Poh v. Poh

64 So. 3d 49, 2010 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 333, 2010 WL 4678978
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedNovember 19, 2010
Docket2090151
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 64 So. 3d 49 (Poh v. Poh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Poh v. Poh, 64 So. 3d 49, 2010 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 333, 2010 WL 4678978 (Ala. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinions

[52]*52PITTMAN, Judge.

Philla L. Poh (“the father”) appeals from a judgment of the Mobile Circuit Court denying his motion to modify custody or his child-support obligation. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.

The father and Titiana N. Poh (“the mother”) divorced in June 2005. The mother received primary physical custody of their child (“the child”), and the father was granted visitation rights. Custody was most recently modified in August 2008.

On May 18, 2009, the mother filed a pleading seeking to suspend or modify the father’s visitation rights and to hold him in contempt, alleging that he had repeatedly engaged in inappropriate behavior in front of the child.1 She requested that she be awarded attorney fees and costs incurred in connection with her request and that a guardian ad litem be appointed to represent the child’s interests. The trial court set a trial date for September 2009, approximately four months later.

On May 27, 2009, the mother moved to immediately suspend the father’s visitation rights (including overnight visits) pending the trial court’s determination on her claim. The trial court granted that motion on July 10, 2009.

On July 13, 2009, the father objected to the mother’s claim, averring that her contentions were unfounded. He attached to his motion a report prepared by the Florida Department of Children and Families, dated June 10, 2009, which concluded that he had not inadequately supervised, threatened harm to, sexually abused, or physically injured the child. He also asserted a counterclaim for a child-custody modification or, alternatively, for modification of his child-support obligation to reflect his alleged involuntary-unemployment status as of May 2009. The father also requested that the mother be held in contempt for allegedly having interfered with his communication and visitation with the child.

In his filings, the father claimed that the mother had neglected the child.2 He argued that, if given primary physical custody of the child, he would move to Colorado and raise the child with the help of the child’s paternal grandparents and the father’s paramour. He also averred that the mother had manipulated the trial court and had denied him access to the child in order to prevent him from exercising his visitation rights, specifically as to two planned trips to Singapore to visit the father’s parents.

An ore tenus proceeding was held in September 2009 at which both parties testified. At the outset of the trial, the mother withdrew her May 2009 request to suspend or modify visitation, but she asked the trial court to award her attorney fees in the amount of $1,500 and to order the father not to expose himself in front of the child. As a result, the issues before the trial court were largely narrowed to those raised by the father, including whether [53]*53child support should be modified in light of the father’s unemployment, whether child custody should be modified, and whether the mother was in contempt as a result of her having filed motions to prevent the father from visiting the child.

The father testified that he was a worker in the petroleum industry. He had been employed by Tecorra Geo Sites, where he earned $17 per hour, until he was laid off in May 2009 because of cutbacks in the oil industry. He presented three copies of paychecks to establish that he had been employed by Applewood Quality Builders (“Applewood”) on an as-needed basis after he was laid off by Tecorra Geo Sites. The paychecks were issued in June, July, and August 2009. He testified that each paycheck reflected less than 20 hours of work per week, with the lowest paycheck being for $800. The father stated that he had not been able to obtain full-time employment after his layoff; however, from his testimony, it appears that he was still in contact with Applewood to be hired as needed. When the father was asked by the guardian ad litem whether he would continue to work offshore or in international locations if he were granted primary physical custody of the child, he replied that he would limit his work to domestic jobs and that the limitation would not affect the amount of income that he had previously been able to earn.

The father was asked about a $80,000 certificate of deposit (“CD”) that he had been known to have had in the past. He testified that the CD was no longer in his possession because he had used the funds from it to pay litigation costs and other expenses while he had been unemployed.

The father testified that he had lost approximately $7,000 when he had been prevented from taking the child to Singapore during the summer of 2009, as allegedly had been agreed to and planned by both parties, because the trial court had granted temporary relief as to the mother’s request to suspend his visitation rights, which request had been withdrawn on the day of the trial. He further stated that the mother had forced him to cancel his plans to visit the child in Tennessee because she had claimed that the child would not be able to do anything because of an ant bite. The father rescheduled the trip, but he stated at trial that the child had later told him that it had been a “small” ant bite.

The mother testified that she had had no problem with the father’s taking the child to Singapore and that she had paid half of the child’s passport-renewal fee so that he could go to Singapore. The guardian ad litem later asked about a telephone conversation between himself, the mother, and the mother’s husband during which the mother had said that she had “prepared the child for Singapore.” She responded that the parties had never set an actual date for a trip to Singapore, but she indicated that she had wanted the child’s passport to be ready if the father wanted to take him. As to the father’s testimony that the mother had forced him to cancel his trip to visit the child because of an ant bite, the mother testified that she had told the father that he could come but that the child’s doctor had recommended that the child receive bed rest.

The child lives with the mother, her husband, and the child’s maternal grandmother. The mother testified that she depended on the father’s child support, paid monthly in the amount of $450, and that she and her husband were living off her husband’s military-retirement income because neither of them had found work since moving to Tennessee.

The mother testified that she and her husband had mutually decided to stop spanking the child when he was six years [54]*54old, although she knew of at least one instance when her husband had spanked the child after that time. During the guardian ad litem’s cross-examination, the guardian ad litem represented to the mother that the child had stated “verbatim” that the mother’s husband “gets aggressive.” The mother responded that the child was mistaken and that her husband was a “wonderful father.” The guardian ad litem also told the mother that the child had said that he could not have toys at home, but the mother responded that the child already had too many toys. The guardian ad litem further inquired about an incident that the mother had reported to him that had allegedly occurred between the father and a police officer during one of the father’s visits to Tennessee. She testified that the father had received a “verbal warning” not to leave the child unsupervised in a vehicle. However, no police report was issued, and no other evidence was admitted that might have corroborated her testimony.

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Bluebook (online)
64 So. 3d 49, 2010 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 333, 2010 WL 4678978, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poh-v-poh-alacivapp-2010.