Marriage of McAuley CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 28, 2021
DocketC090504
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marriage of McAuley CA3 (Marriage of McAuley CA3) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marriage of McAuley CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 6/28/21 Marriage of McAuley CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Sacramento) ----

In re the Marriage of AMEENAH and JEFFERY C090504 ALLEN MCAULEY.

AMEENAH SALAAM, (Super. Ct. No. 12FL07094)

Appellant,

v.

JEFFERY ALLEN MCAULEY,

Respondent.

Ameenah Salaam (mother) appeals from an order changing primary physical custody of her minor son, A., from mother, in Maryland, to father, Jeffery Allen McAuley (father), in California. Although mother had been the child’s primary physical caretaker since birth, the trial court decided a change of custody was in A.’s best interest after finding mother had engaged in a continuous course of conduct designed to frustrate father’s visitation rights and alienate A. from father.

1 On appeal, mother argues the trial court erred by (1) conducting a hearing without proper service of father’s initial request for order, (2) granting relief in excess of what was requested in the initial request for order, (3) rendering a decision without considering all the relevant facts, (4) improperly excluding relevant evidence, and (5) failing to properly weigh the evidence adduced at trial.1 Finding no error, we affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Mother and father were married in July 2011, and separated in December 2012. They had one son, A., born in September 2012. Father stipulated to a five-year domestic violence restraining order in April 2013, which expired in April 2018. After dissolution, mother and father were awarded joint legal custody of A. Mother was given sole physical custody, with father having visitation rights three days a week and during specified holidays. In November 2017, mother filed a request for an order allowing her to relocate to Virginia. In December 2017, over father’s objection, the court granted the “move-away” request and awarded mother sole legal custody of A. Father was awarded visitation/parenting time with A. in California during the month of July, Thanksgiving holidays in odd-numbered years, winter break in even-numbered years, and spring break every year. The court also ordered that each parent shall have the right to “reasonable Facetime or Skype communication . . . when [A.] is with the other parent.” As ordered, A. visited father in July of 2018. Around the same time, mother moved from Virginia to Maryland without seeking court approval. Mother told father about her move, but would not disclose her new address. Father alleged that after A.’s summer visit, his parenting time with A. was significantly reduced. He also claimed that he was no longer able to speak with A. on a

1 Although father did not file a respondent’s brief, we reverse only if prejudicial error is found. (Lee v. Wells Fargo Bank (2001) 88 Cal.App.4th 1187, 1192, fn. 7.)

2 regular basis. Video calls failed because A.’s tablet always was set to “do not disturb.” Father would sit and wait for hours for A. to call him. Sometimes the phone would ring only once and, if father missed the call, A. would not call again. Father claimed that he would ask mother to have A. call, but mother would tell him A. was busy or did not want to call. Mother told him that she was unwilling to force A. to call if he did not want to. As a result, father claimed he was only able to speak to his son approximately seven or eight times between August and December 2018. Father produced a call log to support his claim. On November 30, 2018, a few weeks before A. was scheduled to fly to California for winter break, mother e-mailed father stating that A. would no longer be allowed to visit or communicate with him in any way. Mother explained to father, for the first time, that “[u]pon [A.’s] return home from his [July 2018] visit . . . , A. told me on August 7th [that] ‘Daddy pulled my penis and made it bleed.’ ” In response, father sent mother a text message calling the accusation “ridiculous” and accusing her of deliberately interfering with his relationship with A. Father’s requests for court orders On December 19, 2018, father filed an ex parte request for an emergency order compelling mother to (1) comply with the previously established visitation schedule, (2) pay for the next visit and split the cost of future visits equally, and (3) ensure A. has at least a 15-minute visit with father every two days. Father also asked the court to reinstate joint legal custody and order mother to provide him with A.’s school and medical information. At the December 19, 2018 hearing on the ex parte request, the court referred the parties to Family Court Services for mediation, temporarily halted father’s visitation and parenting time, and set a further hearing on February 5, 2019. Both parties appeared for the February 5 hearing. At the hearing, the court heard father’s explanation of the alleged sexual abuse. According to father, A. came into father

3 and his fiancée’s bedroom one night and said that his “ ‘pee pee hurts.’ ” Father asked A. to pull down his “pull-ups” training pants, which A. wore because of a bed-wetting problem, noticed that the pull-up was wet, and saw that A. had mild redness on the tip of his penis. Father cleaned up A., applied ointment, and told A. not to wear the pull-ups for the next few days until the soreness went away. The court learned that mother had arranged for A. to be interviewed at the Children’s National Hospital, Child and Adolescent Protection Center (Children’s National), in August 2018. The report from that interview stated: “ ‘Patient made no direct disclosure about anyone touching his body in a way that made him feel uncomfortable or that he considered to be inappropriate.’ ” Several weeks after the Children’s National interview, mother arranged for A. to be interviewed by Maryland police. A recording of that interview was forwarded to the Sacramento Sheriff’s Department, and a detective was assigned to review the recorded interview. The detective concluded there was insufficient evidence of sexual abuse, and declined to open a criminal investigation. Both Maryland and Sacramento Child Protective Services (CPS) also declined to take action. The court, unpersuaded by mother’s sexual abuse allegations, restored father’s visitation/parenting time and ordered mother to pay the transportation costs for A.’s upcoming 2019 spring break visit. In addition, mother was to allow father to have video calls with A. on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, and ordered both parents to “exert every effort to maintain free access and unhampered contact” between A. and the other parent. The court also ordered, “[s]hould either parent engage in conduct which undermines the shared custody arrangement, it shall be considered that the parent is not acting in the best interests of the child and such non-conformance may be the grounds for modification of this order.” At mother’s request, the matter was set for trial on June 13, 2019.

4 After the February 5 hearing, mother informed father that despite the court’s orders, she would not allow A. to visit during spring break due to the alleged sexual abuse. Thus, on February 22, 2019, father filed another ex parte request seeking an order to show cause regarding contempt for violating the February 5 order, sanctions, costs and attorney fees.

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