Pollard v. Pollard, No. 532463 (Aug. 28, 1995)

1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 9733, 15 Conn. L. Rptr. 330
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedAugust 28, 1995
DocketNo. 532463
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 9733 (Pollard v. Pollard, No. 532463 (Aug. 28, 1995)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pollard v. Pollard, No. 532463 (Aug. 28, 1995), 1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 9733, 15 Conn. L. Rptr. 330 (Colo. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]MEMORANDUM OF DECISION RE: PLAINTIFFS' MOTION FOR VISITATIONAND DEFENDANTS' MOTION TO STRIKE The plaintiff grandparents* moved, pursuant to General Statutes § 46b-59,1 for visitation with their four-year-old grandchild in this proceeding. The defendant parents object, claiming that as they are an intact, married couple, and are not contemplating divorce or separation, § 46b-59 is unconstitutional as applied to them. For the reasons stated below, pendente lite visitation is granted.

I
The procedural and factual backdrop for this very troubling case is as follows. The plaintiffs (hereinafter plaintiffs or grandparents) are the parents of James A. Pollard, CT Page 9734 Jr., the named defendant, who is married to the defendant Maureen Pollard. The younger Pollards (hereinafter defendants or parents) have a daughter, born June 1, 1991. They entrusted the child to the grandparents for regular and frequent day care in the grandparents' home for essentially the first two years of the child's life, while the parents went to work.

As a result of a disagreement over the reason the grandmother wished to take a short `sabbatical' from the child's day care, the parents ultimately terminated the grandparents' day care of the child. The parents also reduced the child's contact with her grandparents and terminated all contact after the child's third birthday. The grandparents on numerous occasions attempted to arrange for contact and visits with the child, without success. This prompted the grandparents' complaint for custody and visitation of the child. The defendants' motion to dismiss for lack of standing and subject matter jurisdiction was denied after hearing by Judge Austin. In the meantime, the grandparents withdrew their claim for custody and now seek only visitation.

The court then appointed an attorney to represent the interests of the minor child and referred the issue of visitation to family services for mediation, and if such mediation failed, then for investigation and recommendation.

II
The parents' motion to strike and the grandparents' motion for visitation were heard simultaneously. The younger Mr. Pollard, the grandmother and the family services officer, Linda Yuhas, testified, and her report was introduced into evidence. The parties and the attorney for the child filed briefs. From the evidence, the following facts are found.

The defendants have been married for more than eight years. They reside together and have done so continuously since their marriage. Neither has brought an action for dissolution or legal separation, and neither contemplates or intends doing so. There is one child issue of the marriage, born June 1, 1991. The child was entrusted to the plaintiffs on a regular basis for day care for the first two years of her life while the parents were at work. The parties differed about the precise amount of time the child was left with the grandparents (the parents claimed it was between three and five days a week for CT Page 9735 four to eight hours a day, while the grandparents claimed it was four to six days a week up to ten hours a day). It is undisputed, however, that the grandparents (largely the grandmother) provided care and companionship to the child consistently for the first two years of her life. During this time, the child and the grandparents developed a warm, close and loving relationship.

Shortly after, the relationship between the parents and grandparents began to disintegrate. The parents attribute the cause of the disintegration to two slapping incidents in which the grandmother sought to discipline the child. The parents are steadfastly opposed to corporal punishment. The grandmother concedes a single slapping incident on the child's hand when she was misbehaving and characterizes it as a mild slap.

The parents also disapproved of the grandparents' refusal to follow their instructions with respect to the child's diet, napping and other routines. The grandmother experienced a health problem and was told by her doctor to take a few weeks off from her day care responsibility, and she did so by taking some vacation. The grandparents appear to believe that the parents perceived this as an abandonment of the day care agreement. In any event, the grandparents' access to and contact with the child was reduced by the parents, despite attempts by the grandparents to see her, finally culminating in a complete breakdown after the child's third birthday, and the grandparents have not been with the child since.

The parents are suitable and fit parents, love and care for the child and maintain a more than adequate home for her. They went to extraordinary lengths to eliminate the need of day care for the child by working different shifts in full-time jobs. In doing so, they have obviously curtailed their own time with each other.

The grandparents are also caring, loving and affectionate to the child, and are suitable and fit to enjoy visitation with the child, and have a more than adequate home.

The family services officer, Yuhas, interviewed the parties and talked with the child. She visited the homes of each couple and interviewed a number of relatives, friends and neighbors. CT Page 9736

Yuhas described the grandparents as "kind and decent people who did not use corporal punishment as a usual form of discipline and who had a remarkably close, loving relationship with their granddaughter".

Yuhas described the child as bright, vivacious and outgoing and describes the defendants as excellent parents and does not question the quality of their parenting or their parenting ability. She disagreed, however, with the parents' decision to exclude the grandparents from the child's life. It was Yuhas' conclusion that the parties were engaged in a `power struggle'. She also concluded that contact between the child was not only appropriate but necessary, and decidedly in the child's best interest. She recommended immediate visitation to be expanded after two months to include overnight visitation and one week annually in the summer.

I find that the parents' reasons to cut off contact between the child and her grandparents were insubstantial and pretextual.

The court finds Yuhas' testimony thoughtful, incisive and credible, and agrees that it clearly would be in the child's best interest to maintain the close and loving relationship she has with her grandparents. I also find from the evidence that a denial of visitation with the grandparents would be harmful to the child and not in her best interest. The attorney for the child vigorously supported the conclusions and recommendations of Yuhas.

The defendants also basically claim that the hostility which has developed between the parties would be detrimental to the child if visitation were forced upon the parents. Although hostility certainly may be a factor in the evaluation of a child's best interest in the determination of competing custody or visitation claims, most courts generally consider the benefits to a child which accrue from an ongoing, loving relationship with a grandparent to outweigh any possible trauma to a child. Foster and Freed, Grandparent Visitation: Vagaries and Vicissitudes, 23 St. Louis ULJ 643, 660 (1979). To argue that hostility or animosity between contestants over visitation should be a controlling factor in denying visitation to the custodial contestant totally loses sight of the child's best interests.

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Bluebook (online)
1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 9733, 15 Conn. L. Rptr. 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pollard-v-pollard-no-532463-aug-28-1995-connsuperct-1995.