Prescia v. O'Brien

87 So. 3d 345, 11 La.App. 3 Cir. 1560, 2012 WL 1108917, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 439
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 4, 2012
DocketNo. 11-1560
StatusPublished

This text of 87 So. 3d 345 (Prescia v. O'Brien) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prescia v. O'Brien, 87 So. 3d 345, 11 La.App. 3 Cir. 1560, 2012 WL 1108917, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 439 (La. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

KEATY, Judge.

| ]In this child custody case, the father, Gary O’Brien, appeals a trial court judgment that granted joint custody to the father and the children’s maternal grandparents, Joseph and Laura Prescia, with the Prescias designated as “temporary domiciliary parent(s).” The judgment ordered O’Brien to undergo a complete psychological evaluation, the results of which were to be supplied to the trial court and all counsel of record and granted him “restricted visitation” at Avec Les Enfants visitation center or at the home of the children’s maternal aunt. For the following reasons, we affirm.

Facts and Procedural History

Gary O’Brien and his deceased wife, Sherry, are the biological parents of two [346]*346minor children, Brendan and Casey O’Brien. After Sherry died in 2004, the children lived with their father and spent most weekends and some evenings after school with their maternal grandparents, Joseph and Laura Prescia. For several years, these adults formed a cohesive family unit for Brendan and Casey. In 2007, O’Brien began to refuse visitations between the Prescias and the children. The Prescias filed suit against O’Brien, seeking visitation. The trial court found that visitation was warranted and established a visitation plan. The visitation plan worked well until January 2009, when O’Brien began denying visitation and phone contact to the grandparents, claiming that the children did not want to see or speak with them.

The parties filed cross motions for contempt. The parties attended several hearing officer conferences and objected to those recommendations. A rule for contempt was set and was reset. During that time, in late March 2009, O’Brien moved the minor children from New Iberia, Louisiana, to Anacoco, Louisiana, without notifying the Prescias or obtaining judicial permission for the relocation. 12After a hearing on the rule for contempt, the Pres-cias again enjoyed visitation and telephone conversations with their grandchildren.

In 2010, O’Brien began denying visitation and telephone communication to the Prescias for a third time. They filed to have the trial court’s order clarified. The matter was set for a hearing officer conference on May 17 and a rule on June 4. In late April 2010, O’Brien moved the children to Florida and enrolled them in school, again without permission from the trial court. After the fact, he told Lisa DiMarco, the children’s maternal aunt, that he moved to get the children away from his wife’s family and because he believed the state he had moved to did not recognize grandparents’ rights to custody. He refused to tell her which state he was in. At that time, the Prescias sought custody of the children. Temporary custody was granted to the Prescias on June 4, 2010. A hearing on permanent custody was scheduled for July 23, 2010. O’Brien was denied any visitation pending the July 23, 2010 hearing unless it was supervised by DiMarco.

Shortly after the children were removed from his custody in Florida, O’Brien, who had tried to commit suicide fifteen years before and who had lost a son of a previous marriage to suicide, left a message on the children’s therapist’s voicemail stating that he was going to join their mother and to tell the children that he loved them. Alarmed by the implicitly suicidal nature of the message, the therapist called authorities in Florida, and O’Brien was brought to a mental health hospital. While at the hospital, O’Brien told doctors that he moved to Florida to get the kids away from their grandparents and that he suffered from depression. Although it was recommended that he undergo a psychological evaluation, he did not and was released after two days.

|sOn July 23, 2010, after a hearing on permanent custody,1 the trial court found O’Brien in contempt of court and sentenced him to a suspended thirty-day jail sentence. It also ordered that O’Brien have two meetings with Steven Hargrave, the children’s therapist, first independently and then with the children. At that time, O’Brien stated to the trial court, [347]*347“[s]o I am going to go ahead and say that they can have custody of my children because this has devastated me financially and emotionally, and I don’t really see how I can take care of the kids right now.” The matter was reset for August 3, 2010. After the August 3 hearing, the trial court ordered that custody of the children remain with the Prescias, that O’Brien complete a mental health evaluation, that all of O’Brien’s mental health records be released to Hargrave, and that O’Brien only be allowed supervised visitation with his children.

O’Brien met with his children four times at Hargrave’s office between August 2010 and December 2011. He saw the children on Christmas day for an hour or two and again in February 2011 for an hour or two on his daughter’s birthday. Though he was in New Iberia the day before his son’s birthday in May 2011, he did not ask to see his children. He made only one phone call to DiMareo to arrange visitation with his children between August 2010 and July 2011. He did not telephone the Prescias at all, not even to get information on the children’s well-being.

On May 18, 2011, O’Brien filed a “Motion to Return Children to Father.” The matter went to trial on July 21, 2011. At trial, O’Brien admitted that he had only set up four visits with his children through Hargrave, that he had not submitted to a complete psychological evaluation, and that he had seen his children | J'or a short period of time on Christmas and on his daughter’s birthday in February, but had not seen them or asked to see them since that time even though he was in New Iberia the day before his son’s birthday in May.

Hargrave testified that he still sees the children for therapy and they are torn; they love their father, but they also love their grandparents, and what they really want is for both sides to get along. Har-grave further testified that O’Brien has a lot of animosity toward the Prescias and that he seems to thwart the grandparents’ efforts to include him in family events. When he was invited to Thanksgiving dinner, he immediately declined, asserting that he would have the children back by then. Hargrave stated that it is important for the children to have contact with the grandparents and their maternal aunt because it makes them feel connected to their mom. He stated that they are thriving with the Prescias, but with O’Brien, they only survived. He further stated that he felt that their living with O’Brien would emotionally and mentally harm the children because of the continued animosity O’Brien harbors against the Prescias. Further, Hargrave did not think that O’Brien was capable of fostering and promoting a meaningful relationship with the Prescias or DiMareo.

The Prescias and DiMareo also testified. Their testimony revealed that the Prescias have tried to get O’Brien to see the children or to visit them, but he has chosen not to. They explained that their primary and ultimate goal is for O’Brien and the children to reach a healthy reunification in the future. Further, testimony revealed that the Prescias are happy to take care of their grandchildren and are able to provide for them financially and emotionally.

Ultimately, the trial court denied O’Brien’s request. It found that he was discharged from the mental health facility prematurely, as a neuro-psychiatric evaluation was ordered but never performed. It further found:

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Bluebook (online)
87 So. 3d 345, 11 La.App. 3 Cir. 1560, 2012 WL 1108917, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prescia-v-obrien-lactapp-2012.