Knowlton v. Knowlton
This text of 927 So. 2d 640 (Knowlton v. Knowlton) 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.
Opinion
Melissa Jo KNOWLTON, Plaintiff-Appellant
v.
John Warren KNOWLTON, Defendant-Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
Anita D. McKeithen, Shreveport, for Appellant.
Cook, Yancey, King & Galloway, by Curtis R. Shelton, Shreveport, for Appellee.
Before BROWN, STEWART and MOORE, JJ.
*641 STEWART, J.
Appellant, Melissa Jo Pruitt (formerly Knowlton), appeals the trial court's judgment denying her requests to modify custody and to terminate child support. She seeks to be designated the domiciliary parent of the two minor children from her former marriage to appellee, John Warren Knowlton. Finding no error in the trial court's judgment, we affirm.
FACTS
Ms. Pruitt and Sgt. Knowlton are the parents of two minor daughters, Michelle and Katie Knowlton. After separating in early 1998, the parties obtained a judgment on rule dated June 29, 1998, awarding them joint custody of the girls and designating Ms. Pruitt as domiciliary parent in accordance with their agreement and stipulations before the court.
Four months later, Ms. Pruitt filed a motion seeking court approval to relocate the girls to Bentonville, Arkansas. Sgt. Knowlton filed an objection to the request and a petition for divorce. Trial began on December 10, 1998, and continued on February 10, 1999. After brief testimony on the second day of trial, the parties reached a stipulation providing that the girls would remain in Bossier City, that Sgt. Knowlton would be the domiciliary parent, and that Ms. Pruitt would pay child support in the amount of $200 per month. A judgment to this effect was signed on April 7, 1999, and a judgment granting the divorce was signed May 25, 1999. Since the change in custody, the girls have lived with their father in Bossier City with frequent visits to their mother in Arkansas. Both parents remarried, and their mother had another child.
On January 31, 2005, Ms. Pruitt filed a motion to modify custody and to terminate her child support obligation. She sought to be named the domiciliary parent and to have the girls move to Arkansas. She alleged as changes in circumstances warranting the modification: (1) the children's ages, (2) the turbulent relationship between Sgt. Knowlton and his new wife, (3) the turbulent relationship between the minor children and their stepmother, and (4) Sgt. Knowlton's discipline of the children.
Trial was held on September 2, 2005. The daughters, Michelle and Katie, testified as to their circumstances, custodial preference, and observations regarding the incidents described in their mother's rule. Their stepmother, Diane, lives in the Knowlton household along with Laura, Diane's grown daughter, and Laura's baby. According to testimony, both Michelle and Katie have a difficult relationship with Diane, who has sought help for emotional problems in dealing with the mixed family arrangement. Testimony also established that their father is a strict disciplinarian and that Katie has had ongoing behavioral problems.
Michelle, who was 16 at the time of trial, is a junior at Airline High School with better than average grades and is working toward a TOPS scholarship from the State of Louisiana. Her father, who described her as "awesome," generally disciplines her by taking away her car or cell phone. Michelle has a job and friends in Bossier City and would prefer to remain there. However, she testified that she was willing to move to Arkansas if that would allow her younger sister Katie to live with their mother. Michelle testified as to her belief that Katie has a hard time in the Knowlton household. She described a more contentious relationship between her father and Katie involving yelling and his occasional use of inappropriate insults and threats of putting her in a youth shelter. Michelle testified that the police had been to their home on three or four occasions, usually due to arguments involving Diane *642 and Laura. Michelle also testified that Diane once threw a phone at her, but neither party elicited any context for the incident.
Kathleen "Katie" Knowlton, who was one month away from turning 14 at the time of trial, testified that she and her stepmother "get along pretty good but we have fights a lot." However, her testimony did not reveal any noteworthy conflicts. She testified that her father called her names and repeatedly threatened to have her arrested or placed in a youth shelter. She also testified that he once reached back during an argument in a car to choke her after she told him he was not a good father. Michelle denied that their father had ever been physically abusive to either daughter. Katie's testimony, as well as Michelle's, also established that Katie presents a very different behavioral picture than Michelle. Katie was placed in Families in Need of Services ("FINS") and private counseling after she was caught riding in a car with an 18-year-old boy whose identity she would not reveal. She was then caught shoplifting at Barksdale Air Force Base, and she has had numerous disciplinary problems in school. Katie expressed the unequivocal preference to live with her mother in Arkansas. She explained that her mother listens to her and that she has a closer relationship with her stepfather than with her stepmother; however, there was no specific evidence in the record regarding either girl having a close relationship with Mr. Pruitt. Katie believed she would not have behavioral problems in Arkansas, because she would "have a better life up there" and "get along better."
Sheri Miller, a former neighbor of the Knowltons', testified about arguments she witnessed between the girls and their stepmother. However, the incidents she observed occurred a year or more prior to trial. She recounted being asked by Sgt. Knowlton on several occasions to take the girls from the home during arguments involving Diane, Laura, and Sgt. Knowlton. She also testified that she witnessed Sgt. Knowlton call the girls names, but she believed he intended it to be in jest even though he may have hurt their feelings.
Sgt. Knowlton admitted that he is a strict disciplinarian and expressed the belief that his daughters were looking for a "bigger better deal" in Arkansas where they would get things on their terms. He admitted that he called the police when he found that Katie had been riding in a car with an 18-year-old boy, whose name she refused to reveal. Sgt. Knowlton requested that she be issued a ticket for being ungovernable. The incident resulted in Katie being placed in FINS with both his and Ms. Pruitt's agreement. He testified that Katie was caught shoplifting at Barksdale and detained without his knowledge. He did not have her arrested. Though the charges were dropped, he agreed with her detention and believed that she should have been prosecuted so that she would have learned that restitution is owed when you commit a crime. He denied ever being verbally or physically abusive to either of his daughters, but he did admit to telling Katie that she did dumb or stupid things. He agreed that Katie may be acting out for attention, but he was adamant that she gets love and affection from all of her family, including her mother. He testified that Katie presents a unique discipline problem and that Ms. Pruitt has even had to call him to ask for advice on how to control her. He also testified that he would have concerns about the girls moving to Arkansas due to Mr. Pruitt's consumption of alcohol and past citations for driving while intoxicated. Lastly, Sgt. Knowlton testified that Diane had twice admitted herself into a psychiatric facility *643
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927 So. 2d 640, 2006 WL 932021, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knowlton-v-knowlton-lactapp-2006.