Myers v. Myers
This text of 561 So. 2d 875 (Myers v. Myers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Mark L. MYERS, Plaintiff/Appellant,
v.
Peggy Bingham MYERS, Defendant/Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
Sockrider, Bolin, Nader & Anglin by D. Rex Anglin, Shreveport, for plaintiff/appellant.
Birdia Greer Pitts, Shreveport, for defendant/appellee.
Before HALL, NORRIS and LINDSAY, JJ.
NORRIS, Judge.
In this domestic action, the father, Mark L. Myers, appeals a trial court judgment *876 that modified a prior joint custody arrangement and made the mother, Peggy M. Hebert, the primary custodial parent of their eight year old daughter, Ashley. By three assignments of error Mr. Myers urges the trial court committed manifest error in finding a valid change of circumstances and removing Ashley from the stable environment he had provided for over three years. For the reasons expressed, we affirm.
Facts
The parties were married in August 1979; Ashley was born June 12, 1981; the parties physically separated in May 1985. Later that month Mark filed suit for separation and sole custody; Peggy reconvened, also seeking sole custody; Mark later amended his petition to request a final divorce based on adultery. Mark ultimately obtained the divorce based on adultery, with a finding of mutual fault, by judgment of January 10, 1986 (not filed until July 24, 1986). The judgment was "subject to the joint custody implementation plan attached hereto" but no plan was ever attached or filed. By informal arrangement the parties shared custody by keeping Ashley on alternating weeks; this scheme worked very well for over three years.
In March 1989 Peggy filed the instant rule to change the prior custody arrangement by granting her sole custody or, alternatively, primary domiciliary custody. She had remarried in April 1988 and lived for a few months with her husband, Roger Hebert, in Shreveport. In August 1988, however, Roger moved to Atlanta for a new job with better pay. Peggy had later roomed with a girlfriend to save money until she could join Roger in Atlanta. The purpose of her custody rule was so she could move and take Ashley with her. Mark filed an opposing rule seeking sole custody for himself. He urged that he could maintain the continuity of Ashley's life in Shreveport; he also alleged that Peggy was not fit for sole custody because she physically abused the child, was unemployed and unstable, and could not provide as nice a home environment as Mark.
The rules were consolidated and heard on March 28, May 23 and May 24, 1989. Part of Peggy's evidence dealt with the current home situation for herself and Ashley, and the need to move to Atlanta. She had been sharing a one bedroom apartment with Sandra Smith since January 1989, which made for rather cramped quarters when Ashley was with her. Because she was not working, however, she spent all her time with Ashley. For their support she was using Mark's $75 a month child support plus an allowance from her husband Roger, who was working a lot of overtime to maintain two households. Roger's supervisor, knowing about the situation, had been allowing the excess overtime, but Roger preferred to have the family together and to work regular hours. He was currently living in a one bedroom apartment in Fayetteville, Georgia, but had arranged to move to a larger one when Peggy and Ashley arrived. They planned to start looking for a house in a year or so. Peggy was impressed with the public schools in Georgia; if sole or primary custody were awarded to her, she intended to be a full time mother to Ashley and not take a job until they got settled. She admitted that she did not know much about Atlanta and her only "contact" besides Roger was Roger's brother and his family, who had relocated there sometime earlier.
Another part of Peggy's evidence was to refute Mark's allegations of physical abuse and instability. She denied Mark's claim on direct examination that she pinched Ashley or dragged her around by the hair. She denied locking Ashley in the furnace closet, though she admitted Ashley once got into it while playing hide and seek. It was not intentional on Peggy's part. She and several witnesses, her friends and in-laws, denied that she had a bad temper and violent outbursts. The main allegation stemmed from one occasion when Mark found bruises on Ashley's bottom. He called the Child Protection Agency to investigate; he thought they gave her a "stern warning," but no further action was taken. Peggy admitted she had spanked Ashley that evening, but only because she was uncommonly unruly; Ashley is a bright *877 child and usually well behaved. According to Peggy, the Child Protection worker came and talked with her, but when Peggy informed her there was a pending custody battle, the inquiry ended. Peggy's witnesses testified they had never seen any incident of physical abuse, and in fact they had observed Peggy to be a good parent. Peggy also admitted that she had been unemployed for almost two years and had in fact been fired from two of her last three jobs. She offered explanations, however; for instance, she had responded to a want ad that called only for a "chemist with college" but was fired when the employer learned she had no college degree, just some hours. She liked being able to devote all her time to Ashley. She had moved around a lot, but was trying to economize until she could join Roger in Atlanta. She testified she was faithful to Roger and denied any improprieties in Ashley's presence. Peggy admitted she did not encourage contact between Ashley and members of her own family. She testified without contradiction that she had been sexually abused as a girl by her stepfather; her family, in fact, had "disowned" her when she revealed this to Mark. She appears to have much closer ties with Roger's family. She conceded that Mark was a fit parent, but felt that the move to Atlanta would be in Ashley's best interest.
Peggy called Dr. Robert Minniear, an expert family counselor, who had met with the parties in 1982 and 1984, and with Peggy alone since then. He discussed their social history and said that both parties were good parents. He corroborated Peggy's claims of sexual abuse as a child; as a result, she had nothing to do with her own family, except for a sister.
Mark testified that he was a lifelong resident of Shreveport and had been in a townhouse in Cinnamon Square for almost two years; this is about two miles from Ashley's school and one and a half blocks from his mother. Previously he lived with his mother. He has a degree in marketing from LSU and has worked at McElroy Metals for over six years, where he was recently placed in charge of "inside sales," an 8-5 job with no traveling involved. (Previously, in "outside sales," he had to travel to Texas fairly often.) When he has custody of Ashley, he drops her at school in the morning. His mother picks her up each afternoon and stays with her for two hours or so until he gets home from work. His mother testified that she was perfectly willing to continue taking care of Ashley. According to Mark, Ashley is doing well at school and has friends there, as well as at church and in the neighborhood, not to mention plenty of family. Mark testified that he tries to foster contact between Ashley and Peggy's family; he called Peggy's mother as a witness to corroborate this. He was concerned not to disrupt Ashley's life; he recently turned down a lucrative job opportunity in Atlanta, precisely because he did not want to uproot her. He felt that Peggy should make the same sacrifice on Ashley's behalf.
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561 So. 2d 875, 1990 WL 60937, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-myers-lactapp-1990.