Michele M. v. Richard R.

177 P.3d 830, 2008 Alas. LEXIS 21, 2008 WL 540189
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 29, 2008
DocketS-12510
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 177 P.3d 830 (Michele M. v. Richard R.) 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
Michele M. v. Richard R., 177 P.3d 830, 2008 Alas. LEXIS 21, 2008 WL 540189 (Ala. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

MATTHEWS, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Michele M. and Richard R. dispute who should have custody of their son, Charles. 1 Richard and Michele initially had agreed that Michele should have primary legal and physical custody over Charles and Richard would have some visitation rights. Richard later moved to gain full custody of Charles after it became clear that Charles was doing poorly in school due in part to a high number of unexcused absences. Richard was temporarily awarded custody in April 2006. After a two-day trial in late 2006, Superior Court Judge Mark Rindner made Richard’s primary physical and legal custody of Charles permanent. Michele now appeals that award of custody. She argues that the superior court improperly weighed several “best interest” factors and did not take into account Richard’s history of domestic violence. Michele is arguing pro se. Richard has elected not to participate.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Charles was born in 1992 to Michele and Richard. Michele and Richard have never been married to each other. Richard was briefly married to Theresa C. a few years after he met Michele. Michele and Richard lived together for one year before Charles was born, and stayed together until Charles was about six months old. Michele had primary custody of Charles, and an informal visitation schedule was maintained by the parties; basically, Richard would have Charles for one or two days a week. Richard had one child with his ex-wife, a daughter named Jessica, and has full legal and physical custody of her. He now lives with his partner, Carol, and her daughter from a previous relationship, Jennifer.

The visitation arrangement made by Charles and Michele worked, or seemed to, for several years. In April 2000, however, Richard asked that he be able to see Charles on Sundays and Mondays, in order to better accommodate his work schedule. Michele initially agreed. But after trying out this arrangement for a few months, Michele petitioned for sole legal and primary physical custody of Charles. She alleged that Richard was being uncooperative with her and was behaving irresponsibly around Charles, citing one instance where Richard went to a bar and “made [Charles] sit outside of the bar while he sat in the bar drinking and partying.” She was also concerned about the amount Richard was paying in child support.

Richard moved to continue joint legal custody and maintain the recently agreed-to visitation schedule (where Charles would visit *832 Richard on Sundays and Mondays); he also proposed mediation. The parties tried mediation but it was unsuccessful, and they went to trial in 2001. In its findings of fact and conclusions of law made on October 2, 2001, the court awarded the parties joint legal custody but gave Michele physical custody and the right “to decide which extracurricular activities that [Charles] shall be involved in.” The court also set out an elaborate visitation schedule. That visitation schedule was modified somewhat the following year in a stipulated agreement made by the parties.

The superior court made two points in its 2001 findings of fact that are germane to this present case. First, the court noted that “there is some evidence that [Charles] has had a problem with attendance and tardiness in school.” At the time, the court seemed to divide responsibility for Charles’s absences and tardiness equally between the parties.

Second, the court noted that “[a]s to [Richard], he appears to have a history of entering into relationships with women who have alcohol problems which lead to domestic violence problems.” The court continued that “[although there is a record of some domestic violence issues having been prosecuted against [Richard] and some prosecuted by him regarding his subsequent relationships, the court finds that these incidences are irrelevant to the issues in this case.” The court found “more telling” the fact that Richard was awarded full custody of Jessica, his daughter from a previous marriage.

In September 2004 Richard moved for joint legal custody with a provision for “disputed issues” to be resolved by Richard and for the parties to have shared physical custody, on a “one week on, one week off’ schedule. In his affidavit supporting his motion, Richard expressed concern that Charles had been absent numerous times from school during the years in which Michele had primary physical custody of Charles and cited “[Michele’s] utter failure in meeting [Charles’s] educational needs.” According to Richard’s motion, during the 2003-2004 school year “[Charles] missed approximately 57.5 days of school” and “[m]any of the days that Mother did get [Charles] to school, he was several hours late.” At this point, Richard was living with another woman, Carol, who had custody of her daughter, Jennifer.

At a settlement conference on September 2, 2005, the parties entered into an agreement. In that agreement, the parties maintained joint legal custody of Charles, but physical custody was changed “from primary physical custody with [Michele] to shared physical custody.” The agreement provided that the number of days Richard would have custody would increase until (in summer 2007) the visitation schedule would become one week on and one week off. The agreement also added provisions that, should Charles’s grades fall or his school absences increase, Richard would have control over where Charles went to school and what activities he could participate in, especially hockey. Because of Charles’s continued poor grades, in December 2005 Richard was granted (over Michele’s objection) the right to transfer Charles to a school closer to Richard’s residence.

On January 31, 2006, Richard filed a motion for primary physical and legal custody of Charles. Richard stated in his affidavit accompanying the motion that “[Charles] missed an excessive amount of school during the first semester” of the school year, and he reported that Charles had been absent eighteen times from one of his classes. Michele challenged the motion. A hearing was scheduled for April 13, 2006. Michele indicated that she was not prepared for a full trial on whether Richard should have physical custody of Charles. The court postponed the trial but entered an interim order that awarded sole legal custody and primary physical custody to Richard. Michele states in her brief that she allowed this change in custody “based on my unwillingness to fight in court anymore and the fact that I could not afford an attorney.”

During the time the interim order was in place, Michele filed a request for emergency intervention for Charles. In her notice of the filing, Michele wrote that “[Charles] needs to be placed in an in-patient treatment center ... for intensive therapy to deal with his current issues that include past physical abuse and current mental and emotional abuse from his father, Richard.” Richard *833 denied the accusations made in Michele’s motion for emergency intervention, and he accused Michele of withholding visitation of Charles from him.

A hearing was held over the course of two days, November 29 and December 4, 2006. At the trial, Michele (who appeared pro se) called several witnesses, including police officers, Charles’s social worker, and Theresa, Richard’s ex-wife.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 P.3d 830, 2008 Alas. LEXIS 21, 2008 WL 540189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michele-m-v-richard-r-alaska-2008.