Matthew and Terri Wilson v. Lacy Brown

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 10, 2022
Docket54,699-CA
StatusPublished

This text of Matthew and Terri Wilson v. Lacy Brown (Matthew and Terri Wilson v. Lacy Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matthew and Terri Wilson v. Lacy Brown, (La. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Judgment rendered August 10, 2022. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 2166, La. C.C.P.

No. 54,699-CA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

MATTHEW AND TERRI Plaintiffs-Appellants WILSON

versus

LACY BROWN Defendant-Appellee

Appealed from the Third Judicial District Court for the Parish of Union, Louisiana Trial Court No. 47,835

Honorable Thomas Wynn Rogers, Judge

KNIGHT LAW FIRM Counsel for Appellants By: Robert Thomas Knight

THE LAW OFFICE OF ALLEN Counsel for Appellee COOPER, LLC By: Joseph Christopher Miciotto

Before STONE, COX, and ROBINSON, JJ. ROBINSON, J.

Paternal grandparents appeal a judgment dissolving a protective order

and ordering shared custody with the goal of reunifying their grandson with

his mother.

We affirm the judgment.

FACTS

B.B., whose birthdate is January 30, 2013, was born during the

marriage of Lacy Brown (“Lacy”) and Joshua Brown (“Joshua”). On July

27, 2016, Joshua filed for divorce. Joshua and Lacy agreed to shared

custody of B.B., with each having alternating weeks with their son. Joshua

and B.B. lived at the home of Joshua’s mother, Terri Wilson (“Terri”), and

stepfather, Matthew Wilson, during the weeks that Joshua had custody of

B.B.

Lacy began a relationship with Philip Casey Brown (“Casey”) while

still married to Joshua. On June 16, 2017, Joshua was killed during an

accident while driving a tanker truck for work. The funeral was held five

days later. A commotion occurred following the funeral when Lacy would

not allow B.B. to leave with the Wilsons, which led to a deputy from the

Union Parish Sheriff’s Office (“UPSO”) being called to the scene.

On July 14, 2017, the Wilsons filed a petition for visitation against

Lacy. They alleged that Lacy had refused to allow them any visitation with

B.B. since Joshua’s funeral. They sought visitation rights on alternating

weeks.

By a consent judgment signed on August 24, 2017, the parties agreed

that the Wilsons would have visitation rights on alternating weekends, certain holidays and special occasions, and for two seven-week periods

during the summer.

Deputies from the UPSO responded to a complaint from Terri

concerning B.B. on November 3, 2017. According to the police report, Terri

told the deputies that B.B. complained that his lip hurt when she picked him

up for visitation. Terri stated that B.B. told her that when his mother

spanked him, he fell and hit his mouth. A small cut was visible on his

mouth. B.B. told the deputies that his mother spanked him hard and he fell.

Terri also told the deputies that B.B. had a small bruise on his buttocks.

Terri asked the deputies not to contact Lacy concerning this because she

only wanted a report of the incident.

In December of 2017, Terri photographed bruises on B.B.’s buttocks.

Terri filed a police report against Casey on December 29, 2017, and he was

subsequently arrested and charged with domestic abuse battery. A

protective order against Casey on B.B.’s behalf was entered on January 3,

2018. A protective order against Lacy was entered on January 22, 2018.1

On January 10, 2018, the Wilsons filed a motion to modify custody.

B.B. had been placed in their care pursuant to the protective order. The

Wilsons, who sought sole custody of B.B., contended that a change in

custody was necessary because of Casey’s arrest and because Lacy

continued to reside with Casey. The Wilsons alleged that substantial danger

existed if the current order between the parties were not modified to award

sole care of B.B. to them. They further alleged that B.B. had been

1 The protective order against Casey was attached to the motion to modify custody. The protective order against Lacy was referred to at trial.

2 emotionally and psychologically damaged by the abuse he suffered at the

hands of Lacy and Casey.

A son, T.B., was born to Lacy and Casey in April of 2018. Another

son, C.B., was born to them in October of 2020. A daughter, S.B., was born

to them in the fall of 2021. Although engaged, Lacy and Casey were not

married at the time judgment was rendered in this matter.

In April of 2018, the Wilsons began taking B.B. to Amanda Power, a

licensed professional counselor, in West Monroe, Louisiana. Supervised

visits between Lacy and B.B. were initially done through Ryan Forbes in

Ruston, Louisiana. An undated letter from Forbes to Lacy’s counsel states

that Lacy and B.B. attended supervised sessions in his office from May 16,

2018, until February 6, 2019. According to the letter, they met for an hour

every Wednesday with few exceptions.

On February 20, 2019, Terri’s counsel wrote to Lacy’s counsel that

B.B. would not be attending visitation with Forbes that evening and that

Terri had arranged for visitation to be held at the Wellspring Center in

Monroe. The letter explained that visitation would no longer be held with

Forbes because he would not provide the Wilsons with any information

regarding the visits.

On January 8, 2020, Casey was found not guilty of the domestic abuse

battery charge.

The first visit at Wellspring was done on May 21, 2021. B.B. chose to

prematurely end that visit. A visit scheduled for June 11 was cancelled

because B.B. was ill. B.B. chose to leave a June 25 visit early. B.B. refused

to attend visits at Wellspring on July 16 and July 30, and no visits were

3 scheduled after the later date. Lacy was left to communicate with B.B.

through a weekly phone call.

Trial

Trial was held in this matter on October 6, 2021. Trial had been

originally set for April 9, 2018, but was continued numerous times because

of outstanding discovery on the part of Lacy. We note that Casey’s criminal

trial was not held until the beginning of 2020.

Britni Sims supervises visitation at the Wellspring Center. She

testified concerning the visits that were cancelled or ended prematurely.

According to Sims, B.B. never went into any detail concerning his refusal to

participate in visits with his mother, although one time B.B. said he did not

want to see his mother because he did not want to have to go back to her

house. Wellspring personnel reassured him that would not happen while he

was at Wellspring.

Amanda Power (“Power”) testified as an expert licensed professional

counselor. She first saw B.B. on April 9, 2018, when he was having some

emotional problems and behavioral problems related to trauma. Power

diagnosed B.B. as suffering from confirmed physical abuse, child neglect

and abandonment, and disruption of family by separation and divorce.

Power recalled that when she first saw B.B., he expressed fear and

concern about leaving the Wilsons’ home, and he mostly dwelt on his fear of

Casey. He told Power that he had been yelled at, ridiculed, and physically

harmed by them.

Power confirmed B.B. was a victim of abuse based on her viewing of

the police reports and photos. She asserted that B.B. claimed Lacy and

4 Casey abused him, and that it was a daily ongoing thing that one time

escalated beyond the normal abuse. He also described being limited to

specific parts of the home. He was also left alone in the home with his

younger brother T.B. Nothing indicated to Power that B.B. had been

coached to say certain things.

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Related

Richardson v. Smith
92 So. 3d 1145 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2012)

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Matthew and Terri Wilson v. Lacy Brown, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matthew-and-terri-wilson-v-lacy-brown-lactapp-2022.