Parenting of T.R.L., a minor child

2025 MT 15N
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 2025
DocketDA 24-0316
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2025 MT 15N (Parenting of T.R.L., a minor child) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parenting of T.R.L., a minor child, 2025 MT 15N (Mo. 2025).

Opinion

01/22/2025

DA 24-0316 Case Number: DA 24-0316

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA

2025 MT 15N

IN RE THE PARENTING OF:

T.R.L., a minor child,

CASSIE NEZ PERCE,

Petitioner and Appellant,

and

BOB A. LUHMAN,

Respondent and Appellee.

APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Sixteenth Judicial District, In and For the County of Rosebud, Cause No. DR 2022-0029 Honorable Nickolas C. Murnion, Presiding Judge

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

For Appellant:

Cassie Nez Perce, Self-Represented, Miles City, Montana

For Appellee:

Adam L. Forslund, Attorney at Law, Miles City, Montana

Submitted on Briefs: November 13, 2024

Decided: January 22, 2025

Filed:

ir,-6m---if __________________________________________ Clerk Justice Ingrid Gustafson delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Pursuant to Section I, Paragraph 3(c), Montana Supreme Court Internal Operating

Rules, this case is decided by memorandum opinion and shall not be cited and does not

serve as precedent. Its case title, cause number, and disposition shall be included in this

Court’s quarterly list of noncitable cases published in the Pacific Reporter and Montana

Reports.

¶2 Cassie Nez Perce (Nez Perce) appeals from the May 6, 2024 Findings of Fact and

Conclusions of Law and Order Adopting Final Parenting Plan issued by the Sixteenth

Judicial District Court, Rosebud County. We affirm.

¶3 Nez Perce and Appellee, Bob Luhman (Luhman), have a child together, T.R.L., born

in 2010. In 2012, T.R.L. was removed from Nez Perce’s care by the Department of Public

Health and Human Services, Child and Family Division (the Department). The

Department brought a child welfare action in Custer County. That action was dismissed

with an order that approved the parenting plan filed on September 10, 2012, in Rosebud

County Cause No. DR 12-20. That parenting plan provided that for the safety of T.R.L.,

he would reside with Luhman, and that Nez Perce’s rights and authority over T.R.L. were

restricted and under the control of Luhman. The District Court noted in its May 6, 2024,

findings that the prior court had determined that Nez Perce suffered from serious mental

health issues at the time the parenting plan was adopted in 2012. Those issues required

2 medication and treatment which could contribute to an unstable and sometimes violent

environment for the child.1

¶4 After adoption of the final parenting plan in 2012 and dismissal of the child welfare

cause, Nez Perce did not have contact with T.R.L. between April 2012 and 2016. In 2016,

Nez Perce petitioned to establish a parenting plan in Valley County which was dismissed

for lack of jurisdiction. She again petitioned to establish a parenting plan in Valley County

in 2022 and, again, the cause was dismissed. On December 7, 2022, Nez Perce filed a

Petition for Parenting Plan asserting Luhman had cut off all means of communication

between her and T.R.L. since August 2021. She proposed adopting a parenting plan which

provided for T.R.L. to reside on a primary basis with Luhman and with her during

summers, alternating weekends, and alternating holidays. Luhman contested, asserting

there was no relationship between T.R.L. and Nez Perce such that any contact between

them should be supervised. On February 15, 2023, the District Court adopted an interim

parenting plan which provided Nez Perce two hours of supervised contact twice per month

with T.R.L. A little over a month later, on March 24, 2023, the District Court held Luhman

in contempt of court for failing to abide by the interim parenting plan. To purge the

contempt, the court ordered Luhman to abide by the interim parenting plan and to cooperate

with family counseling to re-establish the parent-child relationship between Nez Perce and

T.R.L. Pamela Colombik was appointed as the reunification counselor. Colombik

1 Nez Perce does not contest this finding but asserts her mental health issues and the child welfare cause were too old to be of relevance to her current parenting action.

3 conducted reunification counseling approximately every two weeks from July 2023 until

April 2024. Thereafter, Colombik reported to the court that T.R.L. had anxiety due to Nez

Perce’s parenting attempts, he is fearful Nez Perce will attempt to take him from his father

and step-mother, and despite the counseling, no parent-child bond could be formed

between T.R.L. and Nez Perce. Pursuant to the District Court, Colombik testified that it

was in T.R.L.’s best interests to see Nez Perce only when he wants and only on a supervised

basis.

¶5 Following a hearing, the District Court issued its May 6, 2024 Findings of Fact and

Conclusions of Law and Order Adopting Final Parenting Plan in which it concluded, given

the lack of relationship to date and the lack of success through reunification counseling,

that T.R.L. and Nez Perce are not going to form a parent-child relationship. As such, it

adopted a parenting plan which allows for supervised contact between T.R.L. and Nez

Perce based on T.R.L.’s discretion.

¶6 Nez Perce appeals pro se. From her briefing it is difficult to discern how the District

Court erred or the relief she seeks. She appears to fault the court for: requiring her

participation in mediation, asserting there was domestic violence between her and Luhman

in the past; permitting Luhman to modify the interim parenting plan to include a claim for

child support; permitting admission of an affidavit of Pamela Colombik; and permitting

Luhman to repeatedly reference her history of mental health problems. Nez Perce also

states that T.R.L. prefers to have Nez Perce’s parental rights terminated so that his step-

mother can legally adopt him, and that she “understands and agrees with T.R.L. that since

4 there is not a possibility of a parent/child bond to be formed he should have the right to be

adopted by the person he believes to be his mother.”

¶7 We review parenting plan modifications for a clear abuse of discretion. Bessette v.

Bessette, 2019 MT 35, ¶ 13, 394 Mont. 262, 434 P.3d 894. An abuse of discretion occurs

if a court exercises its discretion based on clearly erroneous findings of fact, an erroneous

conclusion of law, or acts arbitrarily without employment of conscientious judgment or

beyond the bounds of reason resulting in substantial injustice. Bessette, ¶ 13. We review

conclusions of law de novo for correctness. Bessette, ¶ 13.

¶8 Appellant has the duty to present this Court with a record sufficient to enable us to

rule upon the issues raised. M. R. App. P. 8(1). “Failure to present the court with a

sufficient record on appeal may result in . . . affirmance of the district court on the basis

the appellant has presented an insufficient record.” M. R. App. P. 8(2). Nez Perce has not

provided this Court with the transcripts from hearings which would be necessary to review

most of her asserted concerns. Without transcripts we are unable to determine how the

assertion of prior domestic violence was addressed by the District Court in the context of

the mediation it ordered. We are likewise unable to determine to what extent her mental

health history was presented and how the District Court addressed any evidentiary

objections thereto. We are also unable to address evidentiary issues as to whether

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Related

In re Bessette
2019 MT 35 (Montana Supreme Court, 2019)

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2025 MT 15N, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parenting-of-trl-a-minor-child-mont-2025.