Meghan Elaine Matthew v. Thomas William Trudell

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 6, 2017
Docket334911
StatusUnpublished

This text of Meghan Elaine Matthew v. Thomas William Trudell (Meghan Elaine Matthew v. Thomas William Trudell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meghan Elaine Matthew v. Thomas William Trudell, (Mich. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

MEGHAN ELAINE MATTHEW, UNPUBLISHED April 5, 2017 Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 334911 Emmet Circuit Court THOMAS WILLIAM TRUDELL, LC No. 14-104443-DM

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: BECKERING, P.J., and O’CONNELL and BORRELLO, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff appeals as of right a September 1, 2016, trial court order denying plaintiff’s motion to change daughter IGT’s legal residence from Harbor Springs to Jenison. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm.

I. FACTS

IGT was born in 2011, during the parties’ marriage. Before the divorce proceedings were commenced in April 2014, plaintiff moved in with her current husband Trevor Matthew and had given birth to his daughter on May 23, 2013. The trial court entered a consent judgment of divorce on October 21, 2014 that awarded the parties joint legal and physical custody of IGT. The trial court listed IGT’s domicile as both plaintiff’s mailing address in Harbor Springs and defendant’s mailing address in Alanson. Further, the trial court found that IGT “ha[d] a legal residence with each parent” and ordered that neither parent could change the child’s legal residence “to a location that is more than 100 miles from the child’s legal residence with the other party” unless permitted by the trial court or permitted under MCL 722.31. The court awarded each party parenting time on a weekly basis and during holidays as agreed to by the parties or pursuant to the trial court’s schedule if unable to agree.

Plaintiff testified that, around this time, defendant began living with his mother Carole and an uncle named Mark. Plaintiff agreed that she and defendant followed the parenting time schedule but plaintiff characterized Carole as IGT’s “primary caretaker” during defendant’s parenting time.

Plaintiff moved to change IGT’s custody on October 21, 2015, shortly after her new marriage. Plaintiff asserted that she and her husband were moving to Grand Rapids, specifically, “the Jenison area” and testified that this move would cause the parties to live three and a half

-1- hours apart. Plaintiff amended her motion on October 26, 2015 to request a change in IGT’s domicile, legal residence, and parenting time schedule.

The court scheduled an evidentiary hearing before a referee. At the hearing, plaintiff testified that on or about November 3, 2015, her husband Matthew started a new job in the Grand Rapids-area in production at Adams Plastics earning $11.78 per hour with full benefits including health insurance for the family. Before that, Matthew worked as a subcontractor in Northern Michigan as a skydiving instructor and IGT was on MiChild for health insurance. Matthew was only able to obtain about three or four months of seasonable work per year as a skydiving instructor and he did not have any benefits. Matthew wanted to relocate to Grand Rapids for better job opportunities and plaintiff testified that there were no stable year-round manufacturing jobs in Northern Michigan. Matthew owned a trailer home in Harbor Springs where he and plaintiff resided with IGT and their daughter. After relocating, Matthew and plaintiff signed a lease agreement on a two-bedroom apartment in Jenison.

Plaintiff testified that she enrolled at Ross Medical Education Center in Kentwood where she planned to complete the accelerated six-month medical assistant program. At the time of the hearing, plaintiff was completing the administrative portion of the medical assistant program by taking online classes; however, plaintiff explained that for the clinical aspect of the program, she needed to be in Grand Rapids. Plaintiff testified that clinical externships often led to job- placement with an employer. She stated that the program had a 97-percent job placement rate and stated that medical assistants can earn between $17 and $22 per hour in the Grand Rapids- area. Plaintiff testified that there were more opportunities for medical assistants in the Grand Rapids-area including three major hospital systems and multiple medical offices. She stated that she researched the job market for medical assistants in Northern Michigan and determined that there were not as many opportunities as in Grand Rapids. Plaintiff also obtained a part-time secretarial job at a Metro Health office earning $12.00 per hour.

In contrast, in Northern Michigan, plaintiff worked a series of jobs in customer service for a medical supplier, as a telephone receptionist for a skydiving scheduler, in addition to working in asset-protection at Meijer. In November 2015, following a surgery, plaintiff quit her last job in customer service where she earned $11.50 per hour with benefits. Plaintiff agreed that there were secretarial jobs in Northern Michigan earning about $12.00 per hour, but she maintained that she would have better opportunities to obtain a career-job in Grand Rapids as a medical assistant.

Plaintiff explained that in Grand Rapids she would have more of a support network of her dad and siblings and aunts, uncles and cousins. In contrast, in Northern Michigan, her only relatives included her estranged mother and younger siblings; her relatives did not help her with care for IGT. Plaintiff agreed that defendant did not miss any of his parenting time. Defendant lived with his mother Carole and an uncle in a three-bedroom home. When IGT was with defendant for his parenting week, IGT would share a room with Carole. Carole smoked and provided most of the care for IGT, while defendant worked at FedEx as a deliveryman. IGT had asthma and on two occasions returned from defendant’s home with pinworms and lice. Plaintiff agreed that defendant was involved in IGT’s life including her school and medical decisions, but Carole had to provide most of the daily care for IGT.

-2- Plaintiff testified that relocating to Grand Rapids would benefit IGT because it would allow her to have a stable two-parent home to live in with her sister. In addition, plaintiff testified that she did research and learned that Jenison schools were ranked higher than Petoskey area schools and the crime rate was lower in Jenison. Furthermore, relocating to Grand Rapids would provide financial stability and allow Matthew to have year-round employment and would give her more career opportunities as a medical assistant. Plaintiff testified that there were more opportunities for extracurricular and cultural activities and greater diversity in the Grand Rapids area, which would be good for IGT in the long-term. Plaintiff testified that she proposed to have parenting time during the week in Grand Rapids, while defendant could have parenting time three weekends per month, holidays, summer break, and spring and other school breaks. Plaintiff testified that defendant indicated he was opposed to the idea because he did not want IGT in the car so much driving the three-hour trip to see him and because he thought that IGT should grow up in the place where she was born.

On cross-examination, plaintiff agreed that there were secretarial jobs in Northern Michigan similar to the one she recently obtained at Metro Health in Grand Rapids and she agreed that there were jobs for medical assistants in Northern Michigan. However, plaintiff maintained that there was lower demand in Northern Michigan and more career opportunities in Grand Rapids. Plaintiff testified that she was attending Ross Medical Education Center with the current parenting-time arrangement because she was able to complete some of the initial classes online. However, plaintiff stated she would complete the clinical portion in Grand Rapids.

Matthew testified that he married plaintiff in October 2015. At the time, Matthew owned a mobile home in Harbor Springs and worked as a skydiving instructor doing seasonal work.

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Meghan Elaine Matthew v. Thomas William Trudell, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meghan-elaine-matthew-v-thomas-william-trudell-michctapp-2017.