Peterson v. Peterson

818 P.2d 1305, 171 Utah Adv. Rep. 35, 1991 Utah App. LEXIS 157, 1991 WL 210398
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedOctober 15, 1991
Docket910029-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 818 P.2d 1305 (Peterson v. Peterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peterson v. Peterson, 818 P.2d 1305, 171 Utah Adv. Rep. 35, 1991 Utah App. LEXIS 157, 1991 WL 210398 (Utah Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION

GARFF, Judge:

Russell Peterson appeals from a decree of divorce challenging the court’s order of restricted and supervised visitation, and the order requiring him to pay the costs incurred by appellee Lynn Peterson for a custody evaluation, a polygraph examination, expert witness fees, services fees, and copying charges.

FACTS

We draw the facts primarily from the court’s findings. Where elaboration is necessary, we draw the facts from the record consistent with the court’s findings.

The parties were married December 14, 1985, and a daughter was born to them on July 8, 1986. Ms. Peterson moved out of the home in March 1988 because of Mr. Peterson’s excessive drinking and his lack of interest in her and in their child.

Ms. Peterson filed for divorce on May 16, 1988 seeking custody of the parties’ child. She was awarded temporary custody at a hearing held April 11, 1989. During the eleven months between the parties’ separation and the temporary hearing, Mr. Peterson provided no support for the child and he made little effort to exercise visitation.

After Mr. Peterson was ordered to pay temporary child support, he sought to obtain custody. He engaged Stanley S. Adams to represent him. Mr. Peterson obtained a stipulation from Ms. Peterson’s counsel that a custody evaluation be performed by Dr. AuDean Cowley, a sociologist, who was Adams’s maternal aunt. The court ratified the stipulation. Mr. Peterson did not disclose the familial relationship between Dr. Cowley and Mr. Adams to Ms. Peterson, her attorney, or to the court. The court became aware of this relationship sometime after the evaluation was completed and released.

In late 1989, Mr. Peterson made allegations that the child had been sexually abused by Ms. Peterson and by her then-boyfriend, David Shaw. Mr. Peterson took the child to see Dr. Gerald Allred, a pediatrician, and reported that the child had been abused. Dr. Allred alerted the Division of Protective Services.

The Division arranged for a shelter hearing in the juvenile court on December 18, 1989. Both Dr. Allred and Dr. Cowley appeared and recommended to the commissioner that temporary custody be placed with Mr. Peterson. The commissioner recommended that Mr. Peterson receive temporary custody pending further order of either the juvenile or district court and pending a court-ordered medical evaluation of the child at Primary Children’s Medical Center.

Another juvenile court hearing was held in January 1990, wherein a judge vacated the commissioner’s shelter order, found the juvenile court had no further jurisdiction, and restored the status of the parties as it existed prior to the shelter hearing, to wit, that Ms. Peterson would have temporary custody pursuant to the district court’s order.

In response to Mr. Peterson’s allegations of sexual abuse, the district court, at another temporary hearing held February 9, 1990, granted Mr. Peterson’s motion for temporary custody and ordered that Ms. Peterson have supervised visitation. This order was based on Mr. Peterson’s affidavit wherein he summarized the recommendations of Dr. Allred and Dr. Cowley. The court, now aware of Dr. Cowley’s conflict, granted Ms. Peterson’s motion for an independent custody evaluation by Dr. Barbara T. Liebroder, a licensed psychologist.

Beginning February 16, 1990, Mr. Peterson began taking the child to Teena Soren-sen, a registered psychiatric nurse, for therapy sessions related to his allegations of sexual abuse. Ms. Sorensen made at *1307 least seven tapes of these sessions. She prepared an affidavit which Mr. Peterson submitted to the court detailing her belief that the child had been sexually abused by Ms. Peterson and by Mr. Shaw and urging the court to restructure visitation so that Ms. Peterson’s visits could be more closely monitored.

On May 11, 1990, Ms. Peterson filed a motion requesting that the trial court find Mr. Peterson in contempt for failure to allow visitation. The court found no contempt and ordered that Dr. Liebroder make recommendations for visitation.

By this time, Dr. Liebroder had begun her independent custody evaluation. Her report was later received into evidence. Dr. Liebroder conducted written and oral psychological examinations of the parties, interviewed them and observed them with the child. She saw the child on four separate occasions and administered a battery of tests to her. She also spoke with Mr. Shaw, a former baby sitter, a worker from the Division of Social Services, and with Ms. Sorensen. She reviewed written reports and tapes that Ms. Sorensen had prepared, a report from Dr. Palmer, and a report from Dr. Allred. She reviewed written materials supplied by Mr. Peterson and by his sister, Melanie Curtis, a letter written by Ms. Peterson, and a report by Dr. Cowley. Finally, she reviewed a report from Dr. David Raskin who, on Dr. Liebro-der’s recommendation, had administered polygraph examinations to Ms. Peterson and Mr. Shaw.

Dr. Liebroder found that Ms. Peterson had been the primary care provider for the child up to January 12, 1990, and that there was reasonable certainty that neither Ms. Peterson nor Mr. Shaw had abused the child. She also testified that the child was more strongly bonded to Ms. Peterson and that she was the better parent.

The court found that the custody evaluation and testimony of Dr. Liebroder and the testimony of Dr. Raskin were more believable than the evaluations, reports, and testimony of Dr. Cowley, Ms. Sorensen, and Dr. Allred. The court adopted Dr. Liebroder’s recommendation regarding custody and visitation.

The court found that “a parent willing to subject his minor child to repeated physical examinations for child sexual abuse and repeated ‘therapy’ sessions for sex abuse which never occurred is practicing a form of severe child abuse.” The court also found that Mr. Peterson, by “repeatedly coaching his daughter to make false reports of sexual abuse and repeatedly coaching her to denounce her mother, is abusing a child psychologically by causing her to have ill feelings about her mother.”

The court granted custody to Ms. Peterson and ordered that Mr. Peterson have restricted, supervised visitation consisting of five hours every Sunday, to “be supervised by a responsible independent third party adult to insure that the minor child is not further coached or persuaded to have feelings against her mother.”

The court also ordered Mr. Peterson to pay Ms. Peterson $10,260.75 for her expenses. This amount included $5,144.75 for the second custody evaluation, the polygraph examination, expert witness fees, service fees, and copying charges.

Mr. Peterson filed an appeal challenging the restricted visitation and challenging the $5,144.75 portion of the costs.

VISITATION

Mr. Peterson argues that the court’s findings were clearly erroneous because they did not reflect certain observations made by Dr. Liebroder. He also argues that the court abused its discretion in concluding that he should be allowed only five hours of supervised visitation per week because, in so ruling, the court acted to punish him and did not act in the best interest of the child.

We set aside findings of fact only when they are clearly erroneous. Utah R.Civ.P. 52(a); Davis v. Davis,

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Bluebook (online)
818 P.2d 1305, 171 Utah Adv. Rep. 35, 1991 Utah App. LEXIS 157, 1991 WL 210398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-v-peterson-utahctapp-1991.