McAlpine v. PACARRO

262 P.3d 622, 2011 Alas. LEXIS 110, 2011 WL 5009381
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 21, 2011
DocketS-13903
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 262 P.3d 622 (McAlpine v. PACARRO) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McAlpine v. PACARRO, 262 P.3d 622, 2011 Alas. LEXIS 110, 2011 WL 5009381 (Ala. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

WINFREE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

A mother appeals the superior court's denial of an evidentiary hearing for her motion to modify child custody. Because the mother was entitled to an evidentiary hearing in this case, we remand for further proceedings.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

In December 1999, while Kalindi McAlpine and Shaun Pacarro were living together, Shaun assaulted Kalindi. Shaun pleaded guilty to, and was convicted of, domestic violence assault. In 2000 Kalindi and Shaun married. Shaun's conviction was set aside in early 2001 after he met conditions of a suspended imposition of sentence.

In 2004 Kalindi petitioned for an ex parte domestic violence protective order against Shaun, asserting that Shaun abused her throughout their entire relationship even after he was arrested in 1999. 'The district court granted the petition after finding by a preponderance of the evidence that Shaun committed a crime involving domestic violence against Kalindi.

Kalindi and Shaun divorced in 2005. Proceeding pro se, they entered into a court-approved custody settlement agreement: they agreed to joint legal custody of their three minor children, two daughters and one son, with Kalindi having primary physical custody and Shaun having visitation. In October 2006, again proceeding pro se, Kalindi and Shaun entered into a second court-approved custody settlement agreement. This agreement allowed Kalindi to move with the children to Florida and gave Shaun visitation with the children during the summer. There is no indication in the record that the parties mentioned the 1999 and 2004 (or any other) incidents of domestic violence during these proceedings. Kalindi moved with the children to Florida in July 2007.

B. Proceedings

1. 2007 motions, December 2007 hearing, and December 2007 interim order

In October and November 2007, after Kal-indi moved to Florida with the children, Shaun filed motions asserting his visitation was denied. Kalindi later filed, in Alaska, a petition for ex parte and long-term domestic violence protective orders against Shaun; her ex parte motion was granted on December 8.

Kalindi and Shaun appeared pro se at a December 11 hearing on the visitation motion and long-term domestic violence petition. Kalindi acknowledged that she had not let Shaun see the children, but asserted this was because Shaun had threatened her and the children and had abused the children.

The superior court questioned Shaun about his 1999 conviction. Shaun confirmed that he pleaded guilty and was convicted of domestic violence assault against Kalindi. The court noted that Shaun's conviction resulted in a suspended imposition of sentence, probation for one year, and a condition that Shaun attend and complete a domestic violence intervention program. Shaun asserted that he *624 completed the required program in July 2000.

The superior court noted that Kalindi had petitioned for a domestic violence protective order against Shaun in 2004. The court pointed to the 2004 petition as one example of how Kalindi is "familiar with the system [and] ... knows how [domestic violence] protective orders work." The court did not question Shaun or Kalindi about the events underlying the 2004 petition and order.

The éuperior court vacated the ex parte domestic violence protective order and denied the petition for a long-term protective order, finding Kalindi's "testimony regarding her allegations of domestic violence by [Shaun] against her and the children to be false" and that there was "no credible evidence of domestic violence by [Shaun] in the 2005-2007 time period." The court granted Shaun primary physical custody of the children because of Kalindi's interference with Shaun's custodial rights and because the factors pertaining to the children's best interests under AS 25.24.150(c) clearly weighed in favor of the children being in their father's custody. The court indicated that its custody modification "should be understood to be an interim order, effective from the date of the hearing until another hearing is conducted . in the summer of 2008. If no hearing is requested, then the interim order will become permanent." (Emphasis omitted.)

Neither parent sought appellate review of the interim order.

2. 2008 motions, August 2008 hearing, and October 2008 order

In early 2008 Kalindi and Shaun each retained counsel. In May Shaun filed a motion seeking supervision of Kalindi's visitation with the children. Kalindi opposed the motion and filed a cross-motion asserting Shaun denied her visitation. The superior court held a hearing on August 22 and issued a written order on October 20, which the clerk distributed on November 8: Kalindi was granted continued unsupervised visitation contingent on her following certain conditions, and Shaun retained primary physical custody.

Neither parent moved to modify physical custody in 2008. 1 Neither parent sought appellate review of the October 2008 order.

3. October 2009 motion and May 2010 order

In October 2009 Kalindi filed a motion seeking to modify "interim" eustody and visitation, to establish "final child eustody orders," and to determine the rule of law regarding the effect of Shaun's prior domestic violence on the custody decision. 2 Kalindi sought sole legal and primary physical eusto-dy of the children and requested an eviden-tiary hearing.

In early 2010 the case was reassigned to Superior Court Judge Eric A. Aarseth. Kal-indi again requested an evidentiary hearing on her motion. In May the superior court denied her motion without a hearing, stating that the August 2008 hearing had resulted in a "final order" and concluding that Kalindi was "barred by the doctrines of res judicata and collateral estoppel from attempting to re-litigate legal and factual matters that existed prior to the August 22, 2008 hearing," including "factual issues that were known or should have been known to" her at the hearing.

4. Appeal

Kalindi appeals pro se from the May 2010 order; we understand Kalindi's primary ar *625 gument to be that the superior court erred by denying her a custody modification hearing to present evidence of Shaun's history of domestic violence. 3

Kalindi also presents arguments that the superior court erred in December 2007 by: (1) denying her due process by not giving her notice that custody was at issue at the December hearing; (2) modifying custody; and (3) finding that she "has a blatant disregard for the father." We decline to reach the merits of these arguments because Kalindi did not timely seek review of the December 2007 order. A party must appeal a "final judgment for custody of children" within 15 days of the clerk's distribution certificate 4

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
262 P.3d 622, 2011 Alas. LEXIS 110, 2011 WL 5009381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcalpine-v-pacarro-alaska-2011.