Pulham v. Kirsling

2018 UT App 65, 427 P.3d 261
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedApril 12, 2018
Docket20150577-CA; 20160236-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2018 UT App 65 (Pulham v. Kirsling) 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
Pulham v. Kirsling, 2018 UT App 65, 427 P.3d 261 (Utah Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

POHLMAN, Judge:

¶1 This case involves two appeals in the same domestic relations dispute. 1 In the first appeal (the First Appeal), William Kirsling challenges several aspects of the amended decree entered in his divorce from Kristen Pulham. In the second appeal (the Second Appeal), Kirsling challenges the trial court's denial of his petition to modify the divorce decree's custody arrangement. We affirm the trial court's decisions in both appeals.

BACKGROUND

The Trial and the Amended Decree

¶2 Pulham and Kirsling were married in 2008 and separated in 2010. The parties had one child (Child) born during the marriage. In June 2012, the trial court entered a bifurcated decree of divorce, reserving several issues for trial.

¶3 At a bench trial in 2014, the parties contested the issues of custody, child support, past-due child support, and unreimbursed child care expenses. Each party also alleged that the other party was in contempt of the court's prior orders and should therefore face sanctions.

¶4 On Child's custody, the trial court made detailed findings. Among other things, it found that Pulham had remarried, had a son with her new husband, and was living in Tooele, Utah. The court also found that Pulham had been the primary caregiver of Child since birth and that, at the time of trial, Pulham was unemployed and was acting as the full-time caregiver of her younger son and Child.

¶5 Regarding Kirsling, the court found that he was living in Taylorsville, Utah, with his girlfriend and her children, and that Kirsling's older son from a previous marriage lived with Kirsling part-time. The court also found that Kirsling had resided in various places, including Brigham City, Utah, and Phoenix, Arizona, for lengthy periods after the parties separated. The court found that even though Kirsling's "contact and visitation with [Child] ha[d] been inconsistent for much of that time," his contact had "stabilized considerably" in the year leading up to trial.

¶6 Although Kirsling and Pulham agreed at trial that it would be in Child's best interest if they shared joint physical and legal custody, they sharply disagreed about the details of that custody, including where Child should be enrolled in school and with whom she should primarily reside. A custody evaluator prepared a custody evaluation and testified about it at trial.

¶7 Kirsling requested a court order requiring Child to enroll in the school near his home in Taylorsville for three years, at which point Child would then transfer to the school near Pulham's home for the latter half of elementary school. The court rejected Kirsling's request, reasoning that his plan would require Child "to spend considerable time commuting by car between Taylorsville and Tooele"-amounting to "upwards of an hour each way, before school and after school"-and that it was not in Child's best interest to do so merely to accommodate Kirsling's preferred parenting plan. The court also reasoned that Kirsling's plan would require Child to change elementary schools and that such a plan, which would put Child through "an unnecessary adjustment of surroundings, friends and routine," was not in Child's best interest.

¶8 In the November 2014 amended divorce decree (the Amended Decree), which followed the earlier bifurcated decree, the trial court awarded the parties joint physical and legal custody. The court also ordered that Pulham would be the primary custodial parent and would have the final say in parenting decisions for Child, including which school Child would attend.

¶9 As for parent-time, the court determined that a standard parent-time order, as anticipated under Utah Code section 30-3-35, did "not provide sufficient parent time" for Kirsling and was not in Child's best interest. As a result, the court awarded Kirsling additional parent-time in a manner that avoided "creating the attendant travel time that would be inflicted upon [Child] by [Kirsling's] proposed parenting plan."

¶10 On future child support, the trial court found that it would be calculated based on Pulham's monthly income of $30 and Kirsling's monthly income of $4,580, "which are the stipulated monthly gross incomes" of the parties. Then, referencing the Utah Code and a custody worksheet, 2 the court ordered Kirsling to pay Pulham $548 per month for child support.

¶11 On past-due child support, the trial court found that the evidence supported Pulham's claim that Kirsling had an outstanding obligation for a period before 2012. The court also found that Pulham incurred fees paid to the Office of Recovery Services (ORS) due to Kirsling's "failure to timely pay his child support obligation." Because Kirsling had not been "consistently responsible for payments until ORS intervened," the court agreed with Pulham that Kirsling should reimburse her for the ORS fees. Accordingly, the court ordered Kirsling to pay Pulham for past-due child support and ORS fees.

¶12 On unreimbursed child care expenses, the trial court found that Pulham had shown that Kirsling had not paid his share of some expenses. The court ordered Kirsling to pay Pulham those expenses.

¶13 Finally, on the allegations of contempt of court, the trial court found that "insufficient evidence was presented at trial to warrant sanctions for either party." Thus, the court dismissed all charges of contempt.

The Motion for a New Trial

¶14 Kirsling moved for a new trial pursuant to rule 59(a) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. 3 The motion was accompanied by an unsworn document signed by his attorney that purported to be Kirsling's affidavit. As relevant here, Kirsling challenged the trial court's decisions regarding child support and custody as well as the amounts Kirsling owed to Pulham for past-due child support and child care expenses.

¶15 With respect to the amounts owed to Pulham for past-due child support and child care expenses, Kirsling contended that, under rule 59(a)(4), he had newly discovered evidence that he could not have produced at trial. Referring to Pulham's testimony that she did not receive a particular payment, he asserted that post-trial he was "able to obtain a photocopy of the cashed money order that was presented to [Pulham's] counsel as settlement for the financial issues of the case" and that the new information affected the amounts he owed Pulham.

¶16 In denying the motion, the trial court began by characterizing the purported affidavit as "an argument by [Kirsling's] counsel, complaining generally of the failure of the Court to find in [Kirsling's] favor." The court then rejected Kirsling's newly discovered evidence argument, explaining that Kirsling had not established "whether or why he was unable to obtain this evidence prior to trial" and also had not shown that "the introduction of the evidence would have resulted in a different trial outcome." 4

¶17 Kirsling raised another argument under rule 59(a)(6), attacking the court's determination that Pulham's gross monthly income was $30 for child support purposes. Kirsling argued that the evidence was insufficient because the court did "not show[ ] why Ms.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2018 UT App 65, 427 P.3d 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pulham-v-kirsling-utahctapp-2018.