Rickey Thibodeau v. Ashley Blanchard

CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMarch 18, 2013
Docket2012-290
StatusUnpublished

This text of Rickey Thibodeau v. Ashley Blanchard (Rickey Thibodeau v. Ashley Blanchard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rickey Thibodeau v. Ashley Blanchard, (Vt. 2013).

Opinion

Note: Decisions of a three-justice panel are not to be considered as precedent before any tribunal.

ENTRY ORDER

SUPREME COURT DOCKET NO. 2012-290

MARCH TERM, 2013

Rickey Thibodeau } APPEALED FROM: } } Superior Court, Windsor Unit, v. } Family Division } } Ashley Blanchard } DOCKET NO. 386-11-11 Wrdm

Trial Judge: William D. Cohen

In the above-entitled cause, the Clerk will enter:

Mother appeals the court’s decision granting parental rights and responsibilities of the parties’ children to father. On appeal, mother argues that the court erred by altering an existing shared parenting arrangement and not considering splitting legal responsibilities. She also contends that the court abused its discretion in evaluating the statutory best-interests factors, especially as to the primary caregiver. We affirm.

The parties were in a long-term relationship, but never married. They are the parents of two children, born in October 2004 and July 2006. Following the parties’ break-up in 2008, the parties shared custody of the children through an informal agreement. In this arrangement, the children switched households on Saturdays and Tuesdays or Wednesdays so that each parent had the children approximately 50% of the time.

In November 2011, father filed a parentage action. He alleged that mother had scheduled surgery for their daughter without his consent and was threatening to move their children from their current school to the school district where her home was located.

The court held a hearing on the motion at which both parties appeared pro se. Father testified that he lives in Norwich next door to his parents in the home where the children were born and the parties previously resided. Father’s girlfriend and her two children also now live in the home. Since they became school-aged, the children have attended school in Norwich. Father expressed his desire for the children to spend time with their mother but also wanted the children to stay in their current school where he believed they were well adjusted. Father thought it was important for the children to remain in a stable environment and was concerned that mother would be unable to provide this stability because she had moved several times in the previous years. Father thought that another change in school would be particularly difficult for his son. At the hearing, father proposed that the children live with one parent through the school week and the other on weekends. Mother acknowledged that she had moved several times after the parties’ break up. She explained, however, that she was now in a stable situation after moving to Windsor eight months previously. She explained that she now has a home with bedrooms for the children and a yard. She expressed that she wanted to move the children to the Windsor school district. She initially requested a “Monday through Friday” schedule, but then said she would not support father’s proposal that one parent have the children five days during the week if it meant that she would not see her children for the entire week.

The court examined the statutory factors and found that most of them favored neither parent. The court found that both parents were equally able to provide the children with love and affection; meet the children’s physical and developmental needs; and foster a positive relationship with the other parent. See 15 V.S.A. § 665(b). The court found that the most significant factor was “the quality of the child’s adjustment to the child’s present housing, school and community and the potential effect of any change.” Id. § 665(b)(4). On this point, the court found that mother had moved several times in the past years and that her current situation was fairly recent.1 On the other hand, the court found that the children were well adjusted to the current school and community in Norwich and that that factor weighed in favor of granting father custody. Mother appeals.

Mother first argues that the court erred in awarding father physical and legal rights and responsibilities, and in adjusting the children’s schedule so that she ended up with them less than 50% of the time, when the parties had a longstanding agreement to share physical and legal rights and responsibilities and divide the children’s time equally. We consider each of these distinct components of the trial court’s order—legal rights and responsibilities, physical rights and responsibilities, and the allocation of time between the parents—separately, as they are closely related but also distinct.

The court acknowledged that the parties had been able to share parenting responsibilities successfully for four years. By the time of the hearing, however, the agreement no longer held. When father filed the action to establish his parentage, he requested an order for shared physical and legal rights and responsibilities. In her counterclaim, mother asked for shared legal rights and responsibilities, but sole physical rights and responsibilities. The evidence presented at the hearing showed that the parents were generally, and commendably, cooperating effectively concerning most issues relating to the children, but did not agree concerning medical care and where the children should attend school. Both parents also indicated that they thought the children should stay with the parent who lived by the school they attended during the school week. In his proposed parenting plan, submitted at the court’s request after the hearing, father requested primary legal rights and responsibilities, indicated a continuing willingness to share physical rights and responsibilities, and proposed a schedule pursuant to which the children would live with him (and attend school in Norwich) during the week, and with their mother on the weekends. Mother proposed that she be awarded legal and physical rights and responsibilities, and proposed that the children live with her during the week and with father on the weekends.

Given this record the trial court reasonably concluded that the parties did not agree to share legal rights and responsibilities. The core issues dividing the parents implicated legal

1 The court also noted that mother had been in an abusive relationship, but did not elaborate further. This did not appear to factor into the court’s decision. 2 rights and responsibilities, so an order that they share would not have worked. Moreover, although both parents initially filed pleadings indicating a willingness to share legal rights and responsibilities, by the end of the proceedings, both parents sought primary legal rights and responsibilities. Likewise, although the record supports mother’s argument that the parties were able to effectively share physical rights and responsibilities, and that father was willing to do so even after the hearing, mother specifically requested that she be awarded physical rights and responsibilities. Given this record, the trial court’s decision to award both legal and physical rights and responsibilities to one parent or the other was not only within its discretion; it was required. See 15 V.S.A. § 665(a) (“When the parents cannot agree to divide or share parental rights and responsibilities, the court shall award parental rights and responsibilities primarily or solely to one parent.”). Had the court imposed a shared arrangement without agreement, it would have been error. See Cabot v. Cabot, 166 Vt. 485, 493 (1997).

As the parties’ discussion with the trial court unfolded, it became clear that their disagreement about where the children should attend school included a disagreement about where the children should primarily live during the school week. Both parties recommended a parenting plan that called for the children to live during the school week with one parent, and on weekends with the other—a break from their longstanding equal allocation of parenting time.

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2008 VT 12 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2008)
Mullin v. Phelps
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Plante v. Plante
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Payrits v. Payrits
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In re S.B.L.
553 A.2d 1078 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1988)

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Bluebook (online)
Rickey Thibodeau v. Ashley Blanchard, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rickey-thibodeau-v-ashley-blanchard-vt-2013.