Reid v. Reid

897 So. 2d 349, 2004 WL 2128791
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedSeptember 17, 2004
Docket2030406
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 897 So. 2d 349 (Reid v. Reid) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reid v. Reid, 897 So. 2d 349, 2004 WL 2128791 (Ala. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinions

This is the second time these parties have been before this court. *Page 351

On June 26, 2000, the trial court entered a judgment divorcing Heidi Gayle Holcomb Reid ("the mother") from Eric Jason Reid ("the father"). The mother was awarded custody of the child born of the parties' marriage.

On October 22, 2001, the father petitioned to modify custody. The mother answered and counterpetitioned, seeking, among other things, a modification of the father's visitation with the child and a modification of the father's child-support obligation. After conducting an ore tenus hearing, the trial court entered an order on December 18, 2001, that, among other things, awarded custody of the child to the father. In that order, however, the trial court reserved consideration of the issues of child support and the division of the proceeds of a settlement of a legal action. The mother appealed, and on September 6, 2002, this court dismissed the mother's appeal as having been taken from a nonfinal judgment. Reid v. Reid, 844 So.2d 1212 (Ala.Civ.App. 2002) ("Reid I").

On remand, the mother, on August 12, 2003, filed a pleading entitled "Amendment to Counterclaim," in which she alleged a material change in circumstances and in which she sought a "modification" of the trial court's December 18, 2001, order awarding custody of the child to the father (hereinafter "the mother's petition to modify"). The trial court originally scheduled a hearing on the mother's petition to modify for December 4, 2003, but it rescheduled that hearing for October 23, 2003. On October 23, 2003, the trial court conducted an ore tenus hearing on the mother's petition to modify; the father did not appear for that hearing. On October 24, 2003, the trial court entered an order that, among other things, awarded custody of the child to the mother.

On November 3, 2003, the father moved the trial court to vacate its October 24, 2003, order based on his allegation that he had not received notice of the October 23, 2003, hearing date. The trial court conducted an ore tenus hearing on the father's motion to vacate. On November 10, 2003, the trial court entered an order vacating its October 24, 2003, order and rescheduling a final hearing on the merits. After the trial court conducted a final hearing over the course of two days in January 2004, it entered a judgment in which it awarded custody of the child to the father. The mother appealed.

The mother contends on appeal that the trial court erred in setting aside its October 24, 2003, order that had awarded her custody of the child. The mother contends that the father failed to present sufficient evidence to demonstrate that he did not receive notice of the October 23, 2003, hearing. The following facts are derived from the evidence presented at the hearing on the father's motion to vacate the October 24, 2003, order.

The father testified that he received notice of the mother's August 12, 2003, petition to modify together with a scheduling order that indicated that the trial court had scheduled a hearing on the mother's petition for December 4, 2003. The father testified that upon receiving those documents he went to see the attorney who had represented him in the proceedings on his 2001 petition to modify custody; that attorney (hereinafter sometimes referred to as "the father's former attorney") had withdrawn from representing the father during the mother's first appeal to this court. The father testified that, after his former attorney told him how much his representation of the father would cost, he informed the former attorney that he would be back to see him.

In late September 2003, the trial court clerk's office sent a notice to the father's *Page 352 former attorney notifying him of the December 4, 2003, hearing. The father's former attorney returned the scheduling notice to the clerk's office with a letter explaining that he did not, at that time, represent the father. On October 2, 2003, the day after the clerk's office received the returned scheduling notice from the father's former attorney, someone in the clerk's office mailed that scheduling notice to the father.

It appears, however, that the trial court entered an order rescheduling the hearing on the mother's petition to modify to October 23, 2003. The evidence at the hearing on the father's motion to vacate indicated that the new scheduling notice was stamped to indicate that it had been filed with the trial court clerk and placed in the court file on September 30, 2003. However, even at the time of the November 2003 hearing on the father's motion to vacate the October 24, 2003, order, neither the handwritten case-action summary nor the computer-generated case-action summary contained a notation indicating that the new scheduling order had been filed in the trial court clerk's office.

The record indicates that the mother's attorney attempted to serve the father with a copy of the notice rescheduling the hearing to October 23, 2003, by certified mail; the return address on the certified letter indicated that the letter had been sent by the trial court clerk. According to the father, on approximately October 1, 2003, he was in the process of changing residences when he received a notice in his mailbox indicating that he had received a certified letter that could be retrieved from the post office. The certified-mail notice indicated that the letter was from the trial court clerk. Rather than retrieving the certified letter, on October 2, 2003, the father called the trial court clerk. The trial court clerk testified that he recalled speaking with the father and that he informed the father that the hearing was scheduled for December 4, 2003. The trial court clerk testified that he based that representation on his referencing the computer-generated case-action summary. According to the father, the trial court clerk indicated that he would send the father another notice through regular mail. The clerk did not remember making that statement. Shortly after his October 2, 2003, conversation with the trial court clerk, however, the father received, through regular mail, the scheduling order sent on October 2, 2003, by the trial court clerk's office; that scheduling order, which had been returned to the clerk's office by the father's former attorney, indicated that the hearing was scheduled for December 4, 2003.

The father never retrieved the certified letter from the post office, and that certified letter was returned, unopened, to the trial court clerk's office. The record indicates that after the father was served with a copy of the October 24, 2003, order, he went to the trial court clerk's office and opened the certified letter. It is undisputed that that certified letter contained a scheduling notice indicating that the hearing was to be conducted on October 23, 2003.

On October 7, 2003, the mother's attorney had the father personally served, purportedly with notice of the October 23, 2003, hearing. The father did not deny that he had been personally served with notice of a hearing on October 7, 2003. The father testified, however, that the notice he received from the sheriff on October 7, 2003, was another notice for the December 4, 2003, hearing. The father submitted the summons and scheduling notice he received on October 7, 2003, into evidence; the witnesses who examined that summons and scheduling notice *Page 353 agreed that it did not appear that the staple attaching the summons to the scheduling notice indicating that a hearing would be conducted on December 4, 2003, had been removed. The file copy for the October 7, 2003, service indicated, however, that the sheriff had given the father notice of the October 23, 2003, hearing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
897 So. 2d 349, 2004 WL 2128791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reid-v-reid-alacivapp-2004.