Matter of the Custody of Shepherd, Unpublished Decision (3-19-1999)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 19, 1999
DocketCase No. 98 CA 2586
StatusUnpublished

This text of Matter of the Custody of Shepherd, Unpublished Decision (3-19-1999) (Matter of the Custody of Shepherd, Unpublished Decision (3-19-1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of the Custody of Shepherd, Unpublished Decision (3-19-1999), (Ohio Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

This is an appeal from the Scioto County Common Pleas Court, Juvenile Division, judgment granting a petition for custody filed by Brenda Spencer, petitioner below and appellee herein, for custody of Brandi L. Shepherd, who was born on March 12, 1991 to appellee and Alan Shepherd, respondent below and appellant herein.

Appellant assigns the following errors:

FIRST ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR:

"THE TRIAL COURT ERRED TO THE PREJUDICE OF APPELLANT BY INAPPROPRIATELY APPLYING THE BEST INTEREST OF THE CHILD TEST RATHER THAN THE CHANGE OF CIRCUMSTANCES TEST."

SECOND ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR:

"THE DECISION OF THE TRIAL COURT IN MODIFYING THE PREVIOUS PLAN ADOPTED BY APPELLANT AND APPELLEE IS AGAINST THE MANIFEST WEIGHT OF THE EVIDENCE."

Although appellant and appellee never married, they lived together with their child until the fall of 1995. After the parties separated, the child spent significant amounts of time with each parent. During the time appellee worked a night shift, the parties agreed that appellee would pick up the child after school and the child would spend the night with appellant. When appellant acknowledged paternity of the child in a document signed in 1996, the parties agreed that appellant would not pay child support. Problems arose between the parties in June 1997 when appellee stopped working a night shift.

On August 26, 1997, appellee filed the instant petition for custody in the Scioto County Common Pleas Court, Juvenile Division. On September 26, 1997, appellant filed a complaint for custody in the Scioto County Common Pleas Court, General Division. Appellant's complaint was later dismissed.

The Scioto County Common Pleas Court, Juvenile Division heard the matter beginning on November 20, 1997. Appellee's current husband, whom she married in March 1996, testified that appellant sent the child to spend a week with her paternal grandparents without appellee's consent, appellant denied appellee access to the child, appellant was late picking up the child, appellant refused appellee some visits with the child, and appellee had to call police to assist her with picking up the child from appellant. In one incident, appellant's parents refused to answer their door when appellee came to give them antibiotic medication prescribed for the child. In appellee's husband's opinion, the child spent too much time with her paternal grandparents when she should have been spending time with appellant.

The child's fourteen-year-old maternal half-sister testified that when appellant and appellee lived together, appellant yelled at the half-sister, physically punished her, made her play in a hallway, barred her access to a bathroom at night, and told her that she did not deserve to live. The half-sister further testified that appellant became aggressive and loud when he drank alcohol. On cross-examination, the half-sister admitted that she has been suspended from school multiple times. On re-direct examination, the half-sister explained that she has attention deficit disorder and takes Ritalin for that disorder.

Appellee testified that appellant forces her to talk to him through the child, that appellant does not let her see the child's school report cards, and that appellant refuses to answer his telephone. Appellee testified about the incident during which appellant's parents refused to answer their door when appellee and her husband brought antibiotic medication for the child. Sometimes appellee has needed police assistance when picking up the child from appellant. Appellee further testified that appellant has been intoxicated and has driven while intoxicated when children were in his vehicle. Although appellee admitted that appellant never touched her violently, appellee testified that appellant would "tear up the house" when he was drunk.

Appellant admitted that sometimes he drank more alcohol than he should drink. At one point during his testimony, appellant commented about appellee, "the less I have to speak to her, the better off everybody in the world is."

When the trial court interviewed the six-year-old child in chambers, the child stated that she wants to live with appellant and visit appellee. When asked for her reasons, the child said that "daddy spends more time with me and he can help me with my homework." When asked whether appellee helps her with homework, the child said yes. The child noted that she has her own bedroom at appellant's home, but shares a bedroom with her half-sister at appellee's home.

On April 15, 1998, the trial court granted appellee's petition for custody. The court reasoned that appellee was the parent most likely to facilitate visitation and communication with the other parent. The court wrote in pertinent part as follows:

"6). Each parent has testified that each will obey the Court's order, including orders of custody, visitation, and support. However, from the evidence a different picture is presented. The father testified that he unilaterally stopped allowing Brandi to see the mother, and that he ended permission for the mother to pick up Brandi from the latch-key program which she attended after school. There was corroborating testimony to this from Mr. Spencer (the mother's current husband) and from Mrs. Spencer, the mother. Mr. Shepherd apparently lacks good communication skills. According to Mrs. Spencer, Mr. Shepherd usually will not speak with her on the phone. Instead he puts Brandi (age 6) on the phone and speaks through her. This is an untenable position for this child. To place this six (6) year old child in the position of being a go-between or intermediary for her parents cannot be justified. Mr. Shepherd's attitude in Court was very rigid, especially in his interpretation of any custody/visitation and communication with the mother. Mr. Shepherd screens his calls and testified that he doesn't always want to talk with Mrs. Spencer so he doesn't answer the phone or if he does he uses Brandi as her intermediary. Mr. Shepherd's attitude is that the less I have to speak with her (the mother), the better off the world is. In a system which requires the cooperation of the parties to be successful, it is clear to the Court that Mrs. Shepherd (sic) is the party who is most likely to communicate and work cooperatively with the other parent to provide communication, visitation and companionship pursuant to court order.

* * *

8). The Court finds that Mr. Shepherd has on occasion denied Mrs. Spencer of her rights of visitation with her daughter. Although there was no court order, there was an agreement in the testimony that at times Mr. Shepherd denied Mrs. Spencer the companionship of her daughter. Mr. Shepherd said he stopped allowing Brandi to see her and he ended the mother's privilege to pick up Brandi from the after-school latch-key program. Mrs. Spencer corroborated this and viewed this as an attempt by Mr. Shepherd to maintain control of the situation through the vehicle of access to Brandi. There was testimony to the effect that the mother had to take the police with her to go and get Brandi from Mr. Shepherd. Mrs. Spencer corroborated this testimony in her testimony about Mr. Shepherd or his father (Mr. James Shepherd, the paternal grandfather) picking Brandi up from the latchkey program.

WHEREFORE, based on the foregoing and on the testimony and evidence adduced at hearing, including the expressed wishes of the child, the Court however finds it to be in the best interests of Brandi that her custody vest with her mother, the petitioner herein, Mrs. Brenda A. Spencer, until the further ORDER of this Court. * * *

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