Ramona Andrews Denton v. Bobby Gene Denton, Jr.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 4, 2009
DocketCA-0008-0990
StatusUnknown

This text of Ramona Andrews Denton v. Bobby Gene Denton, Jr. (Ramona Andrews Denton v. Bobby Gene Denton, Jr.) 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
Ramona Andrews Denton v. Bobby Gene Denton, Jr., (La. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

08-990

RAMONA ANDREWS DENTON

VERSUS

BOBBY GENE DENTON, JR.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-EIGHTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF LASALLE, NO. 32,463 HONORABLE JOHN PHILIP MAUFFRAY, JR., DISTRICT JUDGE

ULYSSES GENE THIBODEAUX CHIEF JUDGE

Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, Chief Judge, Elizabeth A. Pickett, and Billy Howard Ezell, Judges.

AFFIRMED. MOTION TO STRIKE GRANTED IN PART.

Walter E. Dorroh, Jr. Dorroh & Kendrick, a PLC P. O. Box 1889 Jena, LA 71342 (318) 992-4110 COUNSEL FOR: Plaintiff/Appellee - Ramona Andrews Denton Bobby Gene Denton, Jr. In Proper Person 1803 Martin Luther King, #1015 Houma, LA 70503 (601) 955-5365 THIBODEAUX, Chief Judge.

Bobby Gene Denton, Jr., pro se appellant, appeals the trial court’s

judgment denying his request for sole custody of his minor son, Bobby Gene “Trey”

Denton, III (Trey).1 Mr. Denton seeks a reversal of the judgment which maintained

his ex-wife’s, Ramona Andrews Denton Francis’s (Mrs. Francis), domiciliary custody

of Trey. Mrs. Francis has filed a motion to strike the appellant’s briefs, due to their

lack of compliance with the requisite appellate rules governing the form and

substance of briefs. She also has asked that penalties be assessed to Mr. Denton for

the filing of a frivolous appeal.

The motion to strike is granted in part. Consideration was not given to

matters and issues raised that were not contained within the record or properly

preserved for appeal. The claim of frivolous appeal is denied. The trial court’s

judgment is affirmed.

I.

ISSUES

1. Did Mr. Denton carry the burden necessary to justify a modification of the permanent joint custody decree?

2. Should Mr. Denton be assessed court costs and penalties for filing a frivolous appeal?

1 Mr. Denton sought sole custody of both his two minor children; however, the issue of modification of the joint custody plan was decided in separate hearings for each child. The subject of this appeal is only the custody of the son. II.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Mr. Denton and his ex-wife, Mrs. Francis, were divorced in 2001 after

ten years of marriage. During the marriage, they lived in their mutual hometown of

Jena, Louisiana and had two biological children, a daughter and a son, Trey. By all

accounts, their daughter, who is fourteen years old, is a developmentally normal

child. Trey, age eleven, is autistic and does not speak. A consent judgment as to the

custody of the children was rendered in 2001, granting the parents joint custody, with

domiciliary status awarded to Mrs. Francis, who had always been the primary

caretaker, and visitation to Mr. Denton. The judgment of divorce filed in 2002 made

the custody permanent.

Mr. Denton remarried in 2002. The litigation, however, between the

parties continued due to their inability to amicably settle matters involving the

children, child support, visitation, and property. The issue of a change in custody was

ultimately raised in June of 2006, when Mr. Denton filed a Rule for Modification of

the Joint Custody Plan, asking to be designated as the domiciliary parent for both

children. Regarding his son, Trey, he asserted that his sole custody of Trey was

justified because of his superior ability and desire to provide Trey with better autism

treatment programs and education than that which his son was receiving through the

LaSalle Parish public school system while living with his mother, who he alleged was

impeding Trey’s development. Moreover, he claimed that Mrs. Francis had been

leaving their son alone with his pre-teenaged sister without proper adult supervision

for extended periods of time. Mrs. Francis opposed any changes in custody.

No action was taken on the motion, and as of March 2007, Mr. Denton’s

request for a modification of the custody plan remained unresolved. At that time,

2 through different counsel, he re-urged his request for sole custody and sought

emergency temporary custody of the children through an Ex Parte Motion for

Temporary Child Custody, Rule for Sole Custody, and Incorporated Memorandum

of Law. He alleged in this pleading that he should be granted sole custody of the

children because of multiple changes in the parties’ circumstances, which included

essentially allegations of a being able to provide a more stable home environment

and, again, the ability to provide Trey with better opportunities for the treatment of

his autism.

He also asserted that Mrs. Francis, who remained unmarried at the time,

had been repeatedly exposing the children to the physical and verbal abuse occurring

between her and her then-boyfriend, Todd Lipsey. According to Mr. Denton’s

motion, Mrs. Francis exercised poor judgment by resuming a relationship with Mr.

Lipsey and continuing to allow him into the home and in the children’s presence after

a particularly egregious incident occurred. He reported that Mr. Lipsey had been

arrested for entering the home, while Mrs. Francis and the children were present,

pouring gasoline throughout, and threatening to set the home on fire.

The trial court granted the ex parte request for temporary sole custody

of both children pursuant to La.Code Civ.P. art. 3945, and granted supervised

visitation only to Mrs. Francis. At the subsequent hearing on the issue held a few

weeks later, the trial court maintained temporary custody of the children with Mr.

Denton and granted Mrs. Francis’ request for mental health counseling and

evaluations of the children and parties.

Mary Girard, LPC, LMFT, and Cindy Nardini, LPC, LMFT, counselors

at the Life Solutions Counseling Agency, provided individual counseling,

respectively, to the parties’ daughter and to Mrs. Francis. A few months later, due to

3 the parties’ ongoing disagreements and the escalation in the filing of motions seeking

court intervention on a multitude of matters, the trial court ordered Ms. Girard and

Ms. Nardini to engage in collaborative counseling to assist Mr. Denton and Mrs.

Francis in communicating. Individual and joint sessions were held, but the

counselors submitted a joint letter in January 2008 to the court, advising that they had

been unsuccessful in facilitating any collaborative co-parenting between the parties.

Based on their observations, they concluded Mr. Denton and his current

wife were exhibiting unreasonable negativity, resentment, and unsupported criticism

of Mrs. Francis. The counselors suspected stress in the relationship between Mr.

Denton and his current wife due to the large amount of time he spent away from home

during the week at work, leaving much of the daily care of the children to his wife.

Mr. Denton works as a construction supervisor. The counselors stated that they found

it unacceptable that Trey did not have his own bedroom at his father’s home as well.

The counselors advised the court that although Mr. Denton blamed Mrs. Francis for

retarding Trey’s development, they believed his allegations to be unsupported, since

there was no evidence that Trey was receiving any special treatment for his autism

while under his care. The counselors also expressed concern to the court about Mr.

Denton’s ongoing, inappropriate use of the parties’ daughter as a messenger due to

the parties’ unwillingness to speak to each other.

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