Palazzolo v. Mire

10 So. 3d 748, 2008 La.App. 4 Cir. 0075, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 102, 2009 WL 103957
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 7, 2009
Docket2008-CA-0075
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 10 So. 3d 748 (Palazzolo v. Mire) 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.

Bluebook
Palazzolo v. Mire, 10 So. 3d 748, 2008 La.App. 4 Cir. 0075, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 102, 2009 WL 103957 (La. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

PATRICIA RIVET MURRAY, Judge.

_U?his is a child custody and visitation dispute between two mothers — a biological *750 mother, June Mire; and an adoptive mother, Angela Palazzolo — of an eleven year old girl, I.P. 1 For twenty-four years, Ms. Mire and Ms. Palazzolo were lesbian partners. During that time, they jointly decided to have a child by artificial insemination. The child, I.P., was born in 1997. For more than six years, the trio lived together as a family, first in California and then in Louisiana. When the relationship between Ms. Mire and Ms. Palazzolo ended, a dispute arose between them over custody and visitation. This suit followed. Following a lengthy trial, judgment was rendered awarding Ms. Mire sole custody and terminating Ms. Palazzolo’s visitation rights. From that judgment, Ms. Palazzo-lo appeals. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the trial court’s custody award, reverse the trial court’s visitation ruling, and remand for a hearing to set the parameters of visitation.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In the spring of 1979, Ms. Mire and Ms. Palazzolo commenced a lesbian relationship. In the summer of 1979, they began sharing an apartment. Both Ms. |2Mire and Ms. Palazzolo graduated from college while living in New Orleans. Ms. Mire obtained a bachelors degree in elementary education and a masters degree in biological science. Ms. Palazzolo obtained two bachelors degrees: mechanical engineering and business management. Thereafter, they moved to California and bought a house together. While living in California, Ms. Mire attended the University of Berk-ley and received a Ph.D. in zoology.

After living together for about seventeen years, they decided to have a child by artificial insemination. They mutually agreed on the selection of the sperm donor. They also mutually agreed that the child, if male, would carry the Mire surname and that the child, if female, would carry the Palazzolo surname. Although Ms. Palazzolo attempted impregnation first, she was unsuccessful. Ms. Mire then attempted insemination and became pregnant in 1996.

On January 25, 1997, Ms. Mire gave birth to I.P. Ms. Palazzolo was present for her birth.

On March 14, 1997, Ms. Palazzolo, with Ms. Mire’s written consent, filed a petition for a second parent adoption in a California court. In the adoption petition, Ms. Palazzolo declared the following:

• Ms. Mire’s decision to conceive and bear I.P. was made jointly by Ms. Palazzolo and Ms. Mire. They have acted in all respects as equal parents to I.P. since the child’s birth. They reside in the same home, which they own jointly, in Oakland, County of Alameda. They have resided together for over seventeen years and have known each other for over eighteen years.
• They share the responsibility for the care as well as the economic support of I.P., and will continue to do so after this adoption. Ms. Palazzolo acts in all respects as a parent to the minor child.
• Ms. Mire consents to this adoption and believes that it is in the child’s best interests that Ms. Palazzolo’s de facto parent relationship with the child be confirmed by judicial decree.
|a* Ms. Mire intends that this adoption shall not alter her legal relationship to I.P., and that by this adoption I.P. shall have two legal parents: Ms. Palazzolo and Ms. Mire.
*751 • The natural father (sperm donor) consented to the termination of his parental rights.

In answering questions in connection with the adoption, Ms. Mire declared as follows:

• Ms. Palazzolo and Ms. Mire planned this child together and consider themselves to both be her parents. The adoption will provide legal protection to I.P. and recognition that Ms. Palaz-zolo is in fact her parent.
• Ms. Palazzolo and Ms. Mire have jointly cared for I.P. since before her birth.

On October 31, 1997, the California court approved the second parent adoption. Pursuant to California law the natural father’s (sperm donor’s) parental rights were terminated, Ms. Palazzolo was decreed a second parent, and Ms. Mire’s legal relationship with the child was unaltered. On January 9, 1998, an amended birth certificate was issued listing I.P.’s mother as Ms. Mire and her father as Ms. Palazzolo.

In 1998, when I.P. was almost two years old, the trio relocated to Louisiana. Ms. Mire and Ms. Palazzolo purchased a house together in Lakeview, and they continued to cohabitate and co-parent. Until I.P. was three and began pre-school, Ms. Pa-lazzolo, who was then unemployed, stayed home and assisted in caring for I.P. From 1999 to 2002 (from when I.P. was two or three to when she was five years old), I.P. attended University Montessori School (“UMS”). Both Ms. Palazzolo and Ms. Mire transported I.P. to or from UMS and participated in school activities.

|4On November 1, 2001 (when I.P. was four years old), Ms. Mire executed a will in which she left her entire estate to Ms. Palazzolo. The will included a provision that in the event the State of California reversed Ms. Palazzolo’s adoption of I.P., Ms. Palazzolo was to be named as I.P.’s permanent legal guardian. In the will, Ms. Mire also recognized Ms. Palazzolo as one of the “most important figures” in I.P.’s life.

Beginning in 2002 (when I.P. was five years old), Ms. Mire began home schooling I.P. Both Ms. Mire and Ms. Palazzolo agreed that home schooling was appropriate for I.P. who was above average intelligence. They also agreed that Ms. Mire, who has an undergraduate degree in elementary education, a master degree in biological science, and a Ph.D. in zoology, was well qualified to teach I.P. Ms. Mire arranged with her employer to work at home in order to facilitate home schooling I.P.

For about eight months spanning 2003 to 2004, Ms. Palazzolo worked in California and commuted back and forth to the family home in Louisiana. During this period, the relationship between Ms. Mire and Ms. Palazzolo deteriorated. Before then, they had a relationship without overt conflict. According to Ms. Palazzolo, the cause of the breakup of their relationship was Ms. Mire having a lesbian relationship with a married woman, Cathie Posin. Ms. Mire, on the other hand, characterized her relationship with Mrs. Posin as a platonic friendship and attributed the breakup to other causes.

IfiDuring 2004, Ms. Palazzolo returned to work in New Orleans, and the parties separated. In the fall of 2004, Ms. Mire moved into an apartment located not far from the family home. For approximately one year (from fall 2004 to fall 2005), the parties co-parented I.P. and equally shared physical custody. During this time, Ms. Mire and Ms. Palazzolo jointly saw a counselor, Dr. James O’Neill, regarding their relationship. 2

*752 In the Ml of 2005, Ms. Mire moved back into the family home. According to Ms. Mire, she moved back in order to make the shared custody arrangement less stressful for I.P. Ms. Mire indicated that her intent in moving back was for her and Ms. Palaz-zolo to be roommates.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 So. 3d 748, 2008 La.App. 4 Cir. 0075, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 102, 2009 WL 103957, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palazzolo-v-mire-lactapp-2009.