Orezza v. Ramirez

507 P.2d 1017, 19 Ariz. App. 405, 1973 Ariz. App. LEXIS 547
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedMarch 27, 1973
Docket1 CA-CIV 1993
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 507 P.2d 1017 (Orezza v. Ramirez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orezza v. Ramirez, 507 P.2d 1017, 19 Ariz. App. 405, 1973 Ariz. App. LEXIS 547 (Ark. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

HOWARD, Judge.

This appeal arises out of an order issued after a two-day trial to the court, sitting without a jury, on two causes of action consolidated upon stipulation of counsel.

The first, Cause No. C-256732, was filed on December 28, 1971, by Frances Orezza as the mother of Carlos Ramirez, Jr., against Carlos and Katie Ramirez, husband and wife, praying that she have and be awarded the care custody and control of her son, born out of wedlock on July 30, 1964 in Phoenix, Arizona.

The second, Cause No. C-256858, was filed two days later by Carlos Ramirez, Jr. by his next friend and father, Carlos Ramirez, against Frances Ramirez Orezza, praying that Carlos Ramirez be established as the natural father of Carlos Ramirez, Jr., and that he be granted the care, custody and control of the minor child, with reasonable visitation rights to the mother.

The causes did not involve any change or modification of a prior decree or order of the superior court, and were matters of initial impression for determination by the trial judge.

Frances Ramirez Orezza, appellant, appeals from the trial court’s final order which recites in part:

“The Court finds that, while both parents are fit, in the legal sense to exercise custody and control of the minor child, the future welfare of the child will clearly best be served by allowing custody to remain with his natural father, as it has for the last one and one-half years. While the Court recognizes the strong interests of the minor, 1 it is com *407 pelled to find that the best interests of the child would not be served at this time by changing custody.”

The court therefore decreed Carlos Ramirez, Sr. the father of Carlos Ramirez, Jr., and granted the care, custody and control of the minor child to his natural father, subject to reasonable visitation rights in his mother.

The pivotal question raised on appeal is whether it was an abuse of discretion by the trial court, under the particular facts and circumstances presented, after finding that both parents were fit in the legal sense to exercise custody and control of the minor child, to grant the care, custody and control of Carlos Ramirez, Jr. to his natural father, subject to reasonable visitation rights in his mother, Frances Orezza.

The salient facts, viewed in a light most favorable to upholding the order below, are as follows. Carlos Ramirez, Jr. was born out of wedlock on July 30, 1964, to Frances Ramirez, a single woman, not related to the natural father, Carlos Ramirez. At the time of the child’s birth, the father was married to his present wife, ICatie Ramirez, who is unable to have any children of her own. Mr. Ramirez testified at trial that during appellant’s pregnancy he denied paternity because of fear. He informally acknowledged paternity in 1966 when he began to visit the child on weekends. Katie Ramirez was aware of this relationship and also made periodic visits to see Carlos, Jr. in the home of appellant. From 1966 until the summer of 1970, when Carlos, Jr. went to live in the home of Carlos and Katie Ramirez, appellant also allowed the child to spend some weekends at the Ramirez home. However, during his first six years, Carlos, Jr. was basically cared for and supported by his natural mother. Appellant testified that for three weeks after Carlos, Jr.’s birth, Mr. Ramirez sent her $20 a week, but did not support the child after that until the summer of 1970 when she allowed him to live with Mr. and Mrs. Ramirez, subject to certain conditions.

Appellant married Manuel Orezza on November 9, 1968, and at the time of trial they werv. the parents of a two year-old daughter. She was employed full time and had been working for the same firm for the past four years. During the summer of 1970, Mr. Ramirez became dissatisfied with the school Carlos, Jr. was attending and suggested to appellant that Carlos, Jr. live with him in order to attend a parochial school near his home, Mount Carmel. Appellant testified that she debated this question and then decided to allow Carlos, Jr. to live with his father after being told that he would never try to keep Carlos, Jr. from her and that Carlos, Jr. would be brought home for weekends, holidays and summer vacations.

Thereafter, appellant permitted Carlos, Jr. to live with Mr. and Mrs. Ramirez during the week. In addition to attending Mount Carmel School, Mr. Ramirez provided Carlos, Jr. with remedial tutoring in arithmetic. The tutor was Carlos Jr.’s first grade teacher. She testified that the special tutoring enabled Carlos, Jr. to catch up to his class so that he could advance to the next level. She also expressed the opinion that Carlos, Jr. had developed a stable social foundation at Mount Carmel and that to pull him out of his present environment, especially in the middle of the school year, “would be bad for him.” This teacher also commented on her observations of the Ramirez home. She stated that the home was always neat and clean; that there was a “very good relationship” between Mrs. Ramirez and Carlos, Jr.; and that for three or four months she did not know that they were not mother and son.

Mrs. Ramirez also obtained counselling services for Carlos, Jr. at Arizona State University, where the child engaged in play-therapy and underwent a series of tests, including the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Test. The counsellor testified that Mrs. Ramirez sought these services because Carlos, Jr. was not doing well in *408 school and she wanted to ascertain the reasons. The counsellor testified that during the intake interview with Mrs. Ramirez he learned that Carlos, Jr. was living in two households and had, in essence, two sets of parents, and that perhaps this situation was ripsetting him emotionally and affecting his school work. The counsellor subsequently prescribed a course of counselling for the child. He ascertained that Carlos, Jr’s intelligence quotient fell within the normal range, and he expressed his observation that Carlos, Jr. “was a very neat child”, with “good dexterity” and “a lot of persistence”. During play-therapy and role-playing the counsellor was able to have Carlos, Jr. express the feelings that he liked Katie “because she helped him”; liked his father because “he was a skydiver, and took him on trips”; and that if he could “change his father” it would be that “his father didn’t have to work, so he could be home more often.” The counsellor stated that Carlos, Jr. no longer needed counselling services.

The Ramirez home itself, as evidenced by photographs, contains three bedrooms, one of which is Carlos, Jr.’s. There is a large backyard with a tree house built by both Mr. Ramirez and his son, in which the boy plays every day. Carlos, Jr. also plays baseball in Little League; has taken swimming lessons; has been taken skydiving with his father; and has visited the Phoenix Zoo and Disneyland. In addition, Mr. Ramirez bought his son a pony and some calves. He also bought two Model A cars for Carlos, Jr. to work on when he is older, if he has the interest.

When Carlos, Jr. moved into his father’s home in 1970, Mrs. Ramirez terminated her employment of 19 years in order to be a mother to him and to be able to see Carlos, Jr. off to school in the mornings and to be at home when he arrived after school.

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Bluebook (online)
507 P.2d 1017, 19 Ariz. App. 405, 1973 Ariz. App. LEXIS 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orezza-v-ramirez-arizctapp-1973.