provided to the parties a few days before the scheduled July 8 trial, Dr. Joy addressed Mother’s various concerns about Father. She discounted Mother’s apprehension about Father’s potential for suicide. As to Mother’s concerns related to Father’s pornography viewing, Dr. Joy observed that Father admitted only isolated incidents and claimed that he never viewed pornography in the presence of the children. She referred to her consultation with Dr. Gray in which “he referred to recent data which shows some potential correlation between ‘pornography use to sexual abuse or problems with intimacy,’ ” and further noted “he claims a significant issue to be considered is the frequency, amount and kind of pornography that is involved.” But Dr. Joy also observed that *376 “[according to Dr. Gray, the burned CD of the web history from Father’s computer was ‘pretty straight up’ and not ‘deviant’ or reportable to the police.” She further noted that “the Gilbert police viewed the burned CD of Father’s web site history and found no deviancy.”

¶ 10 Although indicating that additional factors might also be relevant to her consideration if she had time and resources to consider them, Dr. Joy ultimately recommended that Father be granted joint custody and a significantly expanded parenting schedule from his stipulated pretrial parenting time. She recommended that both parents continue with individual counseling, cooperate on health matters pertaining to the children, and “consult and seek agreement with one another regarding any extra activity which may affect the other parent’s access.”

¶ 11 The one-day bench trial was held as scheduled on July 8, 2003. Dr. Joy’s custody evaluation was admitted in evidence. The trial court also heard the testimony, among others, of Mother, Father, Dr. Gray, Dr. Holyoak and Mother’s father who, together with his spouse, had made a substantial gift to the parties to pay down the mortgage on them marital home.

¶ 12 During his testimony Dr. Gray restated what he had told Dr. Joy in their earlier consultations. He acknowledged that not everyone who occasionally views pornography has a personality disorder or a “char-acterlogie” trait. He further acknowledged that he had not examined Father so he could not testify one way or another whether Father had a “characterlogic” problem that might affect his parenting. He also stated that the subject matter of the pornography viewed and the frequency and duration of Father’s viewing were relevant factors in determining the existence and extent of any personality disorder or problem that could be correlated to pornography use. He testified that persons who have such dysfunctions can benefit through counseling and that persons who view pornography are frequently in denial about their behavior.

¶ 13 Dr. Holyoak testified that he had counseled with both Father and Mother and that, while Father had viewed pornography in the past, Father admitted as much and sought treatment for it. He did not perceive Father to be in denial, and, while acknowledging that Father had some issues with intimacy, he thought Father was an effective parent for his children.

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Bluebook (online)
142 P.3d 249, 213 Ariz. 373, 491 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 38, 2006 Ariz. App. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kay-s-v-mark-s-arizctapp-2006.