Quinisha L. Williams v. Willie Cardona-Feliciano

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 20, 2024
Docket24A-DC-750
StatusPublished

This text of Quinisha L. Williams v. Willie Cardona-Feliciano (Quinisha L. Williams v. Willie Cardona-Feliciano) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quinisha L. Williams v. Willie Cardona-Feliciano, (Ind. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

FILED Aug 20 2024, 9:18 am

CLERK Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court

IN THE

Court of Appeals of Indiana Quinisha L. Williams Appellant

v.

Willie Cardona-Feliciano, Appellee

August 20, 2024 Court of Appeals Case No. 24A-DC-750 Appeal from the Kosciusko Superior Court The Honorable Christopher D. Kehler, Judge Trial Court Cause No. 43D04-2109-DC-282

Opinion by Judge Bailey Chief Judge Altice and Judge Mathias concur.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 24A-DC-750 | August 20, 2024 Page 1 of 24 Bailey, Judge.

Case Summary [1] Quinisha Williams (“Mother”) appeals the denial of her request to relocate her

three children (“Children”) from her marriage to Willie Cardona-Feliciano

(“Father”) 1 to Alabama. Mother presents the sole issue of whether the trial

court clearly erred by finding that relocation was not in Children’s best interests

and that, should Mother relocate, Father would immediately assume their sole

legal and primary physical custody – notwithstanding the uncontroverted

evidence that he had twice been convicted of committing felonies against

Mother and had not completed a court-ordered domestic batterer’s program.

We reverse and remand with instructions to the trial court to grant Mother’s

request for relocation and set for hearing the matter of Father’s long-distance

parenting time, at which evidence should be presented as to Father’s

compliance with any prior court order arising from his domestic battery

convictions.

Facts and Procedural History [2] On October 13, 2021, Mother petitioned for dissolution of her marriage to

Father. At a provisional hearing conducted in March of 2022, Mother was

1 Mother had two prior-born children. Father had four prior-born children in Puerto Rico and one in Alabama.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 24A-DC-750 | August 20, 2024 Page 2 of 24 awarded the sole legal and primary physical custody of Children; Father did not

appear at that hearing. Father was awarded parenting time consisting of eleven

hours each Saturday and ordered to pay child support. On May 30, 2023,

Mother filed a Notice of Relocation, requesting that Children be relocated with

her to Alabama; Mother averred that both she and Father had extended family

there. Mother further averred that Father had not been exercising his parenting

time. On June 6, Father filed his objection to Mother’s Notice of Relocation.

Mother filed requests that two witnesses appear remotely; the trial court

summarily denied the requests.

[3] On September 26, the parties appeared for a final hearing, with Mother

represented by counsel and Father appearing pro-se. Mother presented

evidence that Father had pled guilty in 2020 to Domestic Battery, enhanced to a

Level 6 felony because it was committed in the presence of a minor child. He

had struck Mother in the head with a glass vodka bottle and Mother required

hospitalization and staples in her head. Father had received a sentence of one

year in a county jail. Mother also presented evidence that, in 2022, Father had

agreed to plead guilty to Intimidation, as a Level 6 felony, upon dismissal of a

higher-level felony charge. This stemmed from an incident in which Mother

attempted to leave Father and he threatened Mother with a knife, again in the

presence of a minor child. Father received a sentence of eighteen months in

jail, with all but 120 days suspended. Following his conviction for

Intimidation, Father was subject to a No Contact order prohibiting his contact

with Mother, effective until February 28, 2024.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 24A-DC-750 | August 20, 2024 Page 3 of 24 [4] Mother testified that the eldest of Children had been born in Alabama in 2018,

where Mother ran a printing business after her discharge from the Marine Corp.

Mother had several relatives there, including her two older children, and Father

had an older son there. In May of 2018, Mother and Father were married in

Alabama. Soon thereafter, Father traveled to Indiana for work. According to

Mother, she came to Indiana for a “visit” in 2018 but was “trapped” by Father.

(Tr. Vol. II, pg. 56.) Mother testified that Father took her vehicle, driver’s

license, debit card, and cell phone, leaving Mother and the infant to stay in a

hotel. The couple located permanent housing and had two more children, born

in 2019 and 2021. Mother did not return to live in Alabama.

[5] Mother testified that, although Father had only two felony convictions, his

abuse of her had been pervasive throughout their relationship. Mother’s

counsel asked that Mother explain the history of domestic violence, whereupon

the trial court advised that Mother had already been given provisional custody

of Children. Father responded: “Yeah, I no got [sic] an issue with that. She

can have the kids.” (Id. at 64.) The court then admonished “we don’t need

testimony on those issues.” (Id. at 65.) However, because Mother objected to

Father having overnight visits, her counsel continued to elicit testimony relative

to Father’s treatment of Mother, Children, and Mother’s older children.

[6] Mother testified that Children had witnessed abuse on an almost daily basis;

they were afraid of Father, but also had “mixed emotions” and would “love

Dad naturally.” (Id. at 73.) According to Mother, the youngest child had

nightmares and was in therapy because of the incidents she had witnessed.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 24A-DC-750 | August 20, 2024 Page 4 of 24 Mother testified that Father beat her severely during the second pregnancy but

did not beat her during the third pregnancy; she attributed this to his pending

battery charge. However, according to Mother, Father refused to bring home

sufficient food and allocated snacks to only his children, so that Mother would

forgo eating to give portions to her older children. Also, she testified that

Father would threaten to return to his native Puerto Rico or “put her in the

hospital” if she did not comply with his wishes. (Id.)

[7] Michelle Campbell, MSW, testified that she was providing therapy to the eldest

of the couple’s children and also to Mother’s two prior-born children, because

of their exposure to domestic violence. Campbell had diagnosed five-year-old

A.C. with post-traumatic stress disorder (“PTSD”); she experienced recurring

fear that Mother would die after witnessing Father hold a knife to Mother.

Campbell also testified that the older children had reported “multiple instances

of domestic violence,” and Campbell opined that, based “on the older girls’

reports,” she believed that Father could pose a physical threat to Children. (Id.

at 91, 96.) Campbell also testified that she had reviewed reports from the

Department of Child Services (“DCS”), substantiating Father’s neglect of

Children.

[8] Demetria Futch, the maternal grandmother of Children (“Grandmother”),

testified that she was willing to provide a place for Mother and Children to stay

in Alabama. She testified that she had observed “plenty of injuries” on Mother

and also that Father had once put Mother’s “head through a wall.” (Id. at 106.)

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 24A-DC-750 | August 20, 2024 Page 5 of 24 She described Father as having “anger patterns” and claimed that he had been

responsible for holes in the wall and a broken door frame. (Id. at 107.)

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Quinisha L. Williams v. Willie Cardona-Feliciano, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quinisha-l-williams-v-willie-cardona-feliciano-indctapp-2024.