Mullins v. Mullins

490 N.E.2d 1375, 142 Ill. App. 3d 57, 96 Ill. Dec. 170, 1986 Ill. App. LEXIS 2028
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 21, 1986
Docket85-1107
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 490 N.E.2d 1375 (Mullins v. Mullins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mullins v. Mullins, 490 N.E.2d 1375, 142 Ill. App. 3d 57, 96 Ill. Dec. 170, 1986 Ill. App. LEXIS 2028 (Ill. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

PRESIDING JUSTICE SULLIVAN

delivered the opinion of the court:

Respondent appeals from an order transferring to petitioner permanent custody of the parties’ two minor children, contending, essentially, that the trial court’s ruling was contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence.

The record discloses that Sheila Michaelson, formerly Sheila Mullins (respondent) and Philip Mullins (petitioner) 1 were married from August 12, 1972, until May 11, 1983, when a judgment of dissolution of the marriage was granted to respondent. Incorporated therein was a settlement agreement awarding custody of their two minor children — Matthew, age 6, and Katherine, age 4 — to her with liberal visitation rights granted to petitioner.

A detailed chronological account of the procedural history of this protracted litigation is both relevant to and necessary for an understanding of the issues presented. On June 2, 1983, petitioner filed a petition for modification of custody and a rule to show cause together with an affidavit alleging, inter alia, that in an attempt to force him to allow Larry Michaelson (Michaelson) — whom respondent subsequently married — to adopt the children and in retaliation for his refusal to do so, respondent (a) terminated all contact between him and the children by denying him the visitation rights provided for in the judgment of dissolution and any telephone communications with them, and (b) deliberately confused the children by telling them that their surname was to be changed to Michaelson and directing them to call Michaelson “daddy.”

The June 2 petition was subsequently withdrawn by agreement of the parties, but in November 1983, petitioner filed another petition for rule to show cause, alleging continued violations of his visitation rights by respondent. Shortly thereafter, respondent filed a report with the Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) of sexual abuse by petitioner of the children in May and June 1983. She also petitioned in the trial court for a psychiatric examination of him and for termination or restriction of his visitation, alleging as grounds therefor acts of violence and sexual perversion by him in the children’s presence as well as failure by him to protect their safety or provide for their well-being while they were in his care. Due to a preliminary finding by the DCFS that respondent’s sexual abuse charges were “founded,” the trial court ordered on January 5, 1984, that visitations be supervised pending receipt of psychiatric evaluations of both parties.

During February 1984, petitioner variously filed (a) a motion to amend the interim visitation order claiming, inter alia, noncompliance by respondent with it, (b) a petition for a temporary restraining order to enjoin respondent from moving to Florida with the children and from obstructing his attempts to exercise the visitation rights granted by the court in its January order, (c) a motion to hold respondent in contempt of court for refusing to permit a scheduled visitation — which he voluntarily withdrew when she agreed to a make-up visit, and (d) a petition for rule to show cause for various other incidents of interference with his efforts to communicate and visit with the children. Following this series of petitions and motions, respondent filed (a) a second complaint with the DCFS charging that petitioner had sexually molested their daughter in a restaurant on February 22, 1984, and (b) a verified emergency petition for termination of his visitation rights and for a rule to show cause in which she additionally alleged that petitioner had threatened, bribed, attempted to brainwash and, on one occasion, physically assaulted both children and repeatedly harassed her and Michaelson, who had been supervising the visitations.

At the March 27, 1984, hearing thereon, petitioner testified generally that since the divorce, respondent had consistently attempted to deny him contact with the children. Specifically, he testified to difficulties he encountered during the previous three months of court-ordered, supervised visitations. On one occasion in late January 1984, when Matthew was ill, respondent refused to allow him visitation with Kathy unless his fiance’s daughter, who had accompanied him to the restaurant as his witness, sat at another table. On the next scheduled date, February 12, respondent called him at the restaurant to cancel visitation because Michaelson was unable to supervise it, and when he suggested that she or someone else substitute as supervisor or that they arrange another time or day, she cursed at him and hung up. The following week, he asked to see the children at a restaurant closer to his home, but Michaelson denied the request, saying, when reminded of the court order, that he (petitioner) could “take [the] court order and shove it.” Later that day he received a mailgram from Michaelson advising him where and when visitation would be allowed and suggesting he telephone for any additional information he might need, but when he did he received no answer, nor did Michaelson respond to the message he left on the answering machine. A make-up visitation was arranged by the parties’ attorneys for February 22, and on that date, as he was apologizing to the children for not seeing them the previous week and assuring them that he loved and missed them, Michaelson spoke out from another table, telling the children that he was a liar and not to pay any attention to him. A short time later, he brought Kathy to his side of the table, put his arm around her and read the Valentine’s card he brought for her, but when their meals arrived, she returned to her seat across from him and remained there until they left. The following week, February 26, he and his fiance arrived at the restaurant before Michaelson and the children and requested two tables but were told that only one was available and that there would be a 15-minute wait for the other. Upon learning of the delay, Michaelson insisted that the children not be seated until his table was ready, when petitioner protested, noting the short time allotted for the visitation, Michaelson grabbed the children by their wrists, said, in the presence of a crowd of patrons waiting to be seated, “I’m not leaving them here, we already have you under investigation for *** sexual molestation to [sic] your daughter, and I’m not about to leave them here with you,” and took them out of the restaurant. On March 4, because Michaelson was unable to supervise, respondent brought the children to the restaurant and waited out in the car. At one point during the visit, Kathy informed him that respondent had instructed her to tell people that he fondled her, but that she (Kathy) knew that was not true.

On cross-examination, petitioner denied molesting Kathy as she sat next to him on February 22, grabbing or having used physical force against either of the children to prevent Michaelson from removing them from the restaurant on February 26, or having threatened them to refrain from giving information about him to anyone; to the contrary, because of Kathy’s remarks concerning what respondent instructed her to say, he specifically directed both children to always tell the truth.

Following the brief, but essentially corroborative testimony of the petitioner’s fiance and her adult daughter, respondent called Sandra Roy, the DCFS social worker who conducted the initial investigation of respondent’s November 1983 sexual abuse complaint against petitioner. Ms.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
490 N.E.2d 1375, 142 Ill. App. 3d 57, 96 Ill. Dec. 170, 1986 Ill. App. LEXIS 2028, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mullins-v-mullins-illappct-1986.