Quainoo v. Morelon-Quainoo

87 So. 3d 364, 11 La.App. 5 Cir. 766, 2012 WL 1192188, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 479
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 10, 2012
DocketNo. 11-CA-766
StatusPublished

This text of 87 So. 3d 364 (Quainoo v. Morelon-Quainoo) 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
Quainoo v. Morelon-Quainoo, 87 So. 3d 364, 11 La.App. 5 Cir. 766, 2012 WL 1192188, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 479 (La. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

ROBERT A. CHAISSON, Judge.

LThis is an appeal by Carla Morelon Quainoo from a judgment denying her permission to relocate her two minor children from Jefferson Parish to Decatur, Georgia. For the following reasons, the judgment is reversed, Carla Morelon Quainoo is hereby authorized to relocate the children as requested in her petition, and the matter is remanded to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Carla Morelon was studying for her Ph.D. at Indiana University when she met Daniel Quainoo. Mr. Quainoo, then a citizen of Ghana, was employed by the university as an assistant residence manager. He has a master’s degree in student personnel administration. They were married in Indiana in 2006, and shortly thereafter Mrs. Quainoo finished her degree and got a job at Dillard University in New Orleans. In part through Mrs. Quainoo’s help, Mr. Quainoo was also hired by Dillard as dean of residential life and campus life. The couple bought a home in Jefferson Parish. They then had two children: a son, Daniel, Jr., born on July 9, |s2007, and a daughter, Shila, born on July 30, 2009. During this period, Mr. Quainoo became a U.S. citizen. Neither parent has any historic affiliation with the New Orleans metropolitan area, nor has any family there.

In September of 2008, Mr. Quainoo lost his job at Dillard, where his salary was $48,500 per year. During the following [365]*365year, he drew unemployment benefits and applied for numerous jobs in other states, but without success. Shortly before his unemployment benefits ran out, he took a job as a janitor with Sunrise Assisted Living, an elderly care facility company with operations in other states. His salary there is $9.50 per hour. During this period, Mrs. Quainoo took a second job working part-time to help with the couple’s finances.

In 2010, Mrs. Quainoo began receiving information that her $76,000 salary at Dillard might be cut by 10% due to financial constraints at the school. She also testified that after Mr. Quainoo was terminated, her workplace became somewhat uncomfortable for her. She too began looking for a job elsewhere, and Mr. Quainoo was aware of this search. In November of 2010, she was offered a job as coordinator of training and research with the Southern Association of Universities and Schools (SACS)1 in Atlanta, Georgia, with a salary increase of $11,000. She testified that this position was not only more secure than her job at Dillard, but that it was a career move which could open the way for consideration for positions as president, vice-president or chancellor of universities and colleges. She further testified that she had worked at Emory University in Atlanta for eight years, and had friends in the area. Additionally, her sister Yvette, a school social worker, also lives near Atlanta and has a very close relationship with the children. Considering |4all of these factors, she accepted the job in November of 2010. She informed Mr. Quainoo about this development and his comment was “congratulations.”

It was her initial impression that Mr. Quainoo would move to Atlanta with her and the children. He had in fact earlier applied, albeit unsuccessfully, for a job at Emory University in Atlanta, and she took this as an indication that he would move there if he had the opportunity. However, he informed her in late November that he had no intention of moving with her. At about that time, Mrs. Quainoo traveled to Georgia to look for an apartment, and Mr. Quainoo was aware of this. When she returned to Jefferson Parish, she began to prepare for the move. On December 7, after Mr. Quainoo left for work, she left with the children and her furniture for Decatur, a city near Atlanta where she had found a convenient apartment. Mr. Quai-noo did not learn that she had left with the children until he returned home from work.

Mrs. Quainoo testified that she assumed that Mr. Quainoo would eventually change his mind and follow her and the children to Atlanta. Instead, he filed a petition in Jefferson Parish seeking return of the children, and for divorce. The children were duly returned, and Mrs. Quainoo then filed a petition to relocate the children.

During the relocation proceedings, the trial judge appointed J. Stephen York, Ph. D., as a mental health professional to complete a custody and relocation evaluation. Over the course of six weeks, Dr. York interviewed each parent three times and administered the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory-2 test to both of them. He also observed both parents independently with the children. Other information which he considered related to the parents’ education and work histories, comparisons of schools and services in the [366]*366Atlanta versus New Orleans |sareas, various records relating to the children, and other applicable data. His pertinent observations were as follows:

Carla Quainoo has been offered and accepted a promotion in Georgia. It offers her a significant increase in salary as well as job security and prestige in her field of expertise. She has leased an appropriate home in an area with good schools and excellent recreational opportunities. Mr. Quainoo has a job as a janitor in which he is underemployed compared to his education and background, yet he does not want the children to move. He specifically said he did not want a more demanding [job].

Dr. York also noted that Mrs. Quainoo’s sister Yvette, had offered Mr. Quainoo a place to stay in the Atlanta area, and Mrs. Quainoo had contacted the Atlanta office of Sunrise Assisted Living and determined that there were jobs available there. He also pointed out that there are numerous universities and colleges in the Atlanta area which might offer opportunities in both parents’ fields. In regard to Mr. Quainoo’s position on his moving to Atlanta, he said: “Mr. Quainoo has decided he does not want to leave Louisiana. There is no feasible explanation for this. If he is going to work as a janitor, I am sure he could find such work in Atlanta or one of its suburbs. Factually, he could choose to move, and Mrs. Quainoo found the company for whom he works now has jobs in the Atlanta area.”

He reviewed the twelve criteria of La. R.S. 9:355.12 and found that both parties have been good, responsible and loving parents who met their obligations to the children. He acknowledged that by its very nature, relocation presents problems for visitation by the non-locating parent, but deemed these problems at least amel-iorable by reasonable visitation arrangements and modern means of communication. His overall view was that the move would be advantageous to the mother in her career, and also to the children as to schools. His conclusion was that allowing the relocation would be best for the children.

| (¡During the April 25, 2011, relocation hearing, Mrs. Quainoo’s sister Yvette testified to her close relationship with the children and her availability to help out with them. She also corroborated Dr. York’s finding that she had offered Mr. Quainoo a room in her house while he got settled in Georgia.

Mr. Quainoo testified in opposition to the relocation. The thrust of his testimony was that he felt himself to be a very good parent. This was borne out by all of the evidence presented. He stated that he had developed close friendships in his Catholic Church community, and that these people were more than willing to help with the children. Several of these friends corroborated this information.

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87 So. 3d 364, 11 La.App. 5 Cir. 766, 2012 WL 1192188, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quainoo-v-morelon-quainoo-lactapp-2012.