Lewis G. v. Cassie Y.

426 P.3d 1136
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 28, 2018
Docket7304 S-16761
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 426 P.3d 1136 (Lewis G. v. Cassie Y.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis G. v. Cassie Y., 426 P.3d 1136 (Ala. 2018).

Opinion

BOLGER, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

A mother moved from Texas to Alaska, taking her two children with her. The father, still residing in Texas, filed for divorce. The parties executed a settlement agreement awarding joint legal custody of the children to the parents, primary physical custody to the mother, and custody during the summer and over the Christmas holiday to the father. Cooperation between the parents began to deteriorate, and the father moved to modify custody.

*1139 The superior court concluded that there had been a substantial change of circumstances and conducted a best interests analysis. The court elected to keep the custody agreement largely unchanged. However, it required the father's future visitation to occur in Alaska and imposed other conditions on his visitation and the parties' communications. The father appeals, alleging several deficiencies in the court's analysis and arguing that his due process rights were violated. Finding no error, we affirm the superior court's order.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

Lewis G. and Cassie Y. 1 have two children: Rachel, born in December 2002, and Harold, born in March 2005. In March 2015 Cassie moved from Texas to Alaska, taking the children with her. After relocating, Cassie sought a domestic violence protective order against Lewis, which the district court granted based on findings of both assault and sexual offense.

Harold struggled with suicidal ideation while living in Texas, and he continued to do so following the move to Alaska. In May 2015 Cassie scheduled Harold for counseling. Shortly thereafter Harold attempted to hurt himself and was hospitalized at North Star Hospital. After being released Harold continued to receive counseling. He also began seeing a psychiatrist and taking prescribed psychotropic medications.

In October 2015 a Texas court entered a Final Decree of Divorce that included a child custody order. 2 The custody order provided Cassie and Lewis joint legal custody of the children and Cassie primary physical custody. It also stated that as long as the parents resided more than 100 miles apart, Lewis would have physical custody of the children during summer months and the period between Christmas and New Year's Day.

In the months following the divorce, Cassie and Lewis initially communicated amicably. Over time, however, Lewis began to text and email Cassie with increasing frequency, accusing her of preventing him from contacting the children and failing to respond to requests for information. In response, Cassie accused Lewis of harassing her and displaying stalking behavior. Cassie eventually stopped responding to Lewis's texts and directed Lewis to communicate with her only by email. Lewis continued to send her both texts and emails.

In June 2016 Harold and Rachel went to stay with Lewis in Texas for the summer per the terms of the custody order. Later that month Lewis filed a motion to modify custody in a Texas court. He alleged that Cassie had exposed the children to a convicted sex offender and that Cassie was neglecting the children's academic and medical needs. The Texas court sent an investigator to Alaska, who determined that a sex offender was living in a trailer on the same property as Cassie and the children. Although the investigator expressed concern, he noted that the man was scheduled to move out soon, and he advised the Texas court that he did not believe the children were in danger. Additionally, prior to the investigator's trip to Alaska, Lewis told the investigator that he sometimes uses methamphetamine.

Despite receiving ongoing treatment, Harold's mental health struggles persisted. During 2016 he continued to battle impulses to hurt himself. In October Harold ingested some of his mother's medication and was admitted to the hospital for treatment. And in January 2017 Harold was diagnosed with bipolar disorder with psychosis and ADHD. In March 2017 he was again hospitalized at North Star.

B. Proceedings

In October 2016 the Texas court concluded that it lacked jurisdiction over the motion to modify custody because the children resided in Alaska. A few days later Lewis filed a motion in Alaska superior court to change custody. He argued that Harold's drug overdose earlier that month indicated that the children were at risk of harm; that the children's grades had declined; that a convicted child rapist had lived on the same property as Cassie and the children; that Harold's *1140 mental health issues were a product of his living situation; that the children were living in a crowded home with people often moving in and out; and that Cassie had attempted to sabotage Lewis's relationship with the children. Lewis also filed a motion seeking temporary custody of Harold and Rachel on similar grounds. The superior court referred the dispute to a family court master.

A hearing on the temporary custody motion was held in January 2017. The master heard testimony from Cassie, Lewis, Harold's clinicians, and one of the coaches of Rachel's sports team. Lewis argued during the hearing that Cassie had not adequately responded to interrogatories and a request for documents; the court later ordered Cassie to either provide answers to Lewis's interrogatories and produce the requested documents or state objections in writing. The master recommended that Lewis's motion for temporary custody be denied, and the superior court adopted this recommendation.

A hearing on the motion to change custody was held in March 2017. At the outset Lewis stated that Cassie had not provided adequate answers to his interrogatories. He argued that he had not had time to file an objection because Cassie had submitted her responses less than two weeks before the hearing, and he asked the master to delay the hearing by 30 days. Cassie objected to a delay, noting that she had replied to Lewis's interrogatories by the deadline in the court's order. The master declined to delay the hearing. She assured Lewis that he would have an opportunity during the hearing to ask Cassie any questions she had not answered during discovery.

Lewis, Cassie, one of Cassie's friends, one of Rachel's sports team coaches, the investigator appointed by the Texas court, and a member of Cassie's church testified at the hearing. Afterwards the master asked Lewis if he felt his case had been prejudiced by Cassie's failure to provide any requested documents or respond to his interrogatories. Lewis stated that he would like Cassie to answer some questions that had not been adequately addressed during discovery. The master allowed Lewis to ask Cassie several questions. Lewis answered "yes" when the master asked if the court had "fully addressed [his] concerns about the discovery."

The master made findings on the record a few weeks later. Based on Harold's medical issues, repeated hospitalizations, and accidental overdose, the master concluded that a substantial change in circumstances had occurred, which could warrant modification of the custody agreement. 3

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Bluebook (online)
426 P.3d 1136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-g-v-cassie-y-alaska-2018.