Kinga Kostreva v. Michael Kostreva

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 24, 2021
Docket353316
StatusPublished

This text of Kinga Kostreva v. Michael Kostreva (Kinga Kostreva v. Michael Kostreva) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kinga Kostreva v. Michael Kostreva, (Mich. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

KINGA KOSTREVA, FOR PUBLICATION June 24, 2021 Plaintiff-Appellee, 9:00 a.m.

V Nos. 352029; 353316 Macomb Circuit Court MICHAEL KOSTREVA, LC No. 2017-001184-DM

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: MURRAY, C.J., and FORT HOOD and RICK, JJ.

FORT HOOD, J.

Defendant appeals as of right the trial court’s orders granting plaintiff’s request to take the parties’ minor daughter, LKK, to Poland for two weeks, changing the custodianship of the child’s passport from defendant to plaintiff, and granting plaintiff’s request for attorney fees while denying defendant’s request for the same. We affirm in all respects.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

In 2017, the parties divorced and entered a consent judgment of divorce providing that the parties would share joint legal and physical custody of LKK, but that defendant would retain LKK’s passport. On July 3, 2019, plaintiff’s mother—LKK’s grandmother—passed away unexpectedly while visiting plaintiff and LKK from Poland. In preparation to return the decedent to her home in Poland for a memorial service and burial, plaintiff sought consent from defendant to travel with LKK to Poland for two weeks. Defendant did not consent, leading plaintiff to file an emergency motion with the trial court to authorize the travel on July 18, 2019. In the motion, plaintiff requested LKK’s passport from defendant, and requested attorney fees. The trial court granted the motion the following day, authorized plaintiff to travel with LKK to Poland from July 20, 2019, to August 3, 2019, and set a hearing on the permanency of the passport’s custodian and attorney fees for August 5, 2019.

Following the hearing, a referee recommended that defendant retain custody of LKK’s passport, but that defendant reimburse plaintiff for the $1,112.50 in attorney fees necessitated by the motion. Defendant filed objections to the fees. On that basis, a subsequent evidentiary hearing was held on November 1, 2017. Following that hearing, the trial court issued a written opinion

-1- and order denying a request by defendant for attorney fees and increased the fees owed to plaintiff to $6,395. The court additionally, and apparently on its own motion, revisited the issue of permanent custody of LKK’s passport and decided plaintiff would be the custodian of the passport. Defendant filed a motion for reconsideration, which the trial court denied. This appeal followed.

II. THE UNIFORM CHILD ABDUCTION PREVENTION ACT

Defendant first contends that the trial court erred in modifying the parties’ consent judgment of divorce to effectively reverse protective orders against parental kidnapping without first considering the factors outlined in the Uniform Child Abduction Prevention Act (UCAPA), MCL 722.1521 et seq., or the best-interest factors from the Child Custody Act, MCL 722.21 et seq. We disagree.

As a preliminary matter we note that, under the circumstances, “[n]o exception need be taken to a finding or decision” in order to preserve the issue of whether the trial court erred by modifying the parties’ consent judgment of divorce to change the custodianship of the child’s passport from plaintiff to defendant. See MCR 2.517(A)(7). However, for the purposes of this appeal, we find it relevant to note that defendant failed to invoke any argument below concerning the UCAPA or the Child Custody Act. That is to say, defendant’s argument on appeal necessarily implies that the trial court should have sua sponte considered provisions of the UCAPA, and in so doing the best-interest factors set forth in MCL 722.21 of the Child Custody Act, prior to awarding custody of the child’s passport to plaintiff.

The same general standard of review applies to Issues II through V of this opinion: All custody orders must be affirmed on appeal unless the trial court’s factual findings are against the great weight of the evidence, the court committed a palpable abuse of discretion, 1 or the court made a clear legal error on a major issue. MCL 722.28; Fletcher v Fletcher, 447 Mich 871, 876- 877; 526 NW2d 889 (1994).

The UCAPA, MCL 722.1521 et seq., was enacted, effective January 12, 2015, to “allow courts in this state to impose measures to prevent the abduction of children; to establish standards for determining whether a child is subject to a significant risk of abduction; and to provide remedies.” 2014 PA 460. Under MCL 722.1524(1), “[a] court on its own motion may order abduction prevention measures in a child-custody proceeding if the court finds that the evidence establishes a credible risk of abduction of the child,” and under subsection (2), “[a] party to a child- custody determination . . . may file a petition seeking abduction prevention measures to protect the child under this act.” These provisions indicate that the provisions of the UCAPA are not

1 “Although the ‘outside the range of reasonable and principled outcomes’ standard is now the ‘default abuse of discretion standard,’ child custody cases specifically retain the historic Spalding standard.” Moote v Moote, 329 Mich App 474, 478 n 2; 942 NW2d 660, 663 (2019), citing Maldonado v Ford Motor Co, 476 Mich 372, 388; 719 NW2d 809 (2006). According to Spalding v Spalding, 355 Mich 382, 384-385; 94 NW2d 810 (1959), an abuse of discretion occurs when the result is “so palpably and grossly violative of fact and logic that it evidences not the exercise of will but perversity of will, not the exercise of judgment but defiance thereof, not the exercise of reason but rather of passion or bias.”

-2- applicable unless specifically invoked—either by the court or by a party. As specified in subsection (1), a court’s authority to invoke the UCAPA arises when there is evidence establishing “a credible risk of abduction of the child.”

In this case, however, although defendant asserts that plaintiff’s emergency motion occasioned “the first time a Michigan court was being asked to review an order entered based on the risk factors in the UCAPA,” he claims incorrectly that he raised this issue in his response to plaintiff’s emergency motion and in his motion for reconsideration. In arguing the issue in his brief on appeal, he nowhere otherwise asserts that the UCAPA was ever invoked by anyone throughout the proceedings below. Further, although defendant complains that plaintiff has at times taken some liberties with her time or travel with LKK, including by not always providing defendant with satisfactory notice, he does not assert that plaintiff ever attempted any actual abduction in the sense of parental kidnapping in derogation of his own parental rights. Because the record does not reveal any evidence establishing “a credible risk of abduction of the child,” the trial court did not commit clear legal error for not having sua sponte invoked the UCAPA during the proceedings below.

III. PROPER CAUSE AND CHANGE OF CIRCUMSTANCES

Related to the previous issue, defendant next contends that the trial court abused its discretion by changing the custodianship of the child’s passport from defendant to plaintiff without first determining that proper cause or changed circumstances warranted revisiting the issue.

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Bluebook (online)
Kinga Kostreva v. Michael Kostreva, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kinga-kostreva-v-michael-kostreva-michctapp-2021.