Michael Abrams v. Brittany Turner

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 25, 2019
Docket52,922-CA
StatusPublished

This text of Michael Abrams v. Brittany Turner (Michael Abrams v. Brittany Turner) 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
Michael Abrams v. Brittany Turner, (La. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Judgment rendered September 25, 2019. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 2166, La. C.C.P.

No. 52,922-CA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

MICHAEL ABRAMS Plaintiff-Appellee

versus

BRITTANY TURNER Defendant-Appellant

Appealed from the Fourth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Ouachita, Louisiana Trial Court No. 2017-2618 (Civil)

Honorable Alvin R. Sharp, Judge

FAMILY JUSTICE CENTER Counsel for Appellant By: Sophia Dixon Brown

MICHAEL ABRAMS In Proper Person

Before WILLIAMS, MOORE, and COX, JJ. MOORE, J.

Brittany Turner, a single mother residing in New Orleans, appeals a

judgment that awarded her and her former partner joint custody of their two

boys; however, the court named the father, Michael Abrams, who resides in

Monroe, the domiciliary parent with primary custody of the boys during the

school year. Ms. Turner alleges that the trial court clearly abused its

discretion and argues that the weight of the evidence favored making her the

domiciliary parent under La. C.C. art. 134.

For the following reasons, we affirm the trial court judgment.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Michael Abrams filed a petition against Brittany Turner for sole

custody of their two minor male children, Jayden and Amir, ages 10 and 5

years, respectively, alleging that Brittany had abandoned the children by

dropping them off at her father’s house in Shreveport and did not return to

get them. Brittany answered denying that she abandoned her children, and

filed a reconventional demand seeking sole custody of them on grounds that

they have lived most of their lives with her with very little assistance from

Michael.

A Hearing Officer Conference (“HOC”) was held on October 16,

2017, after which the hearing officer filed a report recommending that both

parents share joint custody of the two children, but that Michael be

designated the domiciliary parent. Brittany objected to the HOC report and

its recommendations, and requested a trial on the matter. Pending trial, the

court temporarily adopted the HOC joint custody implementation plan giving Michael primary custody and Brittany biweekly visitation. However,

she did not exercise her visitation the seven months prior to trial.1

At trial of the matter, July 9-11, 2018, both parents and two witnesses

testified, and the court kept the record open until it held a Watermeir inquiry

with the oldest child, Jayden, who by then was 11 years old. There was no

interview with the younger boy, six-year-old Amir.

On August 14, 2018, the court filed a judgment finding that of the

factors listed in La. C.C. art. 134, factors (1), (6), (7), (10) and (11) were

equal, but factors (2), (3), (4), (5), (8) and (9) weighed in favor of the father,

and factor (12) favored the mother. Based in part on these findings, it

awarded the parents joint custody of the children and named Michael, who

lives in Monroe, the domiciliary parent, subject to reasonable visitation for

Brittany. Michael was ordered to submit a visitation plan within 15 days.

Neither party appeared at a subsequent hearing, set for September 14, 2018;

correspondence in the record indicates that neither Michael nor Brittany’s

counsel received the judgment allegedly mailed on August 15, 2018.

Michael notified the clerk’s office on August 17, 2018, two days after the

judgment was mailed, of a change of address and counsel notified the clerk’s

office that it did not receive the judgment. Subsequently, Michael submitted

a proposed visitation plan on September 10, 2018, that lacked a determinate

visitation schedule.

This appeal followed.

1 The trial court questioned Brittany as to why she had not seen or visited the children during that period. She told the court that she did not have the means to visit the children although she kept in touch with them by telephone. 2 FACTS

Brittany Turner and Michael Abrams began dating in the fall of 2006,

while she was living and working as a medical coder in Houston, Texas.

Although she is from New Orleans, Brittany moved to Houston in the

aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Michael works as a barber and instructor at

Delta Community College in Monroe.

Two children were born from the relationship. The first, Jayden, now

age 12, was born on August 16, 2007, in Houston; the second, Amir, was

born on November 13, 2012, in Monroe, and is now 6.

Michael testified that Brittany called him in Monroe when the baby

was six months old and told him he was the father.2 He said he immediately

went to Houston, accepted that he was the father, and began giving financial

support to Brittany. Eventually Michael adopted the child and the boy’s

name was changed to Jayden Michael Abrams. For the next year and a half,

the long-distance relationship continued with Brittany in Houston and

Michael in Monroe.

Brittany moved to Monroe in 2009 when Jayden was two years old.

By 2011, the couple moved in together. She testified that she and Michael

lived together a total of three years over the entirety of their relationship –

from 2011 to 2013, and the year of 2016. She testified that Michael did not

provide her with consistent support, and particularly he gave no financial

support – only contributions of clothing and shoes and other items for the

children.

2 A DNA paternity test showed that another man who she thought was the father was not the father. 3 By contrast, Michael testified that between 2009 and 2014, when

Brittany moved back to Houston, they lived together most of the time, but

they occasionally split up temporarily over disagreements. He estimated

they lived together four years out of that five-year period. He testified that

he gave Brittany financial support.

Brittany’s main complaints regarding the rocky relationship with

Michael were lack of financial support and Michael’s very controlling and

overbearing character. She said he would treat her kindly or help her

financially only when she followed his rules. Toward the end of their

relationship, she said that he harassed her at work with telephone calls

belittling her and restricting her to her apartment. She said he referred to her

as a “clown.”

Michael admitted that he has a lot of rules when he answered the

court’s questions regarding why he thought it would be advantageous for

Jayden to live with him rather than Brittany. Contrary to Brittany’s

testimony, he said that when they lived together in Monroe, he paid the

larger monthly bills and she paid the smaller bills.

In 2014, Brittany went back to Houston, ostensibly to interview for a

job at a medical billing facility. She testified that she and Michael discussed

the job and interview before she left. Conversely, Michael testified that

there was no discussion; he woke up and she was gone, leaving only a note

on her pillow with an ultimatum that either they take the next step and get

married or, presumably, it was over between them. She did not take the

children with her.

After a few weeks, she came back to Monroe to get Jayden, but left

Amir with Michael. Both parents decided that Amir should stay in Monroe 4 because he was so young. She also testified that for the next year and a half,

she drove to Monroe once or twice a month. Once for a two-week period

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Michael Abrams v. Brittany Turner, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-abrams-v-brittany-turner-lactapp-2019.