Lyddy v. Lyddy

787 A.2d 506, 173 Vt. 493, 2001 Vt. LEXIS 284
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedSeptember 19, 2001
Docket00-418 & 00-496
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 787 A.2d 506 (Lyddy v. Lyddy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lyddy v. Lyddy, 787 A.2d 506, 173 Vt. 493, 2001 Vt. LEXIS 284 (Vt. 2001).

Opinion

This matter involves two consolidated appeals, the first from the family court’s order granting defendant mother sole parental rights and responsibilities over the parties’ child after plaintiff father absconded with the child and failed to appear for the final divorce hearing, and the second from the court’s order denying his motion to reopen the divorce proceedings. Father challenges the court’s decision to go forward in his absence, contends that the court failed to assess the evidence fairly and make objective findings, and farther faults the court for denying his motion to reopen without first holding a hearing. We find no error and, therefore, affirm both orders.

The parties were married in 1997, and their son was bom later that year. They separated in February 1999, and father filed for divorce shortly thereafter. Voluminous motions were filed and several hearings were held between March 1999 and August 2000. A temporary order gave father parental rights and responsibilities over the parties’ child approximately seventy percent of the time. On June 8, 2000, the parties were notified that the final divorce hearing would take place on August 22. On August 8, the court held a status conference to assure that the parties would be adequately prepared for trial, particularly considering that father was acting pro se at the time. The court informed the parties that a full evi-dentiary hearing on all issues would take place on August 22, unless the parties settled the matter in a manner satisfactory to the court. Two days before the scheduled final hearing, father failed to transfer the parties’ child to mother as provided under the terms of the temporary order. On August 22, father failed to appear at the final hearing. As it turned out, father had taken the child to Texas, apparently because he feared losing custody of his son.

*494 After mother made an oral counterclaim for divorce, the court proceeded without father, taking testimony from mother and Dr. Lawrence Bart, who had performed the court-ordered family forensic evaluation. Following the hearing, the court awarded mother parental rights and responsibilities, and suspended all contact between father and the parties’ child pending further hearing. The court followed up its August 22 final order with a September 13 order adopting supplemental findings submitted by mother’s attorney. Soon thereafter, father retained counsel, who prevailed upon him to return to Vermont with the parties’ child. Having returned to Vermont, father first filed a September 19 emergency motion for reestablishment of contact with his son, which was denied. On September 21, father filed a notice of appeal from the final divorce order, and on September 26, he filed a motion for a new trial, an amended judgment, and/or relief from judgment. The family court denied the motion in an October 10 order, which father appealed. Father’s appeals were consolidated by order of this Court. On appeal, father argues that the family court erred (1) by allowing mother to proceed on her counterclaim made for the first time at the final hearing without giving him an opportunity to respond, (2) by adopting verbatim biased and erroneous supplemental findings proposed by mother, (3) by failing to conduct a complete and balanced analysis of the relevant statutory criteria in making its custody award, and (4) by denying, without first holding a hearing, his motion to reopen the divorce proceedings.

Father first argues that the family court erred by allowing mother to file an oral counterclaim and go forward at the final hearing when he failed to appear. Father concedes that mother was entitled to file a counterclaim at any time before final judgment under V.R.F.P. 4(f), but claims he was entitled to notice and an opportunity to file an answer under V.R.C.P. 12(a)(2). There was no error.

We agree with father that, generally, the subject of a cross-claim is entitled to notice and an opportunity to file an answer. Given the facts of this case, however, father was not prejudiced by the lack of notice. The family court proceeded on the theory that father had brought the very same issues to the court, which were set for trial, that were raised by mother’s counterclaim — namely claims for divorce and custody of the couple’s child. Other than mother’s request for attorney’s fees, 1 no issue went forward on the day of the hearing of which father had not already had notice, and upon which he had prayed for the same relief. Thus, father suffered no harm because of an alleged lack of notice that the court would go forward on the very issues he had raised himself. Indeed, the matters at issue in this divorce were not new to the parties or the court. The divorce proceedings were contentious, and the parties had been before the court on numerous occasions leading up to the trial, including several evidentiary hearings on temporary custody, motions for protective orders, and motions for contempt. At a status conference held just two weeks before the August 22 hearing, the family court informed the parties that it intended to proceed on a full evidentiary hearing concerning all issues. Those issues did not change in two weeks. Father’s complaint is really that, in his voluntary absence, mother was given custody.

Moreover, in light of the facts before the family court on the day of the hearing, the court had little choice but to go *495 forward. It made the following findings: (1) although father had notice of the final divorce hearing and had appeared at a pretrial status conference just two weeks earlier, he failed to appear at the scheduled final hearing and gave no reason for his nonappearance; (2) father had failed to return the parties’ son to mother two days earlier, as required by court order, and all efforts to reach him by telephone were unavailing; and (3) in light of the expert forensic testimony of Dr. Bart, father’s behavior had placed the welfare of the child at significant and immediate risk. Although father claims that there was no reason to proceed that day and every reason to wait and find out “what happened and why,” we cannot ignore that, on the day of the hearing, no one knew where father and the child were, or whether they would ever be seen again. At the very least, the family court was required to issue a custody order suspending father’s parent-child contact and giving custody to mother so that a law enforcement officer could take the minor into custody. Under these circumstances, it is disingenuous for father to claim that the family court went too far in considering the issues before it. 2

Father’s second claim of error is that the family court erred by adopting, verbatim, the biased and erroneous supplemental findings, conclusions, and order proposed by mother’s attorney. Father acknowledges that V.R.C.P. 52(a)(2) does not bar verbatim adoption of proposed findings as long as they are not clearly erroneous, but contends that some of the findings in this instance were overkill at best and malicious distortion at worst. Before generally addressing this contention, we examine each of the challenged findings.

Father first challenges the court’s finding stating that mother was the primary caregiver before issuance of the temporary order, had demonstrated devotion in caring for the child, and was fully capable of assuming primary care of the child.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
787 A.2d 506, 173 Vt. 493, 2001 Vt. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyddy-v-lyddy-vt-2001.