Lee Richard Slotnik v. Shani Marie Slotnik

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 7, 2022
DocketM2022-00645-COA-T10B-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Lee Richard Slotnik v. Shani Marie Slotnik (Lee Richard Slotnik v. Shani Marie Slotnik) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee Richard Slotnik v. Shani Marie Slotnik, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

06/07/2022 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs May 23, 2022

LEE RICHARD SLOTNIK v. SHANI MARIE SLOTNIK

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Williamson County No. 19CV-623 James G. Martin III, Judge ___________________________________

No. M2022-00645-COA-T10B-CV ___________________________________

In this accelerated interlocutory appeal, a mother seeks review of the denial of her motion to recuse the trial judge. She contends that statements the trial judge made at a hearing present a reasonable basis for questioning the judge’s impartiality or could only stem from an extrajudicial source. We conclude that they do not. So we affirm.

Tenn. Sup. Ct. R. 10B Interlocutory Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed

W. NEAL MCBRAYER, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which J. STEVEN STAFFORD, P.J., W.S., and THOMAS R. FRIERSON II, J., joined.

Fred C. Dance, Franklin, Tennessee, for the appellant, Shani Marie Slotnik.

Mark T. Freeman, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Lee Richard Slotnik.

OPINION

I.

A.

Shani Marie Slotnik (“Mother”) and Lee Richard Slotnik (“Father”) divorced in Illinois. After they both moved to Tennessee, Father filed a petition in Davidson County to enroll or register the divorce decree. Father also sought to modify the visitation schedule established by the Illinois court for their minor child. In 2017,1 the Davidson County court

1 Some places in the limited record before us indicate this may have occurred in 2016. entered an order naming Father as the primary residential parent and severely restricting Mother’s parenting time.

Over time, the child’s relationship with both Mother and Father improved. By the fall of 2018, they “relaxed the parenting plan to the point where they were essentially sharing parenting time.” But then the relationship between Father and child began to deteriorate and continued to do so through 2020.

The case was transferred to the Williamson County Circuit Court. And in March 2021, Mother petitioned to change custody or to modify the residential parenting schedule. Father counter-petitioned to revert back to the permanent parenting plan or reduce Mother’s parenting time. The trial court conducted evidentiary hearings on the petition and counter-petition over three days. At the conclusion of the proof, the court gave an oral ruling which was incorporated into a written order entered on August 24, 2021. On an interim basis, the court reduced Mother’s parenting time and ordered that her parenting time “be supervised until the child’s relationship with Father improves.” The court also ordered Mother, Father, and the child to work with a mental health professional to restore unsupervised visitation between Mother and the child.

The order included several factual findings. The court recounted the case history from the initial filings in Davidson County:

The evidence in this case established that, historically, [Mother] made some atrocious allegations regarding her son that resulted in severely restricted parenting time between her and [the child] when he was a little boy, three or four years old. That she worked with [a counselor] and her husband participated in that. [The counselor] testified that they came to sessions prepared, and they did a great job. And over time, the relationship between [Mother] and [the child] . . . was normalized.

The evidence at that time, though, was that [Father] should be cautious because there was some warning that [Mother] might not be able to help herself. She might not be able to refrain from aiding and abetting behavior.

Then the court turned to Mother’s petition and Father’s counter-petition. It found “clear and definite evidence . . . that the child ha[d] materially changed in his relationship with Father.” And the child, now age 10, was “bullying” both Father and his paternal grandmother. The child had also made up allegations that Father’s home was dirty and that Father had been violent.

The court could not determine a cause for the changed relationship between Father and the child. It eliminated Father’s conduct as a cause, or at least that conduct as alleged by the child, finding the change was “not the result of any conduct that Father has engaged 2 in.” The court was more equivocal when it came to Mother and the child. Rather than eliminating their conduct, the order provided:

The Court cannot find that the conduct of Mother has caused the change in the relationship between the child and Father.

The Court cannot find that it is the child’s own conscious intent that he is going to mistreat his Father.

The Court simply has no understanding of why the relationship with Father has changed but it has.

Although the court could not attribute the change to Mother’s conduct, the court did find that “[f]urther parenting time with Mother would impair the relationship between the child and Father.” And “[t]here [wa]s probable cause to determine that the child [wa]s at risk unless the Court imposes strict limitations on the contact between Mother and the child until the relationship between the child and Father is restored.”

On February 9, 2022, Mother moved to revise the interim order limiting her parenting time. She complained that the court “drastically reduced Mother’s parenting time with her son without a finding that Mother had caused any harm, be that physical, mental or emotional.” She interpreted the court’s order as finding “that Mother did not cause the change in the relations between [the child] and Father.” Following a hearing at which the court only heard arguments of counsel, the court denied the requested relief.

B.

On April 21, 2022, Mother moved for recusal of the trial judge. Mother “made no allegations that the Court ha[d] actual bias against her.” Instead, Mother claimed that “statements the Court ha[d] made . . . give rise to the appearance of bias and/or the appearance that the result of the final hearing of this matter ha[d] been predetermined by the Court.” Mother pointed to statements made by the judge at both the evidentiary hearing and the hearing on Mother’s motion to revise.

Mother contended that the judge’s statements during and after the evidentiary hearing improperly elevated Father’s relationship with the child over other considerations. Among other things, the judge said, “I’m interested in the fact that this little boy has no relationship with his father” and “What I care about is the fact that [the child is] shunning his father.” Thus the judge “approached the problem by attempting to repair [the child’s] relationship with Father at the expense of Mother’s relationship and time with [the child].”

According to Mother, the judge had “no justification for the reduction in Mother’s parenting time.” And, as she did in her motion to revise, Mother characterized the court’s 3 previous order as finding that Mother did not cause the change in relationship between Father and the child.

Mother contrasted the court’s finding with statements the judge made during the hearing on the motion to revise. In response to arguments of Mother’s counsel that there was no evidence that Mother “ha[d] done something wrong here or neglected the child,” the judge said,

All right. Let’s talk. The record in this case is undisputed that your client engaged in sever[e] parental alienation of this child when the case was in the hands of -- Judge [Phillip] Robinson in Davidson County without qualification. The trial court then severely limited your client’s contact and time with [the child] as a result of that. So I have a history in the cause that tells me that your client is fully capable of creating the d[y]sfunction that [the child] is now exhibiting.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Lee Richard Slotnik v. Shani Marie Slotnik, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-richard-slotnik-v-shani-marie-slotnik-tennctapp-2022.