Mitch Reid v. Vickie Lindsey

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 11, 2019
DocketA18A1933
StatusPublished

This text of Mitch Reid v. Vickie Lindsey (Mitch Reid v. Vickie Lindsey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitch Reid v. Vickie Lindsey, (Ga. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

FIRST DIVISION BARNES, P. J., MCMILLIAN and REESE, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules

January 22, 2019

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A18A1933. REID v. LINDSEY.

REESE, Judge.

In this grandparent visitation case, John Mitchell Reid, Jr., the father of D. R.,

a 12-year-old boy, appeals from the trial court’s order granting visitation with D. R.

to Reid’s mother, Vickie Lindsey. Reid contends that the trial court’s findings of fact

were not supported by clear and convincing evidence, that the court erred in ruling

that Lindsey’s visitation had priority over D. R.’s extracurricular activities, and that

it erred in ordering Reid to pay a portion of the Guardian ad Litem’s fees. For the

reasons set forth, infra, we affirm the court’s order as to its award of visitation to

Lindsey, but reverse the court’s order requiring Reid to pay a portion of the Guardian

ad Litem’s fees. Viewed in the light most favorable to the trial court’s judgment,1 the evidence

showed the following facts. D. R. and his twin brother, J. R., were born to Reid and

his first wife, Sherry, in December 2005. J. R. was born with serious medical issues

that required numerous surgeries and prolonged periods of hospitalization in Atlanta.

As a result, Sherry Reid was usually at the hospital with J. R., and Reid had to work

and take care of their other children at home. Given these circumstances, Lindsey and

her husband2 (collectively, “the grandparents”) offered to take care of D. R. in their

home. Over the next ten years, D. R. lived almost exclusively in the grandparents’

Cherokee County home, although he often visited his father and the rest of his family.

Further, during that ten-year period, Reid and his family sometimes also lived in the

grandparents’ home (hereinafter, “Lindsey’s home”) due to Reid’s financial

difficulties and J. R.’s frequent hospitalizations.

From 2006, when D. R. began living in Lindsey’s home, until May 2016, his

grandparents provided almost all of his financial support, and Lindsey home-schooled

D. R. and made most of the decisions concerning his care. The grandparents enrolled

1 See Keith v. Callahan, 332 Ga. App. 291, 291 (772 SE2d 386) (2015). 2 Lindsey’s husband, who is Reid’s step-father, was not a party to the petition at issue, nor is he a party to this appeal. See OCGA § 19-7-3 (a) (2) (defining “grandparent” as “the parent of a parent of a minor child[ ]”).

2 D. R. in sports programs and music lessons, routinely took him to church, and often

took him to college and professional football and baseball games, to theaters and

museums, and on out-of-state trips.

In August 2011, when D. R. was five years old, his mother suddenly and

unexpectedly died. The grandparents purchased a home near theirs for Reid and J. R.

to live in, although D. R. continued to live with his grandparents. Reid remarried

shortly after his first wife’s death, but he and his second wife divorced about a year

later. Then, in 2015, Reid married again, and he and his wife, Nicky, had a daughter,

K. R.

In May 2016, Reid moved D. R. out of Lindsey’s home and into his home

(“Reid’s home”) to live full-time with him, his wife, D. R.’s twin brother, J. R., and

his half-sister, K. R. Reid also notified Lindsey that she would not be allowed any

visitation or phone contact with D. R. unless he (Reid) was present.

On May 31, 2016, Lindsey filed a petition against Reid seeking primary

custody of D. R. and child support.3 She subsequently amended the petition to include

a request for reasonable visitation with D. R. as an alternative to custody and child

3 The issue of Lindsey’s custody or visitation with Reid’s other biological children, J. R. and K. R., was not raised in the petition, nor is it an issue on appeal.

3 support. In February 2017, the trial court conducted a hearing, during which Lindsey

focused solely on her request for visitation with D. R., stating that she was not asking

for custody at that time. Following the hearing, the court issued a temporary order in

which the court made the following findings of fact.

According to the court, in the nine months that had passed between May 2016,

when Reid moved D. R. out of Lindsey’s home, and the date of the temporary

hearing, D. R. had been “happy, loved, and well cared for” by Reid; enjoyed many

new activities with his father; had a “close and warm loving relationship” with all of

his family members; appeared to feel like he was part of the family; and did not want

to stop living with his father.

Even so, the court found that, in the ten years between D. R.’s birth in

December 2005 and May 2016, Lindsey had been D. R.’s primary physical custodian;

provided almost all of D. R.’s financial support; met all of his “health, dental,

education, social, and moral needs[;]” provided D. R. with family vacations,

celebrations for special events and holidays, and numerous extracurricular and

cultural activities; and ensured that D. R. had ongoing contact with his twin brother,

J. R., and other members of his family and step-families. The court found that, during

4 this time, Reid had “made no meaningful assertion of his parental rights [and] agreed

to and supported [Lindsey] raising [D. R.]”

The court found that, as a result of Lindsey’s consistent and stable parental care

and support of D. R. throughout his childhood, D. R. was “very bonded with

[Lindsey] and her husband.” The court found, however, that Reid had “prevented

reasonable contact between [D. R.] and [Lindsey]” during the nine months that had

passed since Reid removed D. R. from Lindsey’s home. According to the court, D. R.

had already experienced significant loss during his childhood, including the death of

his mother, the separation of him from his family due to the substantial medical needs

of his twin brother, the loss of his relationship with his former step-mother and step-

siblings, and his sudden removal from Lindsey, “his primary caregiver of ten (10)

years[.]” The court found that, as a result, “[c]ontinued removal from [Lindsey] would

be another traumatic loss and harmful to [D. R.].”

Based upon these findings of fact, the trial court concluded that there was clear

and convincing evidence that D. R. would be harmed if he was denied contact with

Lindsey and that such contact was in D. R.’s best interests. As a result, the court

awarded Lindsey visitation with D. R. on weekends (subject to his scheduled

5 extracurricular activities) and for two weeks of uninterrupted visitation during

summer vacation, as well as permission for Lindsey to call D. R. three times a week.

In the months after the March 2017 temporary order took effect, however,

several issues arose between the parties that significantly interfered with or prevented

Lindsey’s visitation with D. R. For example, Reid enrolled D. R. in various baseball,

basketball, and other sports programs that required D. R. to attend training sessions

and/or games for several hours almost every weekend. The hours of these activities

varied and sometimes changed at the last minute. The activities also required Lindsey

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Mitch Reid v. Vickie Lindsey, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitch-reid-v-vickie-lindsey-gactapp-2019.