Matter of Amber GG. v. Eric HH.
This text of 217 A.D.3d 1103 (Matter of Amber GG. v. Eric HH.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
| Matter of Amber GG. v Eric HH. |
| 2023 NY Slip Op 03059 |
| Decided on June 8, 2023 |
| Appellate Division, Third Department |
| Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431. |
| This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports. |
Decided and Entered:June 8, 2023
535490
v
Eric HH., Respondent.
Calendar Date:April 25, 2023
Before:Garry, P.J., Egan Jr., Lynch, Fisher and McShan, JJ.
Lisa K. Miller, McGraw, for appellant.
Donna C. Chin, Niverville, attorney for the children.
Egan Jr., J.
Appeal from an order of the Family Court of Broome County (Brett S. Noonan, J.), entered May 25, 2022, which dismissed petitioner's application, in a proceeding pursuant to Family Ct Act article 6, for permission to relocate with the subject children.
Petitioner (hereinafter the mother) and respondent (hereinafter the father) are the parents of two children (born 2011 and 2017). Pursuant to a June 2019 order that was entered upon the agreement of the parties, they were awarded joint legal custody of the children, with the mother to have primary physical placement and the father to have parenting time on alternate weekends, certain holidays and whatever additional times were mutually agreeable. In July 2021, the mother filed this modification petition seeking permission to relocate to Florida with the children and to adjust the father's parenting time accordingly.
The parties testified at a fact-finding hearing on the petition, after which the trial attorney for the children advised that the elder child was willing to be interviewed in a Lincoln hearing and asked that, although she did not believe that the hearing would uncover "anything that we haven't already heard," the hearing only be skipped if the parties agreed to forgo one. Notwithstanding the request of the attorney for the mother that the hearing be held, Family Court declined to do so. The court then rendered a decision from the bench in which it found the testimony of both parties to be credible but — noting, among other things, the mother's ongoing mental health treatment in New York, the elder child's enrollment in a therapeutic afterschool program, and the financial feasibility of carrying out visitation with the father if the relocation occurred — that relocation was not in the best interests of the children. The court accordingly determined that the petition should be denied, then issued a written order dismissing the petition with prejudice. The mother appeals and, with the support of the appellate attorney for the children, argues that Family Court's determination is not supported by a sound and substantial basis in the record. The father has not filed a brief in response.
We reverse. The proposed relocation of a custodial parent provides the change of circumstances necessary to consider modifying an existing custody order, leaving it incumbent upon the mother to "establish[], by a preponderance of the evidence, that the proposed relocation is in the best interests of the children" (Matter of Celinda JJ. v Adrian JJ., 198 AD3d 1203, 1204 [3d Dept 2021], lv denied 37 NY3d 918 [2022]; see Matter of Thomas SS. v Alicia TT., 206 AD3d 1534, 1535 [3d Dept 2022]; Matter of Rebekah R. v Richard R., 176 AD3d 1340, 1341 [3d Dept 2019]). The pertinent factors in conducting a best interests analysis include "each parent's reasons for seeking or opposing the move, the quality of the relationships between the child[ren] and the custodial and noncustodial parents, the impact of the move on [*2]the quantity and quality of the child[ren]'s future contact with the noncustodial parent, the degree to which the custodial parent's and child[ren]'s [lives] may be enhanced economically, emotionally and educationally by the move, and the feasibility of preserving the relationship between the noncustodial parent and child[ren] through suitable visitation arrangements" (Matter of Tropea v Tropea, 87 NY2d 727, 740-741 [1996]; see Matter of Thomas SS. v Alicia TT., 206 AD3d at 1535; Matter of Fisher v Perez, 165 AD3d 1419, 1420 [3d Dept 2018]).
We accordingly turn to the hearing evidence and, in so doing, defer to the assessment of Family Court that both parents were credible in their testimony (see Matter of Thomas SS. v Alicia TT., 206 AD3d at 1535). By way of background, although the parties are from New York, they moved with the children to Florida and lived there with the maternal grandmother from July 2016 to October 2017. When they returned to Broome County in the fall of 2017, it is undisputed that they did so to allow the father and the children to say goodbye to the ailing paternal grandmother and that they intended to return to Florida. The father testified that a lack of money, as well as the fact that the maternal grandmother had thrown him out of her residence, prevented them from returning immediately after the paternal grandmother passed away later in 2017. The parties were unable to return to Florida before they separated in August 2018, after which the father moved to the Town of Sidney, Delaware County and the mother and the children lived in the City of Binghamton, Broome County.
The mother testified that she sought to return to Florida because it would allow her to work and would provide a better family support system for both her and the children. The mother explained that she had not found, and did not believe that she could find, work in New York due to both her mental and physical difficulties and the lack of family support to help her care for the children, and she was left reliant upon public assistance and informal child support payments from the father to make ends meet. In Florida, however, the mother testified that a residence for her and the children was ready at the trailer park where her mother and stepfather, her daughter and other relatives resided. The mother had a full-time secretarial job lined up at the trailer park, and she made clear that her relatives would be available to watch the children if they were not in school and she was working. The hearing testimony also reflected that the mother, who bore almost all responsibility for dealing with the educational and medical needs of the children, had determined what schools the children would attend and where they would receive medical care and mental health services in Florida. She added that the elder child would participate in counseling and a therapeutic afterschool program in Florida that were equivalent to the services he was receiving in New York. She [*3]also made clear that she wanted the father to have extended periods of parenting time over the summer and on longer school breaks and expressed her willingness to transport the children — in a vehicle that she lacked in New York but would be available to her in Florida — halfway for custodial exchanges with him. "Taken as a whole, the mother's testimony demonstrated
. . . that the mother's reasons for wanting to relocate were familial and economic and that the proposed relocation would likely enhance the lives of the mother and the child[ren] economically and emotionally" (Matter of James TT. v Shermaqiae UU., 184 AD3d 975, 977 [3d Dept 2020] [citations omitted]).
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217 A.D.3d 1103, 190 N.Y.S.3d 206, 2023 NY Slip Op 03059, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-amber-gg-v-eric-hh-nyappdiv-2023.