Patricia Labarre v. Robert S Labarre

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 15, 2019
Docket346508
StatusUnpublished

This text of Patricia Labarre v. Robert S Labarre (Patricia Labarre v. Robert S Labarre) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patricia Labarre v. Robert S Labarre, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PATRICIA LABARRE, UNPUBLISHED August 15, 2019 Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 346508 Ingham Circuit Court ROBERT S. LABARRE, Family Division LC No. 09-002722-DM Defendant-Appellee.

Before: CAVANAGH, P.J., and STEPHENS and O’BRIEN, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff appeals as of right the trial court’s order declining to modify joint legal custody or parenting time. Plaintiff and defendant had joint legal custody and a parenting-time schedule with the child, BTL, primarily living with plaintiff during the school year and with defendant during the summer. Plaintiff asked for sole legal custody and additional parenting time during the summer. The trial court declined those requests because plaintiff did not show that they were in BTL’s best interests. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

When the parties signed a consent judgment of divorce in 2010, the parties were awarded joint legal and physical custody as well as equal parenting time with BTL, who was then two years old. By the time BTL started school in 2013, plaintiff had moved to Howell, and defendant had moved to DeWitt. Plaintiff enrolled BTL in school in Brighton, and defendant sought a change in parenting time. The trial court resolved the parenting-time dispute in March 2014 by giving defendant parenting time on alternating long weekends from Wednesday evening through Sunday evening during the school year. During the summer, BTL lived with defendant, and plaintiff had alternating weekends, from Friday evening through Sunday evening, and one mid- week visit for approximately 4½ hours. Each party had two full weeks with BTL during the summer with the option of taking the full two weeks at once or as two one-week blocks.

In the summer of 2017, plaintiff requested sole legal custody, arguing that she and defendant had difficulty co-parenting and that defendant would not agree to medical treatment for the diagnosis and treatment of BTL’s ADHD, BTL’s need for orthodontic work, and BTL’s

-1- need for vision testing and glasses. Plaintiff also requested an alternating weekly or biweekly schedule during the summer, which would increase her overall parenting time.

At the referee hearing, plaintiff testified about defendant’s nonparticipation in the diagnosis and treatment of BTL’s ADHD. At one point, defendant took BTL off of his stimulant medication, and BTL exhibited an extrapyramidal effect when he went back on the medication, which required plaintiff to seek additional treatment to identify a more suitable medication. With the aid of a pediatric psychiatrist, whom defendant refused to see or take BTL to, BTL went on a suitable nonstimulant medication. Plaintiff also testified that defendant balked at the idea of braces for a ten-year-old child, but ultimately agreed to speak with the dentist about BTL’s teeth. Plaintiff further testified that defendant refused to give plaintiff or the eye doctor’s office the insurance information for BTL’s eye exam, and defendant insisted on taking BTL to an eye doctor of his choosing without notifying plaintiff about the appointment. Plaintiff ultimately chose a pair of glasses after learning that BTL needed them, but defendant refused to pay for the glasses because he thought plaintiff chose an unnecessarily expensive pair.

On the issue of parenting time, plaintiff opposed increasing defendant’s overnights with BTL during the school year to balance out her proposed expanded parenting time during the summer. Defendant opposed plaintiff’s request for expanded summer parenting time without a comparable decrease in her parenting time during the school year. Plaintiff stated her intention to find summer activities for BTL and her belief that increasing parenting time with defendant during the school year would be detrimental to BTL’s school performance. Plaintiff testified that, during the summer, she went 13 days without seeing BTL, except for one mid-week visit.

After the hearing, the referee found that the parties agreed that changed circumstances warranted revisiting custody and parenting time and that an established custodial environment existed with both parents. The referee evaluated the best-interest factors under MCL 722.23, and determined that factors (a), (b), (d), (e), (f), (g), (h), and (k) weighed equally or neutrally. The referee found that factor (c)—the capacity and disposition to provide the child with food, clothing, and medical treatment—favored plaintiff because she was better able to get medical treatment for BTL, while defendant delayed or made it inconvenient for plaintiff to get BTL treatment. The referee found that factor (j) weighed against both parties because they had difficulty keeping their personal conflict separate from their co-parenting. The referee weighed factor (l) in favor of joint legal custody and directed the parties to work harder to be proper joint legal custodians. The referee noted that defendant had become more engaged in BTL’s medical treatment and concluded that both parties had “unclean hands” when it came to joint legal custody. The referee instructed the parties to seek judicial intervention to resolve disputes rather than resorting to unilateral action. The referee stated, however, that modification of legal custody may be warranted in the future if the necessity for judicial intervention became excessive. The referee ultimately concluded that plaintiff had not shown by clear and convincing evidence that granting her sole legal custody would be in BTL’s best interests.

The referee also evaluated the parenting-time factors under MCL 722.27(a)(7), and concluded that factors (a), (b), (c), (d), (h), and (i) did not apply. For factor (e), the referee found that BTL had acclimated to the travel distance between the parties (who lived an hour apart) with no negative impact. For factor (f), the referee found that both parents were eager to have parenting time and exercise their parenting time consistent with court orders or in a manner best

-2- suited to BTL’s interests when deviation from the court-ordered schedule was necessary. For factor (g), the referee found that both parties exercised parenting time regularly. The referee ultimately declined to expand plaintiff’s summer parenting time because plaintiff had not shown by a preponderance of the evidence why her proposed change, which would significantly reduce the number of defendant’s overnights with BTL, would be in the child’s best interests.

Plaintiff objected to the referee’s recommendations and requested a de novo hearing. At the de novo hearing, plaintiff stated her willingness to participate in joint co-parenting therapy and mediation to resolve disputes. Defendant would only agree to joint therapy if plaintiff underwent individual therapy first, and he would only agree to mediation if the trial court found it to be the most appropriate dispute resolution method. The parties again testified about their past disputes in obtaining medical treatment for BTL related to the ADHD diagnosis, the orthodontic problem, and the child’s vision. Plaintiff stated that BTL had gotten braces since the referee hearing and that defendant had taken BTL to the orthodontist to fix a problem with the braces. Defendant continued to give BTL his ADHD medication, although defendant still refused to take BTL to the psychiatrist.

Plaintiff continued to ask for alternating weeks in the summer, stating that she went 12 or 13 days without seeing BTL in the summer except for a brief mid-week visit. Unlike at the referee hearing, plaintiff proposed extending defendant’s parenting time during the school year by one additional overnight every other week.

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Bluebook (online)
Patricia Labarre v. Robert S Labarre, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patricia-labarre-v-robert-s-labarre-michctapp-2019.