Minter v. Minter

29 So. 3d 840, 2009 Miss. App. LEXIS 695, 2009 WL 3260556
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedOctober 13, 2009
Docket2008-CA-01114-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 29 So. 3d 840 (Minter v. Minter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minter v. Minter, 29 So. 3d 840, 2009 Miss. App. LEXIS 695, 2009 WL 3260556 (Mich. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

BARNES, J.,

for the court.

¶ 1. John Minter filed a petition in the Lamar County Chancery Court seeking modification of the primary physical custody of his minor son, John Clayborn Minter (“Clay”), from his former wife, Phyllis Minter, to him. The chancery court issued an agreed order, whereby temporary physical custody of Clay was transferred to John, with Phyllis receiving standard visitation. After a hearing on the matter, custody was modified, with John receiving permanent physical custody of Clay. Finding no reversible error, we affirm.

STATEMENT OF FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 2. Phyllis and John married in February 1998. One child, Clay, was born of the marriage in July 1999. The Chancery Court of Lamar County granted a judgment of divorce based on irreconcilable differences in August 2000. The parties agreed to share legal custody of Clay, with Phyllis having primary physical custody and John having standard visitation, which consisted of every other week from Thursday through Sunday. The court also ordered John to pay $200 per month in child support.

¶ 3. After the divorce, Phyllis was living in Opelousas, Louisiana, at her father’s house, and John was living in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. Once Clay began pre-kinder-garten, John testified that he would pick Clay up every other Friday and return him to Phyllis on Sunday. There were no problems with the custody arrangement until May 2005, when John petitioned the chancery court for modification of custody, mainly because Clay had to repeat kindergarten due to thirty-five absences in one year while under Phyllis’s custody. John also claimed Phyllis failed to provide Clay with suitable, stable living quarters; she used drugs; cohabited with men to whom she was not married; and did not cooperate with John about transporting the child between Mississippi and Louisiana for visitation.

¶ 4. In August 2005, the chancery court entered a temporary order, whereby the parties were ordered to submit to hair follicle and urinalysis drug tests. 1 Also, the court appointed Dr. John Galloway, a licensed marriage and family counselor and social worker, to evaluate Clay’s health and well-being and make a recommendation to the court concerning Clay’s custody. In January 2006, temporary physical custody of Clay was transferred to John through an agreed order. Clay has remained in John’s custody since that time, with Phyllis maintaining standard visitation rights.

¶ 5. The chancery court held hearings in June and October 2007. Testimony showed both parties had lived in numerous locations and had held several jobs since the divorce. At the time of the divorce, Phyllis was living in Hattiesburg, but she later moved to Louisiana and stayed at her father’s house in Opelousas for approximately one year. She then moved to an apartment in Lafayette, Louisiana for eight months. Because her father was dying of cancer, Phyllis moved back to his house to care for him. During this time, Phyllis gave birth to her second child, Jacob, in December 2002. Phyllis had the child out of wedlock; she had dated the father of the child for six months. Phyllis *843 testified Jacob’s father has no active participation in his son’s life.

¶ 6. Phyllis continued to live with her father for approximately two years until he died; then she, Clay, and Jacob moved in with her brother, who had a larger mobile home nearby, for approximately one year. Next, she moved in with her sister in Geismar, Louisiana for eight months, while she waited for an apartment in Baton Rouge to become available. Five people were staying in a three-bedroom residence: Clay and Jacob had one bedroom; Phyllis her own bedroom; and Phyllis’s sister and aunt slept in one room. Once the apartment became available, Phyllis moved to Baton Rouge for one year. Phyllis’s latest residence was a two-bedroom mobile home in Prairieville, Louisiana. She resides in one bedroom, with Jacob and Clay (when she has custody) sharing another bedroom. She has several relatives who live nearby.

¶ 7. As for employment, at the time of the divorce, Phyllis was working for H & R Block and for an attorney in Hatties-burg. She had also worked at a Cracker Barrel restaurant at some point since the divorce. She then worked at a seafood company, followed by Teche Electric in Lafayette for one year, where she was laid off. At this time she also became pregnant with Jacob; so, she did not work until she had him. Next, she worked at a T-shirt printing company for a few months until she moved to Baton Rouge, where she worked for a church daycare for about five months, and then another daycare for a year. At the time of the final judgment, Phyllis had woidced at Tonya’s Kids, another daycare, in Gonzalez, Louisiana, for more than two consecutive years.

¶ 8. John, too, has lived in various locations. At the time of the divorce, John was living in Hattiesburg. One month later, he moved to another location in Hat-tiesburg for fourteen months; then he lived with and assisted his grandmother for approximately three years. John moved to another address for approximately a year and one half, until he bought his current house in Petal, Mississippi, which is a three-bedroom home with a fenced-in backyard. He noted that he has only lived in two places since receiving custody of Clay.

¶ 9. Additionally, John has held numerous jobs since the divorce. At the time of the divorce, John worked for Deviney Construction for three months. To make more money, he left this job to work on a construction site in Baton Rouge. He worked at this job until the project was completed — approximately eight weeks. During this time, John still maintained a residence in Hattiesburg. In 2002, John collected unemployment. He then returned to Hattiesburg and worked for various contractors as a painter. At the time of the hearing, he was self-employed, and for the past three years, he has operated a paint-contracting company. He employs three to four individuals and has flexible hours.

¶ 10. Regarding Clay’s education, he attended numerous schools while in Phyllis’s custody. Clay started out in prekindergarten at a public school in Opelou-sas. Phyllis claimed that she was happy with the school, but John did not want Clay in public school; so they moved Clay to kindergarten at New Hope Christian Academy. John refutes this and claims Phyllis was the one who had complained about the public school. John paid the tuition at New Hope.

¶ 11. Testimony conflicted regarding the explanation of Clay’s thirty-five unexcused absences at the private school. John blamed Phyllis, and Phyllis blamed John. Phyllis and her sister claimed the absences were due to John’s picking Clay *844 up every other Thursday morning pursuant to the visitation schedule in the chancellor’s final judgment, which was entered before Clay started school, instead of waiting until Friday afternoon when school was over. John and his mother testified, however, that once Clay was in kindergarten, John did not pick Clay up until school let out on Friday, and that John caused Clay to miss only one day of school. Phyllis admitted she never objected to or sought to have the visitation schedule changed, because John would verbally and physically threaten her if she disobeyed him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 So. 3d 840, 2009 Miss. App. LEXIS 695, 2009 WL 3260556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minter-v-minter-missctapp-2009.