McAllister v. McAllister

97 A.3d 227, 218 Md. App. 386
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedAugust 1, 2014
Docket1453/13
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 97 A.3d 227 (McAllister v. McAllister) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McAllister v. McAllister, 97 A.3d 227, 218 Md. App. 386 (Md. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

ARTHUR, J.

This appeal involves a particularly acrimonious custody dispute. The Circuit Court for Howard County denied the father’s complaint to modify custody and rejected his attack on the attorney whom the court had appointed to represent his two minor children. In the process, the court held the father in contempt for willfully refusing to pay child support, alimony, and other childcare expenses and ruled that he lacked substantial justification to prosecute his case after the first of several hearings. We shall affirm.

Factual and Procedural History

The parties to this dispute are Brian and Theresa McAllister, the natural parents of 13-year-old Ian McAllister and 10-year-old Ethan McAllister. We recount the pertinent facts in *390 the light most favorable to Ms. McAllister, the party who prevailed below. L.W. Wolfe Enters., Inc. v. Maryland Nat’l Golf, L.P., 165 Md.App. 339, 343, 885 A.2d 826 (2005).

A. Separation, Divorce, and the Initial Disputes Over Custody

The McAllisters’ marriage deteriorated, resulting first in separation and then, on February 28, 2012, with a judgment of absolute divorce that incorporated prior written agreements between the parties. Those agreements included a “parenting agreement” that awarded Ms. McAllister sole legal custody and primary physical custody over the children; Mr. McAllister received visitation rights.

In the period leading up to the divorce and in its immediate aftermath, neither parent behaved admirably. Ms. McAllister admitted that she was angry and that she said and wrote inappropriate things at the time. On one occasion, in December 2011, she called the police in an apparent effort to get the children away from Mr. McAllister. On another, in January 2012, she insulted him, threatened to call the police, and gratuitously reminded him that she had sole custody. Both before and after the divorce, she would depart from the terms of the parties’ visitation agreement, keep the children during her husband’s time, and interfere with his visitation rights.

Mr. McAllister saved videorecordings from the same period, evidently believing, erroneously that they would cast him in a favorable light. At the trial of this matter, the domestic master disagreed, calling one of the recordings “particularly disturbing.” That recording showed the parents arguing, in the children’s presence, while the older child, Ian, was becoming visibly “uncomfortable.” Neither parent acted responsibly by disengaging.

B. Mr. McAllister’s Arrest on April 14, 2012, and Its Consequences

Even before the divorce, Mr. McAllister’s relationship with Ian had become strained. The strained relationship deterio *391 rated further on April 14, 2012, when Ms. McAllister received a text message from her younger son, Ethan, in which the child reported that his father was “beating Ian.” Ms. McAllister responded by calling the police, who came to Mr. McAllister’s residence, interviewed the children, and placed him under arrest. Ms. McAllister followed up by pressing criminal charges against her ex-husband and pursuing a protective order on the children’s behalf.

The district court eventually denied a final protective order, the Department of Social Services found that the charges against Mr. McAllister were unsubstantiated, and the State entered a nolle prosequi on the criminal charges. Nonetheless, the domestic master found, in this case, that “whatever happened” on April 14, 2012, “was frightening and upsetting to the children.” 1

After his arrest, Mr. McAllister did not have any visitation with Ethan until July or with Ian until October. In fact, on at least two occasions, Ian affirmatively refused to go with his father when Mr. McAllister attempted to pick him up at school and to take him to school. Mr. McAllister asserted that his ex-wife had obstructed his visits and tried to turn his sons against him. Ms. McAllister, in turn, argued that the children simply refused to see him even though she continually encouraged them to go. 2

C. Mr. McAllister’s Custody Complaint, His Cessation of Alimony and Support Payments, and the Appointment of the BIA

On July 30, 2012, Mr. McAllister filed a complaint for modification of custody, requesting sole custody of the chil *392 dren. At about the same time, Mr. McAllister began to withhold his monthly alimony and child support payments and to apply them to the mortgage payments on the family home which had been listed for sale, but had not yet found a buyer. Mr. McAllister justified his conduct by arguing that his wife, who was living in the house, had not made the payments even though the divorce judgment did not obligate her to do so. He sought, but failed to obtain, a court order that would have authorized him to redirect the alimony and child support payments to the mortgage payments.

Ms. McAllister responded to her husband’s redirection of the alimony and child support payments by petitioning to have him held in contempt. She responded to the complaint for modification of custody with an answer and motion asking the court to appoint a best interests attorney or “BIA” to represent her sons. See Maryland Guidelines for Practice for Courh-Appointed Lawyers Representing Children in Cases Involving Child Custody or Child Access, § 2.1.1. Over Mr. McAllister’s objection, the court appointed a BIA on October 18, 2012.

In what might be regarded as retaliation for Ms. McAllister’s contempt petition, Mr. McAllister petitioned to have her held in contempt in November 2012 for allegedly denying him his visitation rights.

D. The Conference Call with the BIA on January 23, 2013

The court scheduled a hearing on the custody issue for January 30, 2013. A week before the scheduled hearing date, on January 23, 2013, counsel for both parties participated in a conference call with the BIA, who told them that she would recommend that Mr. McAllister’s custody complaint be dismissed. During that call, counsel for Mr. McAllister expressed his desire that Ian participate in “reunification counseling” with Stanley Sack, Ph.D. Ms. McAllister consented, but the BIA reserved judgment on Dr. Sack.

*393 E. The First Hearing on January 30, 2013

The parties appeared for a hearing before a master on the custody issue on January 30, 2013. After arriving half an hour late, counsel for Mr. McAllister protested that the court had allocated only three hours to the issue, terming it a “violation” of his client’s “due process rights.” With the consent of the administrative judge, the master agreed to allow Mr. McAllister to have additional time to present his case and to give Ms. McAllister a comparable amount of time.

Mr.

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97 A.3d 227, 218 Md. App. 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcallister-v-mcallister-mdctspecapp-2014.