Maqsudi v. Maqsudi

830 A.2d 929, 363 N.J. Super. 53
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedSeptember 12, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 830 A.2d 929 (Maqsudi v. Maqsudi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maqsudi v. Maqsudi, 830 A.2d 929, 363 N.J. Super. 53 (N.J. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

830 A.2d 929 (2002)
363 N.J. Super. 53

Mansur MAQSUDI, Plaintiff,
v.
Gulnara KARIMOVA MAQSUDI, Defendant.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division, Morris County.

Decided September 12, 2002.

*930 Edward J. O'Donnell, for plaintiff (Cutler, Simeone, Townsend, O'Donnell and Tomaio, attorneys), Morristown and Beatrice Kandell, Livingston, for plaintiff (Skoloff and Wolfe, attorneys).

*931 John Paone, Woodbridge, for defendant (Paone & Zaleski, attorneys).

WILSON, D., J.S.C.

The threshold issue in this international child custody and marital dissolution case is whether or not this court has subject matter jurisdiction to determine child custody and parenting issues, given that the mother and the two minor children of the marriage are currently residing in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, where the family had spent the majority of the last two years. The father had worked on a special assignment, while maintaining the permanent family home in Morris County, New Jersey. A second issue concerns whether or not this court should enforce an Uzbek custody decree obtained by the mother after her removal of the children from the State of New Jersey. This court determines that it does have subject matter jurisdiction under the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Act, N.J.S.A. 2A:34-28 et. seq. This court also determines that it will not enforce the Uzbek divorce decree because the father was not afforded fundamental indicia of due process—notice and the opportunity to be heard.

I.

Plaintiff, Mansur Maqsudi, emigrated with his parents and siblings from Afghanistan to the United States in 1979, when he was 12 years old. He attended elementary and secondary schools in Morris County and college in Rhode Island. In 1989 he became a U.S. citizen. After college, he began work in the family business in New York City.

In 1991, Mr. Maqsudi visited Uzbekistan for the first time and met defendant, Gulnara Karimova, at a party at the home of her father, then and currently the President of Uzbekistan, a republic formed in Central Asia shortly after the break-up of the Soviet Union. The parties dated for six months prior to their marriage, a religious ceremony in Uzbekistan in November 1991 and a civil ceremony in New York City in December 1991. Prior to their marriage ceremonies, they had discussed the importance to Mr. Maqsudi of educating their children in the United States and living in the United States, particularly because of the difficulties he had encountered in relocating to the United States at the age of 12.

After the wedding, they resided together in Weehawken, New Jersey, where they continued to live until May 1993, when they finished their home in Montville, New Jersey. During this period of time, Ms. Karimova obtained her green card and a visa to remain in the United States.

Their son, Islam, an American citizen, was born in December 1992, while the couple was living in Weehawken. They all moved to Montville in 1993 because of the excellence of the school system and because they had literally dozens of close family members in Morris County.

Mr. Maqsudi continued to work for his family's business in New York City and commuted from Montville. Within a month after they had moved into the Montville home, however, the business required him to spend substantial amounts of time in Uzbekistan on a special project. The parties kept the Montville home and traveled back and forth from Uzbekistan with Islam. When in Uzbekistan, they stayed with Ms. Karimova's father. During this time, they did not have their New Jersey mail forwarded; they did not change their drivers' license addresses; they did not change their passport addresses; and they continued to file tax returns in the United States and New Jersey. Islam started pre-school in Montville, engaged in various extracurricular activities in that area, and continued his *932 close relationships with his many aunts, uncles, and cousins. In June 1998, the Maqsudis' daughter, Iman, an American citizen, was born in the Meadowlands Hospital in Secaucus, New Jersey, while they were living in New Jersey.

From 1993 to 1998, the family had traveled back and forth between Uzbekistan and their home in New Jersey. Mr. Maqsudi's specific charge was to set up a management team in Tashkent to manage the family business projects in Uzbekistan and then to return to the United States. The team was sufficiently in place by 1998; and they returned to Morris County at that time.

In fall 1998, they both decided to pursue graduate degrees at Harvard College. They sold the Montville home, rented a home in Newton, Massachusetts, and almost immediately began searching for a new home in New Jersey, larger and more secure, to serve as their family home after their respective Harvard graduations, Mr. Maqsudi's in June 1999 and Ms. Karimova's in June 2000.

Despite the family's peripatetic lifestyle, the children seemed to be centered in the United States, with their primary physicians and schools being either in New Jersey or in Massachusetts, and their close family relationships being in Morris County, New Jersey. Despite Mr. Maqsudi's business interests, it appears that he was a primary caretaker of the children, taking them to those doctors' appointments, extracurricular activities and school events.

While at Harvard, the parties looked for their next home in the Mendham, Montville, Boonton, and Mountain Lakes areas of Morris County. They looked for a home in those areas primarily because of the reputations of the school systems for their children and secondarily because of the proximity of Mr. Maqsudi's family. In May 1999, they signed a contract on a large and luxurious home in Mendham. They closed on August 1, 1999, and moved in. The house was lavishly furnished and the parties moved in with Mr. Maqsudi planning to work in the New Jersey office of the family's business. Ms. Karimova planned to complete her Harvard degree research in New Jersey away from the Harvard campus.

The manager of the Maqsudi business in Uzbekistan resigned unexpectedly in 1999, however. This situation compelled Mr. Maqsudi again to return to Tashkent to set up another management team. The parties considered Mr. Maqsudi's traveling to Tashkent and leaving the family behind, but decided otherwise because of Iman's tender age. So the parties journeyed together once again to Tashkent, where Islam began first grade in the American International School. That school was essentially a school for transient, principally American, children, whose parents were temporarily stationed in Tashkent. Islam took various courses, all of which were taught in English, and participated in the school's American curriculum. The Maqsudis thought they would be able to return to the United States after a few months, or a year at the most, and wanted Islam to be able to go right back into U.S. schools, without an educational disruption. Islam attended the school for the 1999-2000 school year but missed many days because of journeying back and forth to the United States.

While still in Uzbekistan in early 2000, the parties began renovation of the Mendham home. The negotiations with contractors had started in late 1999. They finished the basement for the children, painted the entire house, refurnished the house and, essentially, made it more comfortable for the children. The parties were adamant that the renovations be completed by the end of March 2000 because *933 they contemplated living there on a full-time basis shortly after that time.

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830 A.2d 929, 363 N.J. Super. 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maqsudi-v-maqsudi-njsuperctappdiv-2002.