NIKO v. Foreman

50 Cal. Rptr. 3d 398, 144 Cal. App. 4th 344, 2006 Daily Journal DAR 14425, 2006 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 10126, 2006 Cal. App. LEXIS 1697
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 30, 2006
DocketG034442
StatusPublished
Cited by186 cases

This text of 50 Cal. Rptr. 3d 398 (NIKO v. Foreman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
NIKO v. Foreman, 50 Cal. Rptr. 3d 398, 144 Cal. App. 4th 344, 2006 Daily Journal DAR 14425, 2006 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 10126, 2006 Cal. App. LEXIS 1697 (Cal. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinions

[348]*348Opinion

O’LEARY, J.

Uikilifi Niko appeals from the trial court’s order modifying a prior child custody judgment and establishing a new coparenting plan. Niko is the father and Robyn Foreman is the mother of Taylor. The prior judgment granted the parents joint physical custody with essentially a 50/50 division of physical custody time and provided that neither parent could change the child’s residence to a location outside the state of California without the written permission of the other party, or alternatively, by order of the court. The modification order at issue continues the joint custody order, but allows Foreman to change Taylor’s residence to Colorado and significantly changes Niko’s physical custody time with his son. Under the new coparenting plan, Foreman will have the physical custody of the child during the school year and Niko will have physical custody during summers, a portion of each winter vacation, and alternating Thanksgiving vacations and spring breaks.

Niko asserts the court applied the wrong standard in deciding Foreman’s modification petition, improperly considered the preference of the minor, and erroneously denied his motion to dismiss the petition and his motions for sanctions. We affirm the order.

I

Factual Background

Niko and Foreman, who were unmarried, had a romantic relationship which produced their son, Taylor, in 1991. At the same time Niko was dating Foreman, he was also dating another woman, Elizabeth. Shortly after Taylor’s birth, Niko married Elizabeth, and they remain married to the present time.

Despite Niko’s marriage, however, Niko and Foreman engaged in at least three reconciliations of their romantic relationship over the next several years. As late as 1998, Niko and Foreman resided together for a period of time. Their romantic relationship rekindled most recently in late 2001. Interspersed among Niko and Foreman’s reconciliations were some periods of discord regarding the care and custody of Taylor.

In September 1996, during one period of discord, Niko filed a complaint to formally establish his parental relationship with then five-year-old Taylor, and requested a “50 [percent]-50 [percent] time-sharing physical custody” order. While Foreman readily admitted Niko’s paternity, over the course of the next [349]*349four years, Foreman and Niko battled over what the appropriate custody arrangement would be for their son. Finally, after much acrimony, in February 2001, an agreement was reached, and the court entered a stipulated judgment. It decreed Niko was both the “natural and legal father” of Taylor, and Foreman was Taylor’s “biological and natural mother.” The judgment also governed the details of Taylor’s custody and support. Among other things, the judgment provided Niko and Foreman would have joint legal and joint physical custody, and specified the manner in which their periods of essentially equal physical custody would be divided.1 The judgment also provided that “neither party hereto shall change the minor [child’s] residence to a location outside the state of California without the express [] written permission of the other party or alternatively by order of the court.”

In November 2002, Foreman filed an order to show cause (OSC) to modify the custody arrangement, seeking permission to move to Colorado with Taylor and sole physical custody of Taylor. She filed a declaration stating her request was motivated primarily by financial considerations, explaining she co-owned her home in Irvine with her father, and he had been, in effect, subsidizing her living expenses. That subsidy was not going to continue, and under those circumstances, Foreman concluded she was “no longer able to afford to live in the Orange County area.” She explained her sister had resided in Colorado since 1996 and owns a business there. The sister had offered Foreman employment. Foreman claimed Taylor had wanted to move to Colorado ever since 1996, when his cousins moved there.

Foreman further declared, as an additional reason for the move, that Niko was “becoming] more and more obsessed” with Taylor’s football workouts, and was making “derogatory remarks” to him. She asserted Niko was “strik[ing Taylor] in the head with an open hand[]” so that Taylor could “ ‘learn how to take a hit.’ ” She claimed this was “part of . . . Niko’s obsession with ‘making a man out of [him].’ ” Foreman stated she was “concerned for Taylor’s physical well being.” She concluded her declaration with what can only be described as a plea: “Niko is [six feet five inches tall] and a police officer. He is very controlling. Taylor is not allowed to ever speak his mind in his father’s presence. Taylor needs help.”

[350]*350Niko opposed the OSC. On December 9, 2002, he filed a response denying any abuse of Taylor, and asserting Foreman’s stated justifications for moving away were “suspect.” He suggested her true motivation was related to the fact Elizabeth had become pregnant with their first child early in 2002. He argued Taylor was doing extraordinarily well under the status quo, and his best interests would not be served by moving to Colorado.

Niko also requested the court order Foreman to pay his “attorney’s fees of $5000 by reason of bringing this action in bad faith[]” pursuant to Family Code section 271.2 In his attached declaration, Niko asked the court “to dismiss this rOSC] Re: ‘Move Away’ because I believe it is brought in bad faith.” Niko indicated Foreman’s real motivation for the move was to prevent Taylor from bonding with his new sibling whose birth was expected on or about January 10, 2003. Niko stated he did not believe Taylor wanted to move, but rather than asking him directly, Niko took Taylor back to Donald Smith, Ph.D., one of the experts who had evaluated the custody plan during the prior paternity action. Niko stated he informed Foreman of his plan and invited her to participate in the evaluation process, but she did not. Niko stated Smith had informed him that Taylor preferred to maintain the status quo.

Over the next year, Foreman and Niko battled much the same as they had prior to reaching the original custody stipulations. Immediately after Niko filed his response, Foreman was granted a continuance of her OSC and a few months later filed another OSC, seeking appointment of an attorney to represent Taylor. In support of her request, Foreman asserted that Niko had arranged for Taylor to be interviewed by Smith without her “consent,” and she was not “invited to participate in . . . Smith’s interviews.” She also asserted that based upon her own discussions with Taylor, Smith’s report recounting Taylor’s statements was a “complete fabrication.” The parties stipulated, and the court appointed, Harold LaFlamme to act as independent counsel to represent Taylor.

The next skirmish occurred within one month when Niko sought an order requiring Foreman to submit to a “[vocational rehabilitation examination” to determine whether she was capable of earning a sufficient living to remain in California. He also filed a motion in limine to disqualify LaFlamme from continuing to represent Taylor, alleging he had engaged in tactics designed to intimidate Smith and prevent him from testifying in the action. The motion to disqualify LaFlamme was denied, and the next month the court appointed Duke Bussey, Ph.D., an associate of the first custody evaluator in the paternity action, to conduct a custody evaluation in connection with Foreman’s OSC.

[351]

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50 Cal. Rptr. 3d 398, 144 Cal. App. 4th 344, 2006 Daily Journal DAR 14425, 2006 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 10126, 2006 Cal. App. LEXIS 1697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/niko-v-foreman-calctapp-2006.