Quevedo-Woolf v. Overholser

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 18, 2018
Docket17-675
StatusPublished

This text of Quevedo-Woolf v. Overholser (Quevedo-Woolf v. Overholser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quevedo-Woolf v. Overholser, (N.C. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

No. COA17-675 and COA17-1344

Filed: 18 September 2018

Rowan County, No. 12 CvD 2654

CELINA QUEVEDO-WOOLF, Plaintiff,

v.

MERRY EILEEN OVERHOLSER and DANIEL CARTER, Defendants.

____________________________________

Appeal by Plaintiff from order entered 16 May 2016 by Judge Marshall Bickett

and appeal by Defendant Overholser from order entered 17 November 2016 by Judge

James F. Randolph in District Court, Rowan County. Heard in the Court of Appeals

19 February 2018. Appeal by Defendant Overholser from order entered 28 March

2017, nunc pro tunc 14 March 2017, by Judge James F. Randolph in District Court,

Rowan County. Heard in the Court of Appeals 6 August 2018.

Woodruff Law Firm, PA, by Carolyn J. Woodruff and Jessica Snowberger Bullock, for Plaintiff.

Hoffman Law Firm, PLLC, by James P. Hoffman, Jr., for Defendant Overholser. QUEVEDO-WOOLF V. OVERHOLSER Opinion of the Court

McGEE, Chief Judge.

I. Factual and Procedural History

A. General

Celina Quevedo-Woolf (“Plaintiff”) and Daniel Carter (“Carter”) had a brief

romantic relationship that resulted in the birth of E.R.Q., a girl, on 19 July

2005. Carter has had minimal involvement in E.R.Q.’s life and is not a party to this

appeal. Plaintiff’s mother, Merry Eileen Overholser (“Defendant”) has raised E.R.Q.

since infancy. When Plaintiff realized she was pregnant she moved in with

Defendant, who was living in Defendant’s mother’s house (the “house”), in Palm

Beach County, Florida. After E.R.Q. was born, Plaintiff continued to live with

Defendant. Though E.R.Q. initially slept in Plaintiff’s room, for the majority of the

time Plaintiff and E.R.Q. were living in the house, E.R.Q. slept in Defendant’s room.

Plaintiff moved out of the house around the time of E.R.Q.’s first birthday,

leaving E.R.Q. with Defendant, because, according to Plaintiff, Plaintiff was not

getting along with Defendant, and for “stability for E.R.Q.” Plaintiff testified she left

E.R.Q. with Defendant because E.R.Q. already “kn[ew] my mother and kn[ew] that

house, [so] it seemed like a logical thing at the time as opposed to me moving out into

a friend’s house, which I did, and [E.R.Q.] not being familiar with the situation or

anything like that.” Plaintiff’s initial apartment was nearby, and Plaintiff testified

-2- QUEVEDO-WOOLF V. OVERHOLSER Opinion of the Court

she visited E.R.Q. but that “it was kind of sporadic,” “weekly.” Plaintiff never kept

E.R.Q. overnight during this initial period.

In order for Defendant to have the authority to make decisions necessary for

raising E.R.Q., such as decisions for medical care, Defendant asked Plaintiff to give

Defendant legal and physical custody of E.R.Q. Plaintiff agreed, and the Circuit

Court of the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit for Palm Beach County, Florida (the “Florida

court”), entered an “Order for Temporary Custody” on 2 November 2006 (the “Florida

Order”), giving sole legal and physical custody of E.R.Q. to Defendant. E.R.Q. was

one year old at the time. The Florida Order allowed Plaintiff to petition for the return

of custody of E.R.Q. to Plaintiff. After Defendant obtained custody, Plaintiff

continued to have semi-regular contact with E.R.Q., but E.R.Q. lived full-time with

Defendant and Defendant made all relevant decisions related to the care of E.R.Q.

In 2007, Defendant filed for, and obtained, an order for child support from Plaintiff.

In June of 2008, when E.R.Q. was approximately three years old, Defendant

and E.R.Q. moved with Defendant’s girlfriend at the time, Janet Kresge (“Kresge”),

to Rowan County, North Carolina. Defendant had been a special education teacher

since 1984, and continued working in that capacity in North Carolina. Plaintiff

testified she did not want Defendant to leave Florida with E.R.Q., but Defendant

testified that, when she discussed with Plaintiff the idea of moving to North Carolina,

Plaintiff “thought it was a great idea and [Plaintiff] said she was coming” to North

Carolina to be near E.R.Q. Plaintiff did not move to North Carolina, and did not visit

-3- QUEVEDO-WOOLF V. OVERHOLSER Opinion of the Court

E.R.Q. in Rowan County until October 2008, when Defendant purchased Plaintiff a

plane ticket for that purpose. A note written by Kresge concerning that time period

stated:

April, 2008. Discussed moving [with Plaintiff]. Better standard of living, et cetera. Was told [Plaintiff] would follow in a few months. Looked for apartments. Sent info to [Plaintiff]. October, 2008 visit [–] three days. [Plaintiff] [s]pent most of time on computer or phone. Did not spend . . . quality time [with E.R.Q.]. Promised to be back for Thanksgiving. No contact.

Defendant testified that, based upon her own observations, what Kresge had written

in the note was correct. Plaintiff’s next visit with E.R.Q. did not occur until May of

2011, approximately two and a half years after the October 2008 visit. The May 2011

visit was a day visit that lasted only a few hours.

Defendant testified that she and Kresge offered to let Plaintiff live with them

and E.R.Q., but Plaintiff did not take them up on that offer. Defendant further

testified:

A After [Plaintiff] came in October [2008] I did not hear from her for quite some time.

Q Was it true that [Plaintiff] didn’t have your phone number when you lived in North Carolina?

A No.

....

Q Do you know where [Plaintiff] was at during that period of time when she had no contact?

-4- QUEVEDO-WOOLF V. OVERHOLSER Opinion of the Court

A No, I don’t.

Q When you say no contact, do you mean no phone calls, no visits, or what?

A Correct. There were – there were no visits from – the next visit did not happen until [3] May, 2011. [Plaintiff] did call on – there were a couple of Christmases where she called. I remember one phone call at Christmas time, and it had been quite a while since I had spoken to her, where she – she told me that she was suicidal and some other things, and things surrounding why she felt that way. There was another phone call. She usually called like May. May and December. And I remember one May she called and I said something to her about [E.R.Q.]’s birthday the previous year. That she never called [E.R.Q.]. And I said, “Why didn’t you do that? You didn’t even call her?” And she said, “Mom, honestly I forgot.” And then there was May of – I believe it was 2010, because [Kresge] was still there. And we were in the backyard and [Plaintiff] called and she just started screaming at me, “Give her back to me. You have to give her back to me. She’s mine. I’m coming to get [E.R.Q.].” And I said, “[Plaintiff], you don’t even know her.” And she said, “Well, that’s okay. I’ll come for the weekend and I’ll spend the weekend with her and then I’m taking her back with me.” And I said, “No.” And it was like I had to try to talk her down.

Q So we’re talking about – and I want to make sure I’m right on this. We’re talking [6] October, 2008, well into May of 2011 here [that Plaintiff had no physical contact with E.R.Q.], right?

A Yes.

Q Did you go through periods like that where you wouldn’t hear from [Plaintiff] for a long time and then suddenly you would get demands to turn [E.R.Q.] over to her?

-5- QUEVEDO-WOOLF V. OVERHOLSER Opinion of the Court

Q Do you even know where [Plaintiff] was living at that point in time or who she was living with?

A No.

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