Miller-Howard v. Mason

CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 21, 2016
Docket655, 2015
StatusPublished

This text of Miller-Howard v. Mason (Miller-Howard v. Mason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller-Howard v. Mason, (Del. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

JORDAN LAWRENCE MILLER- § HOWARD,1 § No. 655, 2015 § Petitioner Below- § Appellant, § § Court Below—Family Court v. § of the State of Delaware § JANE MASON, § File No. CN09-04640 § Petition No. 15-11181 Respondent Below- § Appellee.

Submitted: May 6, 2016 Decided: July 21, 2016

Before STRINE, Chief Justice; VAUGHN, and SEITZ, Justices.

ORDER

This 21st day of July 2016, upon consideration of the opening brief2

and the record on appeal, it appears to the Court that:

(1) The appellant, Jordan Lawrence Miller-Howard (“Father”),

filed this appeal from the Family Court’s judgment, dated November 10,

2015, which denied his petition for sole custody of the parties’ two minor

children (“the Children”). Having reviewed Father’s arguments on appeal

1 The Court assigned pseudonyms to the parties under Supreme Court Rule 7(d). 2 The appellee, Jane Mason (“Mother”), did not file an answering brief on appeal. The Clerk of the Court informed the parties that the matter would be considered solely on the basis of Father’s opening brief and the record below. and the record below, we conclude that the Family Court erred by not

awarding Father sole custody. Accordingly, we reverse.

(2) The parties were married in 2005 and divorced in 2010. They

are the parents of a son, born on February 7, 2002, and a daughter, born

December 13, 2003. Since the parties’ divorce, the Children have resided

primarily with Father but have visited with Mother in Mexico, where she

lived primarily between 2009 and 2014. On April 2, 2015, Father obtained a

Protection from Abuse Order (“PFA”) against Mother. On April 22, 2015,

Father petitioned for sole custody of the Children. Mother filed an answer

on June 4, 2015.

(3) Both parties appeared at a pretrial conference held on July 10,

2015. At that conference, the Family Court informed the parties that trial

would be held on October 14, 2015. The Family Court also entered an

interim visitation order allowing Mother to visit with the Children on

Tuesdays from 9 AM to 2 PM and on Saturdays from 10 AM to 4 PM. On

July 27, 2015, with the Family Court’s permission, Father filed an amended

petition for custody. Mother did not file an answer to the amended petition.

On September 30, 2015, Father filed a motion requesting the Family Court

to interview the children.

2 (4) Trial was held on October 14, 2015. Father appeared and

presented several witnesses. Mother failed to appear. At the start of the

trial, the Family Court asked Father’s counsel if Father still wished to have

the Children interviewed. Father’s counsel asked to defer responding to the

question until the end of the trial.

(5) The trial record reflects that Father has lived in the United

States for eighteen years and is employed building houses. After the parties

divorced, the Children lived with Father in the former marital home, which

Mother and Father continued to own jointly. Between 2009 and 2014,

Mother spent most of her time living in Mexico. In 2009, with Father’s

consent, Mother traveled to Mexico with the parties’ daughter, where she

stayed for several months before returning the daughter home to Father.

Several years later, again with Father’s consent, Mother took both Children

to Mexico for several months. Father paid the Children’s travel and living

expenses while they were with Mother.

(6) After Mother returned to the United States with both Children,

Father learned that she was pregnant with another man’s child. Mother

stayed in the United States with her own mother to give birth but later

returned to Mexico with her newborn. Twice more, Mother returned to the

United States from Mexico temporarily in order to give birth to two more

3 children. In 2014, Mother moved from Mexico back to the United States

with her three young children. Because she had no other place to live,

Father allowed Mother and her three young children to move in with him

and their Children. Father testified that Mother, at that time, had expressed

fear for her safety because she had witnessed a murder in Mexico, for which

her boyfriend had been arrested.

(7) Father testified that shortly after moving in, Mother began

smoking marijuana daily and became very moody and aggressive toward

Father and their Children. She would call the Children “dumb” and

“stupid.” Father became concerned about Mother’s mental health after

Mother told him that she had been sent by God to save the world. Father

came home one day in July 2014 to find Mother and the Children gone and

no note explaining their absence. Later that day, Father was contacted by

the police informing him that Mother had been found with the Children in

Virginia. She had been behaving erratically and had been arrested. Father

immediately drove to Virginia to retrieve the Children.

(8) Mother was admitted to a mental hospital in Virginia, where

she stayed for several weeks. After she was released from the hospital, she

and her three younger children moved out of Father’s residence and moved

in with her mother. In early 2015, however, Father allowed Mother and her

4 three children to move back into the former marital residence. Father and

the parties’ two Children moved out and went to live with Father’s family.

(9) In March 2015, Mother became physically aggressive to Father

in front of the Children. She tried to hit him and yelled obscenities at him.

As a result, Father filed a PFA petition. On April 2, 2015, the Family Court

entered a PFA ordering Mother to have no contact with Father for a period

of two years. The Family Court also awarded Father temporary custody of

the Children and did not provide Mother with any visitation rights.

Nonetheless, after the scheduling conference in July 2015, the Family Court

entered an interim order granting Mother daytime visitation with the

Children two days per week. Father and his sister both testified at trial that,

despite being granted interim visitation rights, Mother often picked the

Children up late and dropped them off early and sometimes failed to appear

for visitation at all.

(10) In addition to Father, the Family Court also heard testimony

from Father’s sister and two of his neighbors. This additional testimony

corroborated Father’s testimony that the children are happy and well-

adjusted where they are living and that Father is a good parent who provides

for the Children, participates in their schooling, and oversees their medical

care. There also was evidence that the Children are doing well in school. At

5 the end of the testimony, Father’s counsel stated that he would make the

Children available for an interview if the Family Court believed it would aid

its decision-making. Because the record was uncontroverted, however, the

Family Court determined that it was not necessary to interview the Children.

(11) The Family Court issued its decision on November 10, 2015. It

analyzed each of the eight “best interest” factors under 13 Del. C. § 7223 and

concluded that six of the eight factors favored Father’s petition and that the

other two factors did not apply. Nonetheless, the Family Court concluded

that the “record lacks sufficient basis to award Father sole legal custody.”

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