Kellie Marie Van Leuvan v. Connie Carlisle

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 2, 2013
DocketA13A0784
StatusPublished

This text of Kellie Marie Van Leuvan v. Connie Carlisle (Kellie Marie Van Leuvan v. Connie Carlisle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kellie Marie Van Leuvan v. Connie Carlisle, (Ga. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

THIRD DIVISION ANDREWS, P. J., ELLINGTON, P. J., and DILLARD, J.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/

July 2, 2013

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A13A0783. IN RE: BURLEIGH L. SINGLETON. A13A0784. VAN LEUVAN v. CARLISLE.

ELLINGTON, Presiding Judge.

These consolidated appeals arise from an order in an ongoing visitation dispute

between Kellie Van Leuvan, the mother of a minor child (hereinafter, “the mother”),

and Connie Carlisle, the child’s maternal grandmother (“the grandmother”). In the

order, the Superior Court of Fulton County found the mother to be in willful civil

contempt of its temporary visitation order, and it ordered the mother and her former

attorney, Burleigh Singleton, to pay the grandmother the attorney fees that resulted

from her having to prosecute two contempt motions against the mother, pursuant to

OCGA § 9-15-14 (a) and (b). In Case No. A13A0783, Singleton contends that the

court erred in ordering him to pay OCGA § 9-15-14 attorney fees. In Case No. A13A0784, the mother contends that there is insufficient evidence to support the

court’s contempt ruling; she also challenges the court’s order that she pay OCGA §

9-15-14 attorney fees. Because the record supports the court’s order and we discern

no error or abuse of discretion, we affirm the judgment in both cases.

The record shows the following, undisputed facts. In February 2011, the

grandmother filed a petition asking for visitation with her granddaughter, who was

four years old at the time and was living with her mother, who was divorced from the

child’s father. On May 31, 2012, following an evidentiary hearing, the trial court

issued a temporary order (hereinafter, the “visitation order”) in which it found that the

grandmother had met her burden, under OCGA § 19-7-3 (a), of showing that she was

entitled to visitation with the child. The visitation order stated, in relevant part, as

follows:

Petitioner [(i.e., the grandmother)] shall have the following visitation with the minor child[:] . . . 1. Petitioner shall have seven (7) uninterrupted days of visitation with [the child] during the summer months of June, July, or August. Respondent [(i.e., the mother)] shall determine within five (5) days of this order when [this visitation shall occur]. . . . 2. During the school year, August through May,

2 Respondent[1] shall have one (1) Thursday night with [the child] per month. The designated Thursday night shall correspond with [the child’s] visitation with her father . . . that is to begin the following Friday. Respondent shall pick [the child] up from school on the designated Thursday and return [the child] to school the following Friday morning.

The mother filed an application for interlocutory review of the visitation order,

and this Court granted the application. Pursuant to that appeal, this Court vacated the

visitation order because it did not contain the court’s specific findings of fact, as

required by OCGA § 19-7-3 (c). See Van Leuvan v. Carlisle, __ Ga. App. __, __ (1)

(Case No. A13A0048, decided ______, 2013). This Court remanded the case back to

the trial court with directions to issue an order that complied with OCGA § 19-7-3

(c). Id.

While the appeal from the visitation order was pending, the mother notified the

grandmother that she had designated the week beginning August 13, 2012, for the

grandmother’s seven uninterrupted days of “summer” visitation, as required by the

order. The grandmother immediately filed an objection to this designation of dates,

1 As explained below, the trial court subsequently found that the two references to “Respondent” in paragraph 2 of the order were typographical errors and that the paragraph should have referred to the “Petitioner,” that is, the grandmother.

3 however, because the child’s school year was scheduled to begin before then, so she

would be attending school throughout that week. The trial court, however, did not

rule on the objection prior to August 13, the date the designated week of visitation

was to begin.

On August 13, the mother’s attorney, Singleton, sent a letter to the

grandmother’s attorney stating that the mother had just learned that the grandmother

intended to pick up the child from school each afternoon that week and to keep her

overnight, pursuant to the mother’s designation of dates. Singleton’s letter stated that,

based upon the grandmother’s objection to the dates and the absence of either a court

order ruling on the objection or any communication between the parties’ attorneys

regarding visitation dates while the mother’s appeal from the visitation order was

pending, “there does not appear to be a legal basis for [the child’s] school to release

[her] into [the grandmother’s] custody.” Singleton also stated that the mother was

going to pick up the child from school each day of that week, as she was entitled to

do pursuant to the parenting plan executed by her and the child’s father. In other

words, the letter notified the grandmother that she would not be allowed to exercise

her seven days of uninterrupted summer visitation with the child that week after all.

In response, the grandmother’s attorney notified Singleton that he was going to file

4 a contempt petition against the mother due to her actions, which, according to the

letter, “defy a polite description.”

The grandmother, however, was apparently not aware of the attorneys’

communications when she went to the child’s school to pick her up for visitation on

the afternoon of August 13. At that time, school officials told her that the school’s

policies did not allow it to release the child to her because she was not the child’s

parent. It is undisputed that the mother had spoken with school officials earlier that

day and had given them copies of certain documents, including the visitation order,

her designation of dates for summer visitation, and the grandmother’s objection to

such dates.

The next afternoon, August 14, the grandmother again went to the child’s

school to pick her up for visitation. She was unable to do so, however, because,

unbeknownst to the grandmother, the mother had gone to the school and had picked

up the child before the end of the school day. School officials again informed the

grandmother that the school would not release the child to her, and, in support of such

refusal, they showed her a copy of a letter written by Singleton that the school had

received. They also showed the grandmother a copy of an e-mail the school had

5 received from its Executive Director. The August 14 e-mail stated, in relevant part,

that the Executive Director had been

made aware of the various letters, emails, phone calls, and other correspondence over the past few days with staff at the elementary campus where [the child] is a student.

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Kellie Marie Van Leuvan v. Connie Carlisle, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kellie-marie-van-leuvan-v-connie-carlisle-gactapp-2013.