Mohammed v. Akbar

CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 25, 2022
DocketA-21-081
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Mohammed v. Akbar, (Neb. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL (Memorandum Web Opinion)

MOHAMMED V. AKBAR

NOTICE: THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PERMANENT PUBLICATION AND MAY NOT BE CITED EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY NEB. CT. R. APP. P. § 2-102(E).

DLER R. MOHAMMED, APPELLANT, V.

BARI S. AKBAR, APPELLEE.

Filed January 25, 2022. No. A-21-081.

Appeal from the District Court for Lancaster County: PAUL W. KORSLUND, Judge, Retired. Affirmed. Darik J. Von Loh, of Hernandez Frantz, Von Loh, for appellant. Hoken James Aldrich, of Nebraska Coalition to End Sexual and Domestic Violence, for appellee. Linsey A. Camplin, guardian ad litem.

PIRTLE, Chief Judge, and RIEDMANN and WELCH, Judges. PIRTLE, Chief Judge. INTRODUCTION Dler R. Mohammed appeals from an order of the district court for Lancaster County dissolving his marriage to Bari S. Akbar. Dler challenges the court’s physical and legal custody determination for the parties’ three minor children, certain costs he was ordered to pay, and the division of the marital estate. Based on the reasons that follow, we affirm. BACKGROUND The parties were married in December 1998 in Iraq. At the time of trial, they had three minor children affected by the dissolution proceedings: Rawez, born 2005; Bayar, born 2014; and

-1- Yar, born 2016. The parties have a fourth child, Mohammed, who had reached the age of majority and was not subject to the court’s custody determination. Dler filed a complaint for dissolution of marriage in August 2019. Bari subsequently filed an answer and counterclaim. The trial court entered a temporary order in December, awarding Dler custody of Rawez, and Bari custody of Bayar and Yar; granting Bari parenting time with Rawez in a therapeutic setting; granting Dler parenting time with Bayar and Yar on alternating weekends; and appointing a guardian ad litem (GAL) to investigate and report to the court concerning the best interests of the children. The court also ordered a reciprocal restraining order between the parties. Trial was held on Dler’s complaint and Bari’s counterclaim in November 2020. Bari testified that she was primarily responsible for the care of the children during the marriage. Dler testified that both parties took care of the children but more of the responsibility fell on Bari because she did not work outside the home. Dler testified that he wants custody of the children because he wants them to be well taken care of and safe. He testified that Yar has been diagnosed with brain cancer and that Bari does not always give him his medicine at the right time. Dler also testified that Bari hits the children when they make a mess or break something. He testified that she will not change Yar’s diaper when it needs to be changed, even when he asks her to change it. Dler testified about various injuries Bayar and Yar sustained while in Bari’s care between May 2019 and July 2020. He also presented exhibits showing pictures of the children with the various injuries. Dler also testified there was at least one occasion where Bari did not have car seats for transporting Bayar and Yar. Dler further testified that there is a lack of communication from Bari at visitation exchanges. For example, on one occasion during Dler’s parenting time Yar complained of pain and started running a fever. Bari had not told Dler that Bayar and Yar had received vaccinations that day so Dler had no way of knowing that the symptoms were likely a result of the vaccinations. Dler also testified that there was an occasion when Bari dropped off the children at daycare even though Yar was sick. Dler received a call from the daycare telling him that Yar was having a hard time breathing. Dler picked him up from daycare and took him to the doctor. Dler also testified that Bari sometimes is late picking up the children from daycare. The daycare will either call him if Bari is late or he later gets a bill from the daycare for the overtime charges. Dler also claimed that Bari admitted to him that she was having an affair. He stated that based on their culture and tradition, once a wife cheats on her husband, the marriage is over. He stated that she “destroyed our life.” He also testified that Mohammed and Rawez know about the affair. Bari testified that there were incidents of domestic abuse during the marriage. Specifically, she testified about an assault that occurred in September 2017. She testified that Dler punched her in the face causing her to lose consciousness. Dler took her to the hospital where she was treated for her injuries and released. Before going to the hospital Dler threatened her and told her that if she told the truth about what happened “[her] life is not going to go as smoothly anymore.” He told her to tell hospital staff that she tripped and fell, causing the injuries to her face. When Bari and Dler came home from the hospital, Rawez called the police and Dler was arrested. A juvenile petition to adjudicate the children was also filed by the State as a result of the

-2- September 2017 incident alleging that Dler had engaged in assaultive behavior toward Bari and caused bodily injury to her when one or more of the juveniles was present or nearby. Bari testified that ultimately, the criminal charges against Dler and the juvenile case were dropped because Dler forced her to recant her statements and tell the authorities that he was a good husband and he did not hit her. Bari also testified about another assault that occurred in February 2018. She testified that Dler came into her bedroom at 3 a.m., woke her up, told her she was supposed to wait for him to come to bed, and while she was lying down he punched her in the chest. After the assault she had pain in her chest and had trouble breathing. Bari testified that she begged Dler to take her to the hospital, but he refused. He told her “you’re not going to the emergency room until the morning, even if you would -- if you die right now.” Mohammed took Bari to the hospital in the morning where, at the direction of Dler, he told hospital staff that Bari had fallen in the bathroom and hit her chest on the bathtub. Bari testified that she did not report the assault to law enforcement because Dler was controlling her and she was afraid of him. Dler denied hitting Bari in September 2017 and when asked about hitting her in February 2018 he responded that he “never hit or assaulted that woman here in America, never.” In November 2018, the parties traveled to Iraq with all four of their children. Bari testified that she believed the trip was to visit family for a month and then they would return to the United States. She testified that while they were in Iraq, Dler told her he had burned her green card and passport and said to her, you have become a man in the U.S., in our life and yours, you have become the man and I -- I became the woman, and you have changed the dynamic of my family, and now you don’t deserve to be back to the U.S. and you have to remain in Iraq.

She further testified that Dler took Mohammed and Rawez to stay with his family and left her at her family’s home with Bayar and Yar and told her, “you take care of these two.” Bari testified that after a month in Iraq, she ran out of medicine for Yar and was unable to get it in Iraq. She contacted the U.S. Consulate to get an expedited Visa and returned to the United States to get Yar the medicine he needed. When describing Bari’s return to the United States, Dler stated that he had taken her to Iraq for a family reunion but that she “escaped” and went back to the United States with the two youngest children. Dler returned to Nebraska with the two oldest children a short time later. There was evidence of a third domestic altercation that occurred in May 2019 in which Dler claimed Bari stabbed him four times with a kitchen knife.

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Bluebook (online)
Mohammed v. Akbar, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mohammed-v-akbar-nebctapp-2022.