Rester v. Manuel

619 So. 2d 655, 1993 WL 166305
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 12, 1993
Docket92-CA-831
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 619 So. 2d 655 (Rester v. Manuel) 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
Rester v. Manuel, 619 So. 2d 655, 1993 WL 166305 (La. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

619 So.2d 655 (1993)

William R. RESTER
v.
Jane Granger, wife of/and Wedney MANUEL and Linda Manuel Rester.

No. 92-CA-831.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

May 12, 1993.

*656 Michael A. Duplantier, New Orleans, for plaintiff, appellee.

D.S. "Terry" Fitzgerald, Jr., Fournet & Adams, Ltd., Lafayette, R.O. Lewis, Luling, for defendant, appellant.

Before KLIEBERT, BOWES, GRISBAUM, WICKER and CANNELLA, JJ.

*657 WICKER, Judge.

Linda Manuel Gober, formerly Mrs. William Rester, appeals a judgment awarding her former husband certain visitation rights with the children of the marriage and making provisions with regard to child support arrearages owed her. The issues in the case are proof of alleged sexual abuse of the children by Mr. Rester, the appellee; suitability of the arrangements for restricted visitation; ownership of the arrearages; and Mr. Rester's liability for one-half of the children's health care expenses. We modify in part and, as modified, affirm; remand in part, modify in part, recast and render; and reverse in part and render.

Mrs. Gober and Mr. Rester were married in 1980 and subsequently had two children, Ryan, now eleven years old, and Kylie, now ten. They divorced in Texas in 1987, with Mrs. Gober receiving physical custody of the children and Mr. Rester visitation. That Texas judgment presaged some of the problems that we are presently dealing with: the parties were mutually enjoined from disparaging each other to the children and from using alcohol or drugs around the children.

Alleging that his former wife had secreted herself and the children from him and denied him visitation rights, and that her parents knew about it, Mr. Rester sued Mrs. Gober and her parents, Wedney and Jane Manuel, in St. Charles Parish, domicile of the Manuels, in August of 1990. He claimed tortious interference with his parental rights and asked for money damages. Mrs. Gober reconvened, alleging that Mr. Rester had sexually abused the children and failed to pay child support. Then Rose Rester, Mr. Rester's mother, moved for an award of visitation with her grandchildren; and Mr. Rester sued for a change of custody and later, for blood tests to determine paternity.

Numerous depositions, hearings, and writ applications ensued, all ultimately resulting in the judgment which Mrs. Gober has appealed. The judge awarded sole custody of the children to their mother, with a proviso that she and the children have therapy. He granted Mr. Rester visitation with the children, supervised by his mother, with the proviso that he also continue in therapy. He dismissed with prejudice Mr. Rester's claims for tortious interference against Mrs. Gober and Mr. and Mrs. Manuel. Finally, he awarded Mrs. Gober part of the accumulated arrearages of child support; but he ordered the bulk of the past due money to be put into a trust fund, with Mr. Rester and his mother as trustees, for the children upon their majority.

In his ruling from the bench, the judge referred to this case as a "soap opera." He noted that the parents had managed to bring the children "to the brink of destruction," and he opined that this was one of the cruelest cases he'd ever heard. He ruled that neither of Mr. Rester's parents had been guilty of sexually abusing the children, as Mrs. Gober had alleged, and that there had been no proof that Mr. Rester had molested Kylie. With regard to Ryan, he stated that Mrs. Gober had "not proven her case beyond a reasonable doubt that [Mr. Rester was] a child sexual abuser." And, he continued, if Mr. Rester had sexually abused Ryan, "certainly nothing will ever take place like that again." However, he noted that the children believe that they have been sexually abused. He concluded "this has got to be gotten over with. Everybody has got to return to their normal life, normal living."

Mrs. Gober assigns several alleged errors: that the judge imposed a "beyond a reasonable doubt" burden of proof rather than a "preponderance of the evidence" burden of proof; that he permitted visitation despite Mr. Rester's failure to prove such visitation wouldn't be harmful to the children; that he ordered arrearages placed in a trust fund; and that he failed to order Mr. Rester to pay one-half the children's health care expenses not otherwise covered by insurance.

PROOF OF SEXUAL ABUSE

The evidence establishes that the marriage was filled with conflict from the start and remained chaotic until its end. The children, born one and two years after the marriage respectively, first seemed to unify *658 the Resters but then became an additional source of conflict. Mr. Rester and Mrs. Gober were unable to agree on their upbringing and discipline, with the mother accusing the father of spoiling the children and the father accusing the mother of harshly disciplining them. Both parents seemed to use alcohol excessively, and Mrs. Gober probably used drugs as well. The situation was exacerbated by frequent changes of residence as a result of job transfers. Finally, in the summer of 1987, Mrs. Gober took the children and left; and all questions of custody, visitation, support, and property division were reduced to judgment by a Texas court.

During 1987 and part of 1988, Mr. Rester's visits with the children were generally uneventful. However, Mr. Rester lost his job in 1988; and his job-hunting trips made his visits erratic. He did visit frequently by telephone. In addition, his child support payments became equally erratic; and Mrs. Gober frequently threatened to withhold visitation unless payments were made.

Mrs. Gober admitted herself to a residential treatment facility, The Meadows, for treatment of co-dependency and substance abuse in May of 1989. She turned temporary custody of the children over to her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Manuel, for the six weeks of her treatment. From this point on, with the exception of a weekend visitation over Father's Day in 1989, she has refused to allow any contact between Mr. Rester and his children.

Mr. Rester did not know where his ex-wife and children were living, although he had a post-office box number and was able to obtain news of them through the Manuels. He allegedly initiated this proceeding in an attempt to find the children and enforce his visitation rights. Since then, he has seen Kylie and Ryan one time, in September of 1991, by court order.

The record is filled with allegations and evidence of the parents' shortcomings both as parents and spouses, but much of this is irrelevant to the one issue: whether and how Mr. Rester can be allowed to visit with the children.

The primary consideration in awarding visitation, as custody, is the best interest of the children. La.C.C. art. 132. It is clear that Ryan and Kylie believe they have been abused by their father and, to a much lesser extent, by their paternal grandmother, from about age four or five. Whether or not abuse has been proven is not the only relevant factor in determining whether or not visitation, and under what circumstances, is in the best interest of these children at this time. Therefore, we make no ruling on the adequacy of proof of sexual abuse, although we note that the standard of proof is preponderance of the evidence and not beyond a reasonable doubt. La.C.C. art. 133 A. We are mindful of the grief and hardship caused a father and grandmother who might be wrongly accused and consequently deprived of visitation, but their interests are less important than those of the children.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
619 So. 2d 655, 1993 WL 166305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rester-v-manuel-lactapp-1993.