Ramsey v. Morales

131 So. 3d 64, 2013 WL 6091613
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 20, 2013
DocketNos. 48,765-CA, 48,766-CA, 48,767-JAC
StatusPublished

This text of 131 So. 3d 64 (Ramsey v. Morales) 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
Ramsey v. Morales, 131 So. 3d 64, 2013 WL 6091613 (La. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

DREW, J.

|! Edgar Morales appeals a judgment awarding primary domiciliary custody of his twin daughters to their mother, Rebecca Leeann Ramsey. Having thoroughly reviewed these consolidated records, we find no abuse of discretion below, and we affirm.

BACKGROUND

In 2008, at the age of 18, Leeann Ramsey and her significant other, Kayla Bennett, moved into the home of Edgar and Rebecca Morales. At some point, Edgar and his wife asked Leeann and Kayla if they would have a baby for them.

Edgar, who is 10 years older than Leeann, began a sexual relationship with her that resulted in Leeann becoming pregnant with twins.

[65]*65In April of 2009, Leeann entered into a written agreement1 which provided that she was having the baby for the Morales-es, with whom the baby would live, and that the Moraleses would make all decisions about the child, though Leeann could see the baby at any time by giving notice. The twins were born in October of 2009.

On August 18, 2011, when the twins were 22 months old, Leeann filed a petition for custody. Later that month, the Moraleses filed a separate suit, with a rule for custody and a proffered ex parte order for temporary custody. Days later, the trial court issued an instanter order placing custody of the twins with the Department of Family Services (“DFS”), which accounts for the third record.2

12As often happens when instanter orders grant custody to DFS, the parties quickly reached agreement as to an interim order designating a one-week rotation of physical custody of the twins. The trial court recalled the instanter order and approved the weekly rotation of physical custody between Leeann and Edgar, pending a decision on custody and visitation.

TRIAL

A hotly contested trial was held on five dates between March and September of 2012. Rebecca Morales was ultimately dismissed as a party.

In a ruling rendered November 2, 2012, the trial court noted that each parent had at times displayed behavior which put his or her own interest ahead of the twins’ best interests. The court also noted that it could not find clear and convincing evidence justifying an award of sole custody. While each party had made accusations against the other, the court found most of the accusations to be inconsequential or moot. The court recognized that the parties were willing to address their problems.

After considering the factors listed in La. C.C. art. 184,3 the court ^acknowledged that the determination of custody was a close call. The trial court was particularly impressed by the stability and geographical nearness of Leeann’s family, which would afford her a network [66]*66of assistance with the children. In addition, Leeann’s work hours were more flexible than Edgar’s.

The trial court designated Leeann as the domiciliary parent,4 which is the sole issue in this appeal.

We annex hereto and adopt in toto the trial court’s ruling relative to its domiciliary assignment.5 The document is thorough, well-organized, and an incisive model of clarity. This court expresses its appreciation for a job well done.

EDGAR’S ARGUMENT ON APPEAL

Edgar argues that the trial court was manifestly erroneous by not fully considering the evidence or properly applying it to certain factors (1, 4, 12) under Art. 134.

Factor 1: Love, affection, and other emotional ties between the parties and the children

The trial court found that both parents loved the twins and were involved in their upbringing.

Edgar argues that the evidence shows:

|4« a strong emotional tie between Edgar and his children and a lack of emotional connection between Leeann and the twins;
• Leeann contracted away her parental rights while the twins were still in her womb, and she held herself out as their aunt and not their mother;
• Leeann saw the twins only once a month after they were born and even those visits were not maternal visits;
• he cared for the twins from the time they were born until the issuance of the instanter order in August of 2011; and
• the twins were not meaningfully in Leeann’s care until October of 2011.

Leeann responds that Jessica Byrd, a social worker assigned to the twins, testified that the twins had a hard time separating from both Edgar and Leeann. Carol Jung, a friend of both parents, testified that the twins love both parents.

Factor 4: Length of time in a stable, adequate environment, and the desirability of maintaining continuity of same

The trial court concluded that the existing temporary custody arrangement had not been damaging to the twins and had worked well.

Edgar argues that:

• the continuity to be considered should not be limited to the start of litigation but should go back to the birth of the children;
• he cared for the twins from birth until the issuance of the instanter order; and
• the court did not find that he had provided an inadequate or unstable environment for the twins.

Leeann responds that:

• it is insignificant that the twins lived with Edgar for their first two years because she was also living there;
• Edgar has not provided the twins with a stable environment, in that he | ¡¡moved from Monroe to Calhoun to Columbia and then to Grayson during the first two years of the lives of the twins;
[67]*67• he now lives in a small mobile home in Columbia within 2.5 miles of 17 registered sex offenders;
• Rebecca has an arrest record relating to traffic matters and bad checks; and
• Edgar is an illegal alien.

Factor 12: Care for and rearing of the children previously exercised by each party

Social worker Byrd testified that Edgar told her that Leeann helped care for the twins. The record also preponderates that Leeann may have been afraid to take the twins with her when she returned to her parents in 2011 because of the bogus written agreement and because of threats from Rebecca Morales. She sued to obtain custody within a few days of returning to be with her parents.

The Other Nine Factors

The remaining factors of Art. 134 either favor Leeann or are inconclusive. These appear to have played no part in the trial court’s decision.

OUR ANALYSIS

These parents are flawed, as are we all. Doubtless each litigant regrets certain actions taken in the past.

Our duty in this appeal is to decide whether it was manifestly erroneous or clearly wrong to designate Leeann as the domiciliary parent. We cannot make that finding on these consolidated records.

The trial court found this case to be close. We agree, and it is 1 fiprobable that had the trial court ruled the other way, we would be constrained to affirm that judgment. As it is, we affirm the judgment below.

DECREE

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131 So. 3d 64, 2013 WL 6091613, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramsey-v-morales-lactapp-2013.