Marcus Karl Sanders v. Sumie Sanders

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedMay 14, 2019
Docket2017-CA-01467-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Marcus Karl Sanders v. Sumie Sanders (Marcus Karl Sanders v. Sumie Sanders) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marcus Karl Sanders v. Sumie Sanders, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2017-CA-01467-COA

MARCUS KARL SANDERS APPELLANT

v.

SUMIE SANDERS APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/19/2017 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. DOROTHY WINSTON COLOM COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: OKTIBBEHA COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: JAMES PAUL TINSLEY ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: CARRIE A. JOURDAN NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - DOMESTIC RELATIONS DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 05/14/2019 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE J. WILSON, P.J., GREENLEE AND McCARTY, JJ.

J. WILSON, P.J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Marcus and Sumie Sanders consented to an irreconcilable differences divorce and

agreed that the chancellor would determine custody of their daughter, Kristen, and related

issues. After a trial, the chancellor awarded Sumie physical custody of Kristen and granted

Marcus reasonable visitation. Marcus argues that the chancellor’s custody decision was

based on a flawed Albright analysis. He also argues that the chancellor failed to address his

request for declaratory relief related to an alleged risk of international child abduction.

Finally, Marcus argues that the chancellor erred by following an unapproved local rule

regarding temporary custody hearings. We find no error and affirm. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. Marcus Sanders moved from Mississippi to Japan to teach English. In Japan, he

began a relationship with Sumie, a Japanese citizen. Marcus and Sumie married in 2011.

In addition to teaching, Marcus started a business making YouTube videos. Sumie worked

for a pharmaceutical company and also studied law. In 2013, Sumie gave birth to Kristen,

the couple’s only child. After Kristen’s birth, Sumie stayed at home, which led to some

financial difficulty for the family. In 2014, they decided to move to Mississippi to be closer

to Marcus’s family and save money. Sumie also testified that Marcus was unhappy in Japan

and wanted to move home to Mississippi.

¶3. After Marcus moved to Mississippi, Sumie and Kristen remained in Japan for three

months while Sumie waited to obtain a visa. When Sumie and Kristen finally arrived in

Mississippi, they moved with Marcus into his parents’ home in Ethel. Marcus had decided

to focus on his growing YouTube business, and in Ethel he was able to record and produce

his videos in a studio on his parents’ property that his father had built. Sumie did not work

outside the home, although she did earn some money online by buying and selling American

brand name items to people in Japan.

¶4. Marcus primarily worked on his YouTube videos at night, so Sumie was Kristen’s

primary caregiver. Marcus’s parents, Mark and Melinda, also helped with Kristen’s care.

Marcus usually was asleep during the day due to his unusual work hours, but he did

occasionally play with Kristen or help put her to bed at night.

¶5. Sumie did not have a car or a driver’s license when they moved in with Marcus’s

2 parents; thus, she had to rely on her mother-in-law for transportation. Even after Sumie

obtained a driver’s license, she had to ask her mother-in-law to borrow a car. Sumie was not

happy in Ethel. After living with Marcus’s parents for about a year, Marcus, Sumie, and

Kristen moved to an apartment in Starkville. Living in Starkville allowed Sumie to take

Kristen on outings to local events, the library, book stores, and the swimming pool at their

apartment complex. Sumie made some new friends who also had children, and they would

often have playdates. Sumie and Marcus shared a car, but she testified that Marcus did not

allow her to go any farther than Columbus without his permission.

¶6. In late 2015, Marcus and Sumie had a fight. In the heat of the moment, Sumie said

that she might just “disappear.” Marcus testified that this remark scared him and that he

became fearful that Sumie would abscond with Kristen to Japan. He started keeping

Kristen’s passport locked away from Sumie.

¶7. In March 2016, Marcus went to Atlanta to visit some friends. While he was out of

town, Sumie left the home. She and Kristen went to a domestic abuse shelter, although

Sumie does not allege that Marcus ever physically abused her or Kristen. She testified that

she left because she was fearful for her safety and her daughter’s safety because Marcus had

become extremely controlling. Sumie testified that Marcus prevented her from traveling

freely and tightly controlled her spending. She said that Marcus always wanted receipts for

any money that she spent and would not give her access to the family Amazon account.

¶8. When Sumie moved out, she filed a complaint for divorce and for custody of Kristen.

Marcus answered and filed a counterclaim for divorce and custody. On April 22, 2016, an

3 agreed order was entered setting a hearing on temporary matters, including custody. The

order provided that temporary matters would be decided based on affidavits submitted by the

parties. Both parties submitted multiple affidavits. On May 9, 2016, the chancery court

entered a temporary order granting Sumie temporary physical custody of Kristen, granting

Marcus temporary visitation of every other weekend plus three weeks during the summer,

and granting the parties temporary joint legal custody. In February 2017, the parties

withdrew their fault-based claims for divorce and consented to an irreconcilable differences

divorce. They agreed that the chancellor would determine Kristen’s custody, visitation, and

related issues. In March 2017, the case proceeded to trial on the stipulated issues.

¶9. After the separation, Marcus moved back to his parents’ home in Ethel, and Sumie

and Kristen moved back into the couple’s apartment in Starkville. Sumie testified that she

had been looking for work in Mississippi, but she was unable to find a job. She testified that

she had some interviews scheduled in New York but that if she could not find a job in the

United States, she intended to return to Japan. While Marcus had Kristen for three weeks of

visitation under the temporary custody order, Sumie went home to Japan to visit her family.

While Sumie was in Japan, she obtained certifications that she thought might help her find

a job as a fitness, diving, or swimming instructor. She and Kristen had been able to get by

on temporary child support and alimony, as well as money that her mother sent from Japan.

¶10. Sumie testified that if she ever did move back to Japan, she would want Marcus to

have lengthy visits with Kristen twice a year. She agreed that Marcus and Kristen should

have a relationship and that he was not a bad father. But she also believed that Marcus did

4 not always think about his family and how his actions affected them. She pointed to the fact

that Marcus worked most nights and slept during the day and rarely ate meals with her and

Kristen.

¶11. Marcus testified that he had modified his working hours since the separation in order

to be able to take care of Kristen during visitation. He denied any suggestion that he was not

around to help care for Kristen. He testified that he would often play with her or watch TV

with her when they lived at his parents’ home in Ethel. He acknowledged that his working

hours were unusual, but he believed that he saw Kristen more often than a parent who

worked a “normal” nine-to-five job.

¶12. Marcus asserted that Sumie did not give Kristen enough attention. He thought that

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Marcus Karl Sanders v. Sumie Sanders, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marcus-karl-sanders-v-sumie-sanders-missctapp-2019.