Marsh v. Smith

67 So. 3d 100, 2011 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 19, 2011 WL 190043
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 21, 2011
Docket2091108
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 67 So. 3d 100 (Marsh v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marsh v. Smith, 67 So. 3d 100, 2011 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 19, 2011 WL 190043 (Ala. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

THOMAS, Judge.

Percy Marsh (“the father”) appeals from a judgment of the Mobile Circuit Court denying his request for a modification of custody. The father and Heather Marsh Smith (“the mother”) were divorced in July 2005; the divorce judgment awarded the parties joint custody of the parties’ daughter (“the child”), with the parents having alternating weeklong custodial periods. The joint custodial arrangement functioned well until the mother remarried and decided to move from Mobile County, where both parents had resided after the divorce, to Lucedale, Mississippi.

The mother informed the father of her intent to relocate via conversations regarding the matter, but she failed to serve the father with the appropriate written notice containing the information required by Ala.Code 1975, § 30-3-165, a part of the Alabama Parent-Child Relationship Protection Act (“the Act”), codified at Ala. Code 1975, § 30-3-160 et seq. The father then filed in the trial court a petition to hold the mother in contempt for failing to properly provide notice of her relocation; in his motion, he requested temporary custody of the child until the mother returned to Mobile County.

In response to the father’s petition, the mother counterpetitioned for a modification of custody, seeking sole custody of the child. The father then counterpetitioned for a modification, seeking sole custody of the child as well.

The father sought emergency temporary custody of the child in March 2008 based on the mother’s endangering the safety of the child by giving the child an overdose of a prescription medication. The mother opposed the father’s motion, alleging that her mistake in giving the child too much of the medication was inadvertent and that the issue had been promptly and properly han-[102]*102died by the mother. However, after a hearing, the parties agreed to place the child in the temporary sole physical custody of the father and for the mother to have visitation from Thursday afternoon to Sunday evening on alternating weekends.

At the trial in November 2008, the mother admitted that she had relocated to Lucedale, Mississippi, where she resided with her current husband. She explained that they lived next door to her current husband’s parents, Marion and Bobbi Smith (collectively referred to as “the Smiths”), and that the child spends time with them and her current husband’s grandchildren, who also live nearby, when the child is in Mississippi. The mother further explained that she had begun exercising her custodial or visitation periods in Mobile County when the father and the guardian ad litem had objected to her relocation to Mississippi; she said that the Smiths had allowed her to use their residence in Chickasaw during her custodial or visitation periods. According to the mother, she and the child slept in the same bed during the mother’s custodial or visitation periods and the mother’s current husband slept on the couch in the Chickasaw house. During the litigation, the mother objected to the father’s practice of allowing the child to sleep with him during his custodial periods. As noted below, the father discontinued this practice when the mother made an issue of it. The mother also complained that the father had not taken the child to the doctor even after the divorce and had relied on her to do so; the father explained that he drove a truck to and from New Orleans twice per day during that period and that he was not available to pick up the child from day care to take her to the doctor’s office. Otherwise, the mother had no real complaints about the father’s parenting.

The father testified that the child had slept in his bed with him when he had custody of her. He explained that he had discontinued that practice when the mother had objected to that practice, citing its “inappropriateness.” The father denied that having the daughter, who was six at the time of trial, sleep in his bed was inappropriate. According to the father, the child enjoyed being with both of her parents; the father said that he would have expected the child to feel this way. The father also said that he felt that the mother was selfish and that she could be a better mother if she would put the needs of the child first. The father focused on the mother’s inadvertent overdosing of the child as evidence that her parenting skills were lackluster.

Regarding the overdosing incident, the mother testified that the child had had an allergic reaction of some kind during the time she was taking an antibiotic for an upper respiratory infection. When the hives the child suffered from did not resolve overnight after the mother had administered a dose of the over-the-counter medication Benadryl, the mother took the child to the emergency room, where the physician on duty prescribed a steroid medication. The mother said that she inadvertently gave the child the steroid medication on the antibiotic dosing schedule; that is, she gave the child a dose of the steroid each time the child was to receive a dose of the antibiotic, which was more frequently than the dose of the steroid was to be administered. When the mother realized her mistake, she said she took the child to the emergency room at once. Once the child was seen at the emergency room, the child was found to have suffered no severe ill effects. The mother said she was told that the child could have had a more severe reaction to the overdose but that she had not. The mother also said that she was told to wean the child off of [103]*103the steroid medication because stopping it at once could cause an adverse reaction as well. The mother said that she explained the entire situation, including her part in improperly administering the medication, to the father. The mother said that she had requested permission from the father to keep the child in her custody for a few extra days to monitor her because of the mother’s concern regarding the incident but that the father had not agreed.

The father testified that the mother had attempted to conceal the incident from the father by requesting to keep the child a few extra days. However, the father said, he had denied the mother’s request, thus forcing her to reveal that the child had been improperly administered medication. He said that the mother had also overdosed the child on the day she returned the child to him by having given her a second dose of the medication before the second dose was due to be administered. The father said that he took the child to her regular pediatrician, who told him that overdosing the medication was very dangerous to the child and who instructed him to take her off of the medication immediately.

The mother suffers from fibromyalgia and is on several medications because of her condition. She takes Darvocet, a narcotic pain reliever, as needed for the pain resulting from her condition, and she also takes Neurontin, Prozac, and Trazodone. The mother admitted that, at times, her condition and her medication have made her sleep during the day; she said that, after her medication was adjusted and after she was prescribed Trazodone to help her sleep at night, she had had fewer episodes of sleeping during the day.

The mother testified that she chose not to work after she took a leave of absence to care for her current husband when he suffered adverse consequences after an elective surgery.- The mother said that her current husband needed constant care after the surgery but that he was now much better at managing most daily tasks. She said that, with his income, she was able to elect to be a homemaker so that she could stay home to rear her children.1

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Bluebook (online)
67 So. 3d 100, 2011 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 19, 2011 WL 190043, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marsh-v-smith-alacivapp-2011.