Ogden v. Ogden

39 P.3d 513, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 175, 2001 WL 1598179
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 14, 2001
DocketS-9815
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 39 P.3d 513 (Ogden v. Ogden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ogden v. Ogden, 39 P.3d 513, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 175, 2001 WL 1598179 (Ala. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Justice.

I,. INTRODUCTION

Douglas Ogden appeals the custody and property division provisions of a divorce decision and challenges the trial court's refusal to disqualify the child eustody investigator for apparent gender bias because her yellow-page listing advertised her as an attorney who was a "voice for women and children." Although we find that the yellow-page listing gives rise to a reasonable appearance of bias that warranted disqualification, we conclude that failure to disqualify the custody investigator amounted to harmless error. But we further conclude that unjustified delay in entry of the written judgment and resulting discrepancies between that judgment and the superior court's earlier oral decision necessitate a remand for reconsideration of the Jjudgment's visitation provisions; we similarly hold that discrepancies and oversights in the Jjudgment's provisions addressing the division of marital property must be clarified on remand.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Julie Ogden and Douglas Ogden were married in 1985 and lived in Anchorage with their two children: Wendy, born in April 1987, and Patrick, born in July 1992. On January 17, 1999, Douglas-secretly intending to end the marriage and keep permanent custody of his daughter-abruptly abandoned his job, his family home, and his wife and son, and absconded to Juneau with Wendy. After spending a week with a friend in Juneau who ultimately asked him to leave, Douglas traveled to Tok with Wendy, moved in with his sister and brother-in-law, and enrolled Wendy in school. During this time Douglas maintained sporadic contact with Julie but refused to disclose his and Wendy's location.

On January 21, 1999, four days after Douglas absconded, Julie filed for divorce in Anchorage. Less than two weeks later, Julie managed to locate Douglas and Wendy in Tok and, after a hastily scheduled hearing held in Anchorage on February 5, 1999, she secured an order that gave her interim custody of both Wendy and Patrick. The interim *515 order appointed Anchorage attorney Jacqueline Bressers to conduct a child custody investigation and prepare a recommendation for permanent custody. Although the interim order also established a visitation schedule that allowed Douglas to maintain supervised contact with his children, Douglas balked at the order's supervision requirement and elected not to exercise his visitation rights.

Ten months later, in December 1999, Douglas and Julie signed agreements formally retaining Bressers to conduct the custody investigation. By March 2000 more than a year had passed without visitation between Douglas and his children; Bressers, who was actively conducting her custody investigation, met with Douglas-evidently at his request-to arrange a visitation schedule that would enable her to observe him interacting with the children. The conference resulted in a stipulation allowing Douglas to have supervised visitation for approximately six hours on alternating Saturdays.

The Ogdens' divorcee trial was scheduled to begin in June 2000. In May Douglas moved to delay the trial and asked for an expedited hearing to determine Bressers's ability to serve as custody investigator. His motion alleged that Bressers was biased against men and claimed that she had displayed that bias in a child custody recommendation that she had prepared on April 6, 2000. To bolster his allegation of gender bias, Douglas submitted, among other things, a copy of Bressers's listing in the attorney's section of the Anchorage yellow pages, where Bressers advertised herself as a "Voice for Women and Children."

At the time that Douglas filed his motion, Bressers had completed her custody investigation and was preparing her final report. The superior court, noting that Bressers had been appointed since February 5, 1999, and that Douglas had failed to specify when his dissatisfaction with Bressers initially arose, concluded that Douglas had not established grounds for an expedited hearing. The court declined to delay the trial or to hear Douglas's motion immediately, indicating that it would be addressed as a preliminary issue at the outset of trial. Douglas subsequently renewed his motion, submitting supplemental descriptions of actions on Bressers's part that, in his view, established her bias. The court evidently took no action on the renewed motion before the time of trial.

On June 14, the day set for trial, the superior court conducted an extensive hearing into Douglas's claim that Bressers was biased. Upon concluding the hearing, the court found that Douglas had failed to establish grounds for Bressers's disqualification; the court observed that Douglas's disagreement with Bressers's report was not an indication of bias but was instead "something that occurs in every case." After noting that Bressers's yellow-page advertisement dealt with her field of practice as an attorney and that it is common for attorneys to advertise their specialties, the court explained that attorneys who are appointed as child custody investigators "wear different hats" by serving as neutral advisors to the court. In short, while recognizing that, as a lay person, Douglas might easily jump to the conclusion that "there is an agenda here," the court found no evidence of actual bias warranting Bressers's disqualification.

Because the hearing into bias had been so time consuming, the court postponed the trial until July. The rescheduled trial began on July 11, 2000. While the trial nominally dealt with issues of both property and custody, the parties primarily disputed custody. In oral findings made on the record at the close of trial, the court divided the marital property equally and granted Julie sole legal and physical custody of both children. The court also established a "stair-step" visitation schedule designed to work progressively toward allowing Douglas to assume shared custody of both children.

As described by the court, the stair-step approach initially required Douglas to follow the supervised visitation schedule in existence at the time of trial, which the parties agreed gave Douglas about seven hours of supervised visitation every two weeks. After three months, supervised visitation would increase by one hour. And the court proclaimed that it would consider further increases-possibly including unsupervised and *516 overnight visits-after Douglas submitted the results of a psychological evaluation.

Upon entering these oral findings on the record on July 12, 2000, the court directed Julie's attorney to submit proposed written findings and conclusions. 1 Douglas promptly tried to appeal the decigion, but his notice of appeal was held in abeyance by the Appellate Court Clerk's Office because the superior court had not yet entered a written judgment. On August 30, seven weeks after the court ordered Julie's attorney to submit written findings and conclusions, Douglas filed a motion asking the court to compel Julie's attorney to comply with the order. In his motion, Douglas complained that the court's delay in issuing its written decision was prejudicing his right to visitation and preventing him from pursuing his right to an appeal.

A month later, on September 29, the court granted Douglas's motion and ordered Julie's attorney to produce the proposed findings within ten days or show cause for her delay.

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Bluebook (online)
39 P.3d 513, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 175, 2001 WL 1598179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ogden-v-ogden-alaska-2001.