Roberts v. Roberts

49 Va. Cir. 422, 1999 Va. Cir. LEXIS 359
CourtSpotsylvania County Circuit Court
DecidedAugust 13, 1999
DocketCase No. CH98-786
StatusPublished

This text of 49 Va. Cir. 422 (Roberts v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Spotsylvania County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts v. Roberts, 49 Va. Cir. 422, 1999 Va. Cir. LEXIS 359 (Va. Super. Ct. 1999).

Opinion

By Judge William H. Ledbetter, Jr.

Grounds of divorce and child custody are the primary controversies in this divorce case.

Facts

The parties were married on August 16,1997, two months after the birth of their child, Ira Nicole.

For several months prior to their marriage and for the first several months of their marriage, Mr. and Mrs. Roberts lived with Mr. Roberts’ mother in Oak Grove Subdivision. In October of 1997, they moved to Steeplechase Apartments. Mr. Roberts worked for Collins Construction Company, while Mrs. Roberts cared for the child. For a while, she worked part time in the evenings in a video store.

The marriage was rocky, at times stormy. The parties testified at length about incidents that occurred, especially in 1998. As would be expected, their versions of those events differ.

On September 20, 1998, Mr. Roberts took the child and moved back to his mother’s house. Mrs. Roberts remained at Steeplechase until the lease expired and then moved to her parents’ house on Forest Grove Drive.

Mr. Roberts filed a petition for custody in the juvenile court. On October 15,1998, that court awarded temporary custody of Ira Nicole to Mr. Roberts, [423]*423with supervised visitation to Mrs. Roberts. A final hearing was scheduled, but before that hearing could be held, Mrs. Roberts filed this divorce suit.

The parties reached an agreement regarding custody of their child. This court incorporated that agreement in a pendente lite order. By the terms of that agreed order entered on January 7,1999, die parents share custody, alternating on a weekly basis.

Since then, a number of events have occurred that bear on the issues before the court.

First, Mr. and Mrs. Roberts attempted reconciliation in January 1999. They did not live together, but they “dated” and, at least according to the testimony of Mrs. Roberts, engaged in sexual relations.

Second, Mrs. Roberts left her parents’ home. Her whereabouts after that are not dear, except that for a while she stayed at a motel; she lived with Michael David Keys and his fiancee in Unionville; she lived with a girlfriend; she slept on a loading dock behind Breezewood Shopping Center; and at some point, she returned to the home of her parents.

Third, Mrs. Roberts struck up a relationship with Scott S. Elder. They spent the night together a number of times and engaged in sexual relations.

Fourth, during the time Mrs. Roberts lived outside her parents’ home, her weeks with the child under the custody arrangement were truncated or omitted altogether. During those periods, Mr. Roberts was thedefacto custodian, and his mother was Ira Nicole’s primary caretaker while Mr. Roberts was at work.

Fifth, in March 1999, Mrs. Roberts discovered that she was pregnant. She is unsure whether Mr. Roberts or Mr. Elder is the father. Most recently, she has strengthened her belief that the child was conceived in January while she was “dating” her husband.

Now, Mr. Roberts continues to reside with Ira Nicole, his mother, and his brother in Oak Grove Subdivision. Mrs. Roberts has obtained employment in Fredericksburg as a live-in caretaker for an elderly couple. She declines to reveal her address for fear that Mr. Roberts will harass her as he has in the past.

Mr. Roberts is 21 years old; Mrs. Roberts is 19.

Status of the Litigation

As noted above, die parties began litigation for custody in the juvenile court shortly after their separation. On October 15,1998, that court awarded temporary custody to Mr. Roberts and scheduled a final hearing.

Mrs. Roberts instituted this divorce suit on December 3, 1998, and scheduled a pendente lite custody hearing for December 21, 1998, thereby [424]*424divesting the juvenile court of further jurisdiction in the matter. Mr. Roberts was served with process on December 4,1998.

Before the pendente lite hearing, the parties reached an agreement and presented it to the court on December 21,1998. On January 7,1999, the court entered the agreed pendente lite order. The order provides for joint custody, with physical custody alternating between the parties on a weekly basis. The arrangement was conditioned on each party living with his or her parents. Ira Nicole would not be in the presence of the parties’ “boyfriends or girlfriends.”

Mr. Roberts filed an answer on December 21,1998. He filed a pleading seeking leave to file a late cross-bill. On December 28, 1998, without obtaining leave of court, he filed a cross-bill alleging Mrs. Roberts’ adultery with “Jed Mitchell and various other persons.” Mrs. Roberts responded to the cross-bill and also moved the court to dismiss the cross-bill as untimely. (Neither party has formally sought a ruling on the cross-bill issue, and no proposed order has been entered either to allow the cross-bill or to strike it.)

Depositions were taken on April 30, 1999, May 27, 1999, and June 25, 1999. On July 20, 1999, the court conducted an ore tenus hearing for the purpose of allowing the parties to supplement the depositions on the issue of custody. The court took the case under advisement. Counsel submitted memoranda. This opinion addresses all issues.

Divorce

Both parties have expended considerable time and energy attempting to prove fault grounds for divorce. Mrs. Roberts’ bill of complaint seeks a divorce based on cruelty. Mr. Roberts’ cross-bill alleges cruelty and adultery.

Cruelty may be established by any conduct that renders marital cohabitation unsafe or that involves danger to life, limb, or health. Physical violence and reasonable apprehension of bodily harm may be components of cruelty, but mental anguish and unrelenting neglect and humiliation may also be as bad as physical wounds in such degree as to amount to cruelty. Cruelty may consist of a single act of atrocious misconduct that causes serious bodily harm, but generally, it consists of successive acts of ill treatment. Sollie v. Sollie, 202 Va. 855 (1961); DeMott v. DeMott, 198 Va. 22 (1956). However, a divorce based on cruelty grounds cannot be granted merely upon evidence of marital disharmony, angiy words, and annoyances. Sprott v. Sprott, 233 Va. 238 (1987); Coe v. Coe, 225 Va. 616 (1983); Beers v. Beers, 198 Va. 682 (1957).

In sum, in order to prove divorce grounds of cruelty, the misconduct must be serious, such that it amounts to extreme cruelty that is entirely subversive [425]*425of family relations, rendering family life intolerable. See Swisher, Diehl, and Cottrell, Virginia Family Law (2d ed. 1997) § 7-3.

Using these criteria, neither party has established cruelty grounds of divorce. There is some evidence of angry verbal confrontations, rudeness, vulgarity, snatching and slapping, pushing and shoving, and other sallies of passion. However, these incidents were infrequent, even isolated, occurrences that did not cause bodily harm and did not make family life well nigh intolerable for either party. At other times, they were affectionate, cooperative, considerate, and caring. In essence, these parties were quite young and very immature. They were teenagers with relatively few financial resources who were trying, unsuccessfully, to live together and raise a child.

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Related

Sprott v. Sprott
355 S.E.2d 881 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1987)
DeMott v. DeMott
92 S.E.2d 342 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1956)
Sollie v. Sollie
120 S.E.2d 281 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1961)
Coe v. Coe
303 S.E.2d 923 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1983)
Beers v. Beers
96 S.E.2d 139 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1957)

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Bluebook (online)
49 Va. Cir. 422, 1999 Va. Cir. LEXIS 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-roberts-vaccspotsylvani-1999.