Michael G. v. Amy T.

CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 2015
Docket14-0914
StatusPublished

This text of Michael G. v. Amy T. (Michael G. v. Amy T.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michael G. v. Amy T., (W. Va. 2015).

Opinion

STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA

SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS

Michael G., Petitioner Below, Petitioner FILED September 11, 2015 RORY L. PERRY II, CLERK vs) No. 14-0914 (Monongalia County 12-D-224) SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA Amy T., Respondent Below, Respondent

MEMORANDUM DECISION Petitioner Michael G., 1 pro se, appeals the order of the Circuit Court of Monongalia County, entered August 11, 2014, affirming the July 10, 2014, order of the Family Court of Monongalia County. In its July 10, 2014 order, the family court (1) denied petitioner’s motion to sanction respondent for allegedly violating the court’s prior orders regarding petitioner’s mail and telephone contact with the parties’ minor children; (2) modified petitioner’s mail and telephone contact with the children; and (3) directed respondent to mail petitioner certain papers and belongings. Respondent Amy T., pro se, did not file a response.2

The Court has considered the parties’ briefs and the record on appeal. The facts and legal arguments are adequately presented, and the decisional process would not be significantly aided by oral argument. Upon consideration of the standard of review, the briefs, and the record presented, the Court finds no substantial question of law and no prejudicial error. For these

1 Because this case involves sensitive facts, we protect the identities of those involved by using the parties’ first names and last initials; and identify the children by using their initials only. See State ex rel. W.Va. Dept. of Human Servs. v. Cheryl M., 177 W.Va. 688, 689 n. 1, 356 S.E.2d 181, 182 n. 1 (1987). 2 On August 7, 2015, this Court entered an amended scheduling order noting that respondent failed to file a response and directed respondent to do so. However, despite this Court’s order, respondent did not file a response. Pursuant to Rule 10(d) of the West Virginia Rules of Appellate Procedure, if a respondent fails to respond to an assignment of error, this Court will assume that the respondent agrees with petitioner’s view of the issue. However, the Court declines to rule in petitioner’s favor simply because respondent failed to file a response. See Syl. Pt. 8, State v. Julius 185 W.Va. 422, 424, 408 S.E.2d 1, 3 (1991) (“This Court is not obligated to accept the State's confession of error in a criminal case. We will do so when, after a proper analysis, we believe error occurred.”).

1 reasons, a memorandum decision affirming the circuit court’s order is appropriate under Rule 21 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure.

The record does not reflect that the parties were ever married. Currently, petitioner is incarcerated in federal prison. Petitioner has been granted mail and telephone contact with the parties’ minor children, K.G and D.G. 3 In his motion for sanctions, petitioner alleged that respondent violated the family court’s prior orders regarding petitioner’s mail and telephone contact. At the time of petitioner’s motion, petitioner’s mail and telephone visitation with K.G. and D.G. was governed by prior orders entered on August 5, 2013, and January 10, 2014. Accordingly, the family court found the following:

Both the August 5, 2013, order and the January 10, 2014, order contemplated that the children would write [petitioner] at least one letter per month. [Respondent] was not to interfere with that in any regard, and she was to post the letters within a day or two of receiving them from the children for mailing. [Respondent] also was ordered to provide [petitioner’s] letters to the children subject to certain restrictions.

Among those restrictions were that petitioner was prohibited from pressuring the children to write him more than once a month and from undermining the children’s relationship with respondent. The August 5, 2013, order also required petitioner to keep the family court notified of his current location within the federal prison system and required respondent to make copies of petitioner’s letters to the children and the children’s letters to petitioner, and to provide the copies to the family court for the court’s review. The January 10, 2014, order relieved respondent from the obligation of making copies of the letters and awarded petitioner phone contact with the children pursuant to the parties’ agreement. Petitioner’s obligation “not [to] denigrate [respondent] or enquire of [respondent’s] activities in his letters to the children” was restated.

Following a July 9, 2014, hearing on petitioner’s motion for sanctions,4 the family court denied the motion finding that it was never the court’s intent “to give [petitioner] a means of brow-beating the children or undermining the relationship between [respondent] and the children.” With regard to the oldest child, K.G., the family court found that by March of 2014, petitioner and K.G. had a falling out. Petitioner became angry that K.G was not writing him. Consequently, in two undated letters, petitioner disowned K.G. by telling the child that K.G. had let him down, that K.G. should not write back because “I won’t write you again,” and that “[i]f you treat me like this then I must treat you as no longer being my son.” With regard to the younger child, D.G., the family court found that in a March 13, 2014, letter to D.G., petitioner repeatedly attacked both respondent and K.G., specifically calling K.G. “a little liar.” The family court also determined that petitioner’s letter to D.G. contained threats both about the instant case and about what petitioner will do when he is released from prison, stating that “everyone [who] thinks this is some joke . . .

3 K.G. was born on March 26, 1999, and D.G. was born on November 10, 2003. 4 The recording of the July 9, 2014, hearing has been reviewed.

are not gona [sic] like this sh*t much the day I do finally get out[.]” The family court concluded that petitioner’s letters were “angry, manipulative and threatening.”

In addition to finding that respondent did not violate its directives regarding petitioner’s mail and phone contact with the children, the family court modified its prior orders. First, the family court ordered that any letters or phone calls between petitioner and K.G., who was fifteen years old, would be at K.G.’s discretion. Second, the family court gave petitioner “one last chance” to correspond with D.G., but ordered that petitioner could not: (1) threaten D.G., K.G., respondent, or anyone else with whom D.G. has a relationship; (2) speak negatively about D.G., K.G., respondent, or anyone else with whom D.G. has a relationship; (3) discuss this or any other proceeding with D.G.; or (4) ask D.G. for money or suggest that D.G. ask respondent or anyone else to send petitioner money. The family court directed respondent to request that her parents unblock petitioner’s telephone calls to their home, but ordered that it would not find respondent in contempt if respondent’s parents, who were not parties to the case, refused her request.

Also, in its July 10, 2014, order, the family court found that prior to his original prison transfer, petitioner sent respondent certain papers and belongings without her permission to do so and had since been pressuring both respondent and the children to send the items back to him at their cost. The family court noted that respondent was indigent and the sole source of income for the children. The family court directed respondent to return petitioner’s papers and belongings to him, but ordered that if respondent did not have the financial resources to do so, she could enlist the aid of the court to mail the papers and belongings to petitioner.

Petitioner filed two appeals of the family court’s July 10, 2014, order.

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Michael G. v. Amy T., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-g-v-amy-t-wva-2015.