Michael S. Miller v. Jennifer L. Miller
This text of Michael S. Miller v. Jennifer L. Miller (Michael S. Miller v. Jennifer L. Miller) 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.
Opinion
STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT
04-1355
MICHAEL S. MILLER
VERSUS
JENNIFER L. MILLER
**********
APPEAL FROM THE THIRTY-SIXTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF BEAUREGARD, NO. C-2004-0211B HONORABLE HERMAN I. STEWART, DISTRICT JUDGE
OSWALD A. DECUIR JUDGE
Court composed of Oswald A. Decuir, Glenn B. Gremillion, and Elizabeth A. Pickett, Judges.
Pickett, J., dissents and assigns reasons.
AFFIRMED.
David L. Wallace Attorney at Law P. O. Box 489 DeRidder, LA 70634 (337) 462-0473 Counsel for Defendant/Appellant: Jennifer L. Miller
C. Kerry Anderson Attorney at Law P. O. Box 1025 DeRidder, LA 70634 (337) 463-2100 Counsel for Appellee: A. M. E. David Deshotels, Jr. Deshotels, Mouser & Deshotels P. O. Box 399 Oberlin, LA 70655 (337) 639-4309 Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellee: Michael S. Miller DECUIR, Judge.
This appeal arises from a dispute over the legal custody of Dakota Miller, the
minor son of Michael Miller and Jennifer Driskill Miller. The trial court found
substantial harm would result if custody were awarded to either parent; therefore, the
court granted custody to the child’s paternal grandparents, Malcolm and JoAnn Miller.
Jennifer has appealed the decision of the trial court. Michael disagrees with the
factual findings of the trial court but does not contest the award of custody. For the
reasons assigned below, we affirm.
Michael and Jennifer met over the internet. She was sixteen years old and had
just completed her junior year of high school when her grandparents allowed her to
travel from their home in Oklahoma to Louisiana to spend a week with Michael and
his parents.1 Michael was in his early twenties at the time. It appears from the
testimony that he was unable to drive long distances because of a seizure disorder.
Michael and Jennifer began a sexual relationship, and by the time she returned home
from her second visit to Louisiana, she was pregnant. The couple married in June of
2002, four months after their son, Dakota, was born.2
The evidence in the record shows, and Jennifer admitted, that she began an
affair with another man a few months after she and Michael were married. She
became pregnant a second time and had an abortion which she testified she was forced
to do by Michael. Her third pregnancy resulted in the birth of a daughter, Cheyenne,
who Michael sought to disavow. Relying on DNA evidence which showed a 0%
probability of paternity, the trial court granted Michael’s petition to disavow, and that
ruling has not been appealed.
1 Jennifer was raised by her grandparents from the time she was six years old. Her mother is serving a life sentence for murder, in California, and her father was released from prison in December of 2003, after serving time for a felony drug conviction. 2 Prior to their marriage, Jennifer finished high school in Oklahoma. Both parties described in their testimony a violent and tumultuous relationship.
They fought physically, as well as verbally, over issues such as housekeeping, internet
pornography, and Jennifer’s relationships with other men. Michael’s mother testified
as to their chaotic home life, while Jennifer’s grandmother corroborated the fighting
that went on between the two. Ultimately, the couple separated in February of 2004,
when Jennifer left with the children while Michael was at work, and she returned to
her grandparents’ home in Oklahoma.
Since the time of the parties’ separation, Michael sent $40.00 for their child’s
support and once bought diapers for both children. There was testimony that Jennifer
sent Dakota to Louisiana for a scheduled visitation and the Millers found fleas in his
hair. The trial court concluded that placing the child in the custody of either parent
“would place him in an unsafe environment with a real physical danger and an
extremely questionable moral environment.” After questioning JoAnn and Malcolm
Miller, the trial court referred to Article 133 of the Louisiana Civil Code and
determined that it had the authority to place the child with “any other person able to
provide an adequate and stable environment.”
The record before us reflects great immaturity on the part of both Jennifer and
Michael. Their moral choices, violent tempers, and disregard for their responsibilities
as parents, as well as Michael’s seizure disorder, caused the trial court to find them
both unfit to raise their child. Nevertheless, Jennifer contends in this appeal that the
court was without authority to grant custody to the Millers, who are not parties to the
litigation and have not sought custody. She also contends the trial court erred in
effectively granting custody to Michael, since he lives with his parents, and in failing
to grant visitation.
We find the trial court’s decision to be well supported by both the evidence in
the record and legal authority. Article 133 of the Civil Code clearly authorizes a court
2 to award custody to a non-parent in order to prevent “substantial harm to the child.”
Similarly, there is jurisprudential history for awarding custody to a grandparent who
has not petitioned for custody and who is not a party to the suit. See Nail v. Clavier,
99-588 (La.App. 3 Cir. 11/10/99), 745 So.2d 1221, writ denied, 99-3494 (La. 1/5/00),
752 So.2d 169, and cases cited therein. Accordingly, we find no manifest error in the
trial court’s determination that an award of custody to JoAnn and Malcolm Miller is
in the best interest of the child, Dakota Miller. The fact that Michael lives with his
parents, and thus would also be living with Dakota, is of no moment.
On the issue of Jennifer’s visitation rights, we note the trial court specified only
“reasonable visitation” in its judgment. The trial transcript indicates the court
instructed the parties to work out a visitation schedule among themselves and, if they
could not agree, then they should return to court for a determination of visitation. The
trial court has great discretion in determining visitation rights, and we find no error
in the court’s decision to require the parties to work together on a schedule agreeable
to all before making a judicial pronouncement on such a logistically complicated
matter.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment rendered by the trial court.
Costs of this appeal are assessed to Jennifer Driskill Miller.
3 NUMBER 04-1355
COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT
STATE OF LOUISIANA
Pickett, Judge, dissenting.
For the same reasons I expressed in my dissent in Nail v. Clavier, 99-588
(La.App. 3 Cir. 10/10/99), 745 So.2d 1221, 1227, writ denied, 99-3494 (La. 1/5/00),
752 So.2d 169, and as more fully expressed below, I respectfully dissent from the
majority opinion.
My primary objection in Nail, and in the instant case, is that the grandparents
to whom custody was awarded were not parties to the suit, and the actual parties were
never given an opportunity to fully and fairly examine them to make a determination
of fitness. I fully recognize the authority of the trial court to award custody to a non-
parent. La.Civ.Code art. 133. I also understand the inclination to deny custody to
either the mother or the father in this case. I believe the trial court, once it determined
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