Marriage of Lutzi v. Lutzi

485 N.W.2d 311, 1992 Minn. App. LEXIS 454, 1992 WL 88800
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedMay 5, 1992
DocketC8-91-2381
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 485 N.W.2d 311 (Marriage of Lutzi v. Lutzi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marriage of Lutzi v. Lutzi, 485 N.W.2d 311, 1992 Minn. App. LEXIS 454, 1992 WL 88800 (Mich. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION

CRIPPEN, Judge.

Appellant Bonnie Lutzi asked the trial court to modify the “visitation schedule” *313 for the two minor children of the parties. An earlier decree named appellant as physical custodian of the children. Because the decree provided for visitation during alternating weeks and alternating holidays, the trial court granted respondent John Lutzi’s countermotion to amend the decree to provide that custody is placed in a “shared physical custody arrangement.” The court also denied appellant’s proposed changes in the arrangement. Appellant challenges the trial court’s amendment of the judgment and contends she is entitled to have visitation altered.

We reverse the judgment amendment but affirm denial of appellant’s motion.

FACTS

The marriage of Bonnie Lutzi and John Lutzi was dissolved in 1988. Pursuant to a stipulation of the parties, the trial court judgment provided that the parties have joint legal custody of their two minor sons, now ages six and eight, but that appellant Bonnie Lutzi have “the physical custody of the minor children.” Another provision of the stipulated judgment provided that “as visitation” the children should spend “alternating weeks and alternating holidays” with each parent. The parties have adhered to the judgment and have enjoyed equal periods of custodial child care.

The record furnishes a meager disclosure of the living circumstances of the parties. Before the marriage dissolution the family lived in Kasson, a city about 13 miles west of Rochester. The oldest child has attended school in Byron, located east of Kasson, five miles nearer to Rochester. Bonnie Lutzi has engaged in real estate sales work since 1985, evidently in the Kasson or Byron areas. She describes plans to sell real estate in the “Stewartville area.” Stewart-ville is located about 10 miles south of Rochester, some 22 miles from Byron and 27 miles from Kasson. Appellant has not indicated where she plans to live, but says she plans to have the children attend school at Chatfield, a city about 16 miles east of Stewartville.

Because of her plans to change the school of the children, appellant moved in July 1991 for an order altering the visitation schedule established in the decree, asking that she have custody during the school year and visitation for at least two weeks during the summer. John Lutzi opposed this motion and moved, inter alia, that the decree be amended to state that custody of the children is placed in a “shared physical custody arrangement.”

The trial court determined that judgment provisions on custody and visitation were ambiguous and ordered an amendment to state an arrangement of shared physical custody. On affidavits filed by the parties, the court denied alteration of the arrangement, observing that (1) the standard for altering a “joint physical custody” arrangement is one of endangerment, and (2) appellant “fails to demonstrate that it is in the best interest of the minor children that the presently existing shared physical custody arrangement be disrupted.” Explaining its latter finding, the court observed special needs of the oldest child and the successful meeting of those needs in the Byron school system. On appeal, Bonnie Lutzi argues that the decree clearly gives her rights as the sole physical custodian. She ends her brief with the conclusion, without elaboration, that she is “entitled” to continued sole custody rights and “to relocate [the children] to her new residence.”

ISSUES

1. Did the trial court err in denominating the custody arrangement as one of shared or joint physical custody?

2. If appellant was the sole custodian, did the trial court err in denying her request for custody during the school year?

ANALYSIS

Contentions of the parties require an attempt to define shared physical custody arrangements and to ascertain their legal significance. In spite of continuing uncertainty on the topic, we find authority for reasonably settled standards governing the issues of this case.

*314 1.

The trial court amended the judgment in this case because of its interpretation of provisions on custody and visitation, not because of a change of circumstances. Consistent with the original judgment, the parties have enjoyed an equal division of custodial time for nearly three years.

The trial court found little guidance from the governing statutes. Joint physical custody is defined by statute as a placement where residence and routine daily care “is structured between the parties.” Minn. Stat. § 518.003, subd. 3(d) (1990). Clearly, however, sole physical custody with visitation also results in structuring the residence and care of the children between the parties. Thus, trial courts may unequally divide physical custody but still label the arrangement as joint. Courts may choose, as some do, to designate joint physical custodians as primary and secondary joint custodians.

The trial court’s conclusions reflect an understanding, not stated in the statute, that joint physical custody traditionally involves an equal sharing of residential care. Thus, the court could conclude that an equal sharing of physical custody not only looks like, but is in fact a joint custody arrangement. We have previously denied the claim of a “de facto” joint physical custody placement, but this holding occurred in circumstances where the noncustodial parent enjoyed only a liberal visitation schedule. Geiger v. Geiger, 470 N.W.2d 704, 706 (Minn.App.1991), pet. for rev. denied (Minn. Aug. 1, 1991). Geiger did not denounce the notion that a still larger visitation arrangement might make the noncustodial parent a de facto joint physical custodian.

We conclude it is not necessary to determine in this case whether or under what circumstances a de facto joint custody arrangement might arise. There is also no occasion here to decide appellant’s proposition that such a determination may require an evidentiary hearing to explore the intention of the court in its judgment on custody. Instead, the issue in this case is resolved by observing that the 1988 custody arrangement was not independently determined by the trial court but reflected a stipulation by the parties.

The existence of a stipulated decree is a critical consideration because of statutory language on definitions of custodial arrangements. The definitions statute provides in its preface that the statute provides definitions which govern “unless otherwise agreed by the parties.” Minn.Stat. § 518.003, subd. 3. The parties agreed in 1988 that respondent would have an equal caring role but that appellant would be designated the physical custodian. Taking into account the express statutory reference to an agreement of the parties, as well as the inexact definition of physical custody (physical custody “structured between the parties”), we conclude that the courts must accept the denomination of custody stipulated by the parties. Thus, the trial court erred in modifying the judgment to reconcile perceived ambiguities in its provisions.

2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
485 N.W.2d 311, 1992 Minn. App. LEXIS 454, 1992 WL 88800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriage-of-lutzi-v-lutzi-minnctapp-1992.