Newhouse v. Chavez

772 P.2d 353, 108 N.M. 319
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 6, 1988
Docket10469
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 772 P.2d 353 (Newhouse v. Chavez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newhouse v. Chavez, 772 P.2d 353, 108 N.M. 319 (N.M. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

ALARID, Judge.

A long-standing dispute between the parties over the custody of their two minor children has led to this appeal. Mother, Marilyn Newhouse, appeals the most recent determination, reached after the trial court heard evidence on her motion to alter father’s, Donald Chavez’, visitation schedule. The judgment appealed from changes sole custody in mother to joint legal custody in the parties, unless and until mother is able to comply with a parenting plan agreed to by the parties in the spring of 1986; places physical custody with father, with “liberal visitation” in mother; and continues the parenting plan which was approved by court order in April 1986. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.

These proceedings began when mother decided to move from Los Lunas, New Mexico, where both parties resided, to Los Alamos, New Mexico. It is undisputed that the 1986 parenting plan, which was in effect at the time of the decision to move, is impossible to implement with one parent living in Los Lunas and the other in Los Alamos. The effect of the judgment, therefore, is that mother forfeits her right as sole custodian unless she returns to live in the same community as father. Though joint custody is in effect until she does return to live in Los Lunas, mother is limited in her exercise of rights as joint custodian because the judgment requires adherence to the 1986 agreement.

Mother raises two issues on appeal: 1) whether the findings upon which the custody determination depends are supported by substantial evidence, and 2) whether the trial court abused its discretion in drafting a custody arrangement that effectively prohibits her and her family from moving. We consider whether the trial court’s custody modification is justified by its findings that mother acted in “bad faith.” See Alfieri v. Alfieri, 105 N.M. 373, 733 P.2d 4 (Ct.App.1987). We determine those findings are not supported by the evidence and that the remaining findings do not justify prohibiting mother’s move. Further, our review reveals that the trial court’s findings fail to resolve basic issues material and necessary to a determination that modification of the initial custody agreement to joint custody is in the best interests of the children. See NMSA 1978, § 40-4-9.1 (Repl.1986). We therefore remand for reconsideration of those issues. Jaramillo v. Jaramillo, 103 N.M. 145, 703 P.2d 922 (Ct.App.1985).

FACTS

The parties were divorced in 1980. By stipulation and agreement, the children of the parties, then ages three and five, were placed in the sole custody of mother and they have been with her since the divorce. Mother remarried and has a third child by that marriage. Since October 1981, father has initiated several unsuccessful proceedings, seeking joint custody of his children. He has obtained gradually-increased visitation rights. The record clearly reflects that father has consistently and steadfastly sought to increase his time and involvement with his children.

In the spring of 1986, the parties agreed to a parenting plan which provided for substantial visitation and increased involvement in decision-making for father. The agreement was provisional in that it would be reviewed and modified if it appeared that the children were “detrimentally affected” by the arrangement.

The plan clearly contemplated the parties would both reside in the general vicinity of Los Lunas. In addition to substantial visitation in father, the plan provides that the children remain in Los Lunas, continue in their schools, attend the same church, and receive medical attention from the same pediatrician. To effectuate the plan, father moved from Edgewood, New Mexico, where he resided at the time of the agreement, to Los Lunas.

The record reveals that neither party was entirely satisfied with the parenting plan. It was not enough for father and proved, by later events, too much for mother. Father sought an increase in visitation in July 1986, asserting that the visitation schedule in the plan was not accomplishing the intended objective of further developing his relationship with his children. In November 1986, when mother advised him she intended to move to Los Alamos with the children, father sought modification of the custody arrangement in the form of a motion to change the children’s principal place of residence to his own. Soon after, mother moved for an alteration in the visitation schedule which would permit her to move to Los Alamos with the children, but continue liberal visitation in father. The trial court refused to rule on the parties’ motions without a full hearing on the merits. It denied mother’s request for a temporary modification of the April 1986 agreement, pending an evidentiary hearing, though the trial court’s docket did not permit such a hearing for almost a year.

Mother moved with her husband and the children to Los Alamos in February 1987. In order to comply with a January 1987 order of the court continuing the April 1986 plan, mother commuted daily with all three children from Los Alamos so the children of the parties could attend school in Los Lunas and maintain the visitation schedule as per the parenting agreement. When this effort proved too stressful for mother, the children, and the family, mother again renewed her request for temporary modification, which was again denied. Thereafter, the children stayed with father in Los Lunas, going to Los Alamos on weekends when arrangements could be made, pending the court’s ruling on the parties’ motions. Father then filed an amended motion seeking either a change in custody or in the principal place of residence of the parties’ children.

The trial court heard evidence on mother’s motion for alteration of the provisional visitation agreement. Although the parties did not present evidence on the issues raised by father’s motions for change of custody, see Section 40-4-9.1, the trial court concluded that physical custody in father and joint legal custody ip the parties serves the best interests of the children. We review this custody determination and the findings filed in support.

MOTHER’S RIGHT TO RELOCATE

Mother challenges the trial court’s findings that she acted in “bad faith” in deciding to relocate and that the move is contrary to the best interests of the children. If these findings are supported by the evidence, the trial court’s custody determination may be justified. Garcia v. Garcia, 81 N.M. 277, 466 P.2d 554 (1970) (custodial parent’s right to relocate may be restricted if removal of children would be clearly contrary to their best interests); Alfieri v. Alfieri (prohibiting custodial parent’s move justified where she acted in bad faith to abrogate non-custodial parent’s right to visitation).

Father, whose requested findings and conclusions the trial court adopted, believed that mother’s conduct was like that in Alfieri, where this court affirmed a similar judgment on the basis of the custodial parent’s conduct. See also Meier v. Davignon, 105 N.M. 567, 734 P.2d 807 (Ct.App.1987).

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Bluebook (online)
772 P.2d 353, 108 N.M. 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newhouse-v-chavez-nmctapp-1988.