Pedro Flores Rodriguez v. Yolanda Salgado Yanez, e

817 F.3d 466, 2016 WL 1212412, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 5727
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 28, 2016
Docket15-40048
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 817 F.3d 466 (Pedro Flores Rodriguez v. Yolanda Salgado Yanez, e) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pedro Flores Rodriguez v. Yolanda Salgado Yanez, e, 817 F.3d 466, 2016 WL 1212412, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 5727 (5th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

Appellant Pedro Antonio Flores Rodriguez petitioned for the return of his child, A.S.F.S., under the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction and the -International Child Abduction Remedies Act. The district court denied Flores’s petition. Flores now appeals, and we REVERSE in part, VACATE in part, and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I.

Appellant Pedro Antonio Flores Rodriguez (“Flores”) and Appellee Yolanda Ivonne Salgado Yanez (“Salgado”) are the parents of A.S.F.S., an eleven-year-old girl. 1 A.S.F.S. was born in Chihuahua, Mexico on January 6, 2005. A.S.F.S. lived in Mexico until October 2013, when Salga-do took her to the United States without Flores’s permission. On.July 17, 2014, Flores filed a petition in the Eastern District of Texas seeking the return of A.S.F.S. to Mexico under the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction 2 and the International Child Abduction Remedies Act. 3 The district court appointed a guardian ad li-tem for A.S.F.S. and held a show cause hearing on the petition in November 2014.

A. Show Cause Hearing

The lion’s share of the show cause hearing was devoted to-the testimony of the two parents. Flores and Salgado testified consistently as to the general course of their relationship. They met in either 2001 or 2002 in Torreón, Mexico. Both were married at the time, but they began a romantic relationship soon after meeting. Salgado discovered that she was pregnant with A.S.F.S. in 2004. Flores initially denied that he was the father, but eventually acknowledged paternity and was present when A.S.F.S. was born. After A.S.F.S.’s birth, Flores continued to live with his -wife — who did not know about his relationship with Salgado or A.S.F.S. — but he sometimes spent the night at Salgado’s house. Flores testified that he would-.stay with Salgado and A.S.F.S. four to five days a month while Salgado’ testified that it was only one day a month. Flores also provided Salgado and A.S.F.S. with financial assistance. While he was working as a federal police officer, Flores “paid the water, the electric bill,-the telephone, and food.” In addition, Flores paid for- A.S.F.S. to attend private school. After Flores retired in 2007, the financial support became more irregular, but Salgado testified that he still paid her bills “probably eight or nine months” out of the year. ■

*470 In either 2011 or 2012, Salgado and A.S.F.S. left Torreón and moved into Sal-gado’s mother’s house in Chihuahua. - Sal-gado testified that she moved because she was fearful of Flores, who she alleged was physically abusive and. an alcoholic. Though .Chihuahua and. Torreón are several hours apart, Flores traveled to Salga-do’s mother’s house “[e]very month or every month and a half.” In October 2013, Salgado and A.S.F.S. crossed into the United States using “six-month entry card[s].” • Salgado told Flores that .they would- only be gone for a few weeks while they visited relatives. Salgado’s intention, however, was to permanently remain in the United States. Once Salgado and A.S.F.S. crossed, Flores had difficulty contacting them. Although Salgado told Flores.that she and A.S.F.S. were in Denver, they were actually in Texas., After staying briefly with two-different,friends, Salgado moved into her boyfriend’s apartment in Tyler, Texas. Flores was eventually able to get m touch with Salgado and A.S.F.S., but his contact with A.S.F.S. has remained limited..

■ Beyond these background facts, Flores and Salgado testified very differently about Flores’s relationship with A.S.F.S. Flores testified that they had a “beautiful” relationship with “very nice communication.” Flores elaborated .that he often helped A.S.F-.S. with her homework, took her to school events, and went to the park and the movies with her. Salgado testified that she never allowed Flores to be alone with A.S.F.S. because. she “didn’t trust him.” Salgado,explained that “every time he’s spent time or. tried to spend time with [her] by himself, he. always bother[s] her accosting her with questions towards me to the point that the girl was afraid and ... cr[ied].”- Salgado also testified that Flores was “very aggressive” and physically abused her in front of A.S.F.S. “[m]any times,” although he was never violent with A.S.F.S. Salgado acknowledged that Flores regularly visited Chihuahua, but testified that “he only came to see [her] ... [b]ecause ’.he has never cared for [A.S.F.S.].” Salgado added that Flores was “drunk” and “[a]lmost always” violent during these visits.

After Flores and Salgado' completed their testimony, the district court briefly questioned A.S.F.S. in chambers. A.S.F.S. testified that her relationship with her father was poor. She indicated that Flores never spent time with her and did not even speak to her except to ask questions about Salgado’s love life. A.S.F.S. explained that she “would just go to [her] room” when Flores visited Chihuahua because “he was always drunk” and would say “ugly things ... [l]ike dirty words.” She characterized the relationship between her parents as “[flighting” and reported that she had seen Flores “push[ ]” Salgado.

At two different points, the district court asked A.S.F.S. whether she was happier living in Mexico or the United States. A.S.F.S. testified that she was happier in Texas, although she was happy living in Mexico too:

Q. ... Are you happy living here in Texas? -
' A.' Yes. '
Q. Okay. Now, you lived in Mexico before Texas; is that right?
A. Yes.
Q. Were you happy living in Mexico?
A. Yes.
Q. Well;'do you like living in Texas better, or do'you like living in Mexico - better?
A. Texas.
[[Image here]]
Q, So, [A.S.F.S.], I asked you this before but I will just ask you again: Are you happier here in Texas or in Mexico?
*471 A. In Texas.
Q. Why are you happier here?
A. Because I am going to be able to learn more languages, and I want to learn much more in here.

B. District Court’s Decision

In December 2014, the district, court issued a decision in Salgado’s favor. The district court agreed with Flores that A.S.F.S. was (1) a “habitual resident” of Mexico at the time of removal and that (2) her removal was in breach of Flores’s custody rights under Mexican law. Nevertheless, the district court denied Flores’s petition because he “was not exercising his custody rights at the time of A.S.F.S.’s removal to the United States.” After summarizing the evidence, the district court reasoned as follows:

[Flores] adduced insufficient evidence that he provided any physical care or financial assistance to A.S.F.S.

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Bluebook (online)
817 F.3d 466, 2016 WL 1212412, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 5727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pedro-flores-rodriguez-v-yolanda-salgado-yanez-e-ca5-2016.