Renee Michelle Tracy, n/k/a Renee Michelle Buchli v. Shane Elwood Tracy

2017 WY 17, 388 P.3d 1257, 2017 WL 696133, 2017 Wyo. LEXIS 17
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 22, 2017
DocketS-16-0126
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 2017 WY 17 (Renee Michelle Tracy, n/k/a Renee Michelle Buchli v. Shane Elwood Tracy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Renee Michelle Tracy, n/k/a Renee Michelle Buchli v. Shane Elwood Tracy, 2017 WY 17, 388 P.3d 1257, 2017 WL 696133, 2017 Wyo. LEXIS 17 (Wyo. 2017).

Opinion

DAVIS, Justice.

[¶1] Shane Tracy (Father) successfully petitioned for modification of the child custody provisions of his divorce decree and thereby obtained custody of his young son and daughter. 1 His ex-wife, Renee Buchli (Mother), appeals from the district court’s modification order, as well as from a temporary order entered early in the litigation. We affirm.

ISSUES

[¶2] Mother raises the following four issues on appeal:

1. Did the district court err when six months prior to trial, it granted Father temporary physical custody of the children upon offers of proof and argument, rather than after holding a full evidentiary hearing?
2. Did the court abuse its discretion by allowing the children’s counselor to testify as an expert witness at trial even though Father had not made a disclosure of that witness’s proposed testimony which complied with all requirements of the Wyoming Rules of Civil Procedure?
3. Did the district court abuse its discretion in ultimately awarding custody of the children to Father after a full evidentiary hearing?
4. Did the court violate Mother’s constitutional rights to interstate travel and to associate with her children when it modified custody in favor of Father?

FACTS

[¶3] The parties divorced on July 18, 2013. By the terms of a stipulated decree of divorce, Mother was granted custody of the children, subject to Father’s right to liberal visitation. The decree also provided that the children were to attend Meadowlark School in Sheridan to take advantage of superior educational opportunities at that facility.

[¶4] Later Mother became involved with the boyfriend she eventually married, and the two began living together in August of 2014. From that point on, the boyfriend commuted daily from Sheridan to his job at a Gillette area coal mine. On April 10," 2015, Mother advised Father by -letter that she intended to move to Gillette with the children in August of that year. Father responded‘on May 27 by filing a petition to modify the custody, visitation, and support provisions of the parties’ divorce decree, as well as a motion for temporary custody. Mother’s answer and counterclaim agreed that her planned move constituted a sufficient material-change of circumstances to reopen the divorce decree. 2

[¶5] Before and after the move, the children began to exhibit serious emotional and behavioral problems. Ten-year-old BJT began experiencing persistent bouts of uncontrollable crying, and five-year-old SST began to uncharacteristically order adults ^around and otherwise aggressively attempt to control them. Mother consequently enrolled the children in counseling with Deiadra Smidt. BJT began twice weekly sessions in June of 2015, and SST began therapy the following month.

[¶6] The district court issued an order setting a hearing on the motion for temporary custody for August 7, 2015. As the transcript of that hearing establishes, school would start a few weeks after that hearing, and it was therefore important to address the situation one way or another within a short tinie. The same order set a one-day bench trial on the motion for February 5, 2016, and it set other deadlines to assure that the case was ready for trial on that date.

[¶7] Approximately one week after that order issued, Ms. Smidt copied Mother, Father, and their attorneys with a letter summarizing her work to date with BJT. She *1260 reported that the boy’s grave state of conflict over the pending move threatened to make him progressively more sad, depressed, fearful, and anxious unless he continued with therapy to help him develop coping skills to respond to the pressures he was feeling.

[¶8] At the beginning of the temporary custody hearing, the district court reminded the parties and counsel that because less than an hour had been set aside for the proceeding, it did not expect to hear any testimony. It would instead hear only legal arguments and offers of proof from counsel as to facts currently at their disposal. Neither counsel objected to proceeding in that manner, which we deduce is the practice in the Fourth Judicial District. 3 The hearing was a free-ranging one, with both parties and their attorneys contributing, although the clients were not under oath. The court asked a number of questions of counsel and the parents.

[¶9] Father’s attorney focused on the need to keep the children, particularly BJT, in counseling with Smidt and in the school where they were comfortable and successful and had friends. Counsel also noted that Father’s mother and extended family would help him attend to the children’s needs when he had to work. Finally, counsel reported that Mother and her boyfriend intended to live in a toy hauler 4 trailer with the children until they could save enough money to build a house in Gillette.

[¶10] Before building the house, Mother and her boyfriend would need to construct a road and provide water, waste facilities, and electricity for the property on which the house was to be built. When Mother moved with the children to Gillette on August 1, 2015, shortly before the temporary order hearing, the toy hauler had to be parked in a recreational vehicle park populated mostly by transient workers in the oil and mineral industries because of the lack of these amenities. In addition, Mother had at that point decided not to work so that she could stay home with the children when they were not in school.

[¶11] The court expressed concern over Mother’s somewhat unsettled and provisional planning for the future. It had concerns that Mother had placed her financial welfare, and to some extent that of the children, in her boyfriend Mr. Buchli’s hands, although they were not married. However, it was far more concerned that the children be given the best chance at resolving the serious emotional problems caused by the move. It concluded that interest would best be served by leaving them where they could attend Meadowlark Elementary School, and by continuing the therapeutic relationship they had with Ms. Smidt until a trial 5 of the modification petition could be held.

[¶12] Consequently, the court granted Father’s request for temporary custody of the children from the start of the new school year until the upcoming trial in February of 2016. The court made it clear that it was normally “very reluctant” to modify custody on a temporary basis, but that it would do so under these unique circumstances. It also indicated that the order was indeed temporary, and that it was just intended to maintain a stable status quo with regard to schooling and counseling until it could hold a full evidentiary hearing. The court also adjusted visitation and child support to accommodate the temporary arrangement. A written order followed. 6

*1261 [¶13] On October 23, 2015, Father designated Smidt as an expert witness. The disclosure provided as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2017 WY 17, 388 P.3d 1257, 2017 WL 696133, 2017 Wyo. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/renee-michelle-tracy-nka-renee-michelle-buchli-v-shane-elwood-tracy-wyo-2017.