Rodvik v. Rodvik

151 P.3d 338, 2006 Alas. LEXIS 191, 2006 WL 3530588
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 2006
DocketS-11986
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 151 P.3d 338 (Rodvik v. Rodvik) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rodvik v. Rodvik, 151 P.3d 338, 2006 Alas. LEXIS 191, 2006 WL 3530588 (Ala. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Karsten Rodvik appeals the superior court’s resolution of his divorce proceeding. He challenges the trial court’s decision granting sole legal and primary physical custody of the couple’s three children to his former wife, Maureen. Additionally, he appeals the trial court’s decision to order supervised visitation and child support and its award of legal fees to Maureen. He also challenges the trial court’s division of property, which resulted in a distribution of marital property favoring Maureen. Finally, he argues that it was error for the trial judge to decline to recuse himself from the Rodviks’ divorce proceeding. We affirm the trial court’s custody and visitation decision but remand several discrete property issues to the trial court for further findings.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Karsten and Maureen Rodvik were married in Anchorage in 1990 and separated in 2003. They have three children, ages 13, 11, and 6. Karsten filed a complaint for divorce in January 2004 seeking custody of the three children and child support. Maureen filed an answer and counterclaim for divorce, seeking custody of the children and child support.

During the contentious divorce, Maureen filed for and received a series of protective orders. A domestic violence protective order was issued on October 24, 2003, after Kar-sten agreed to the entry of the order. In her petition for this protective order, Maureen alleged that Karsten deprived her of sleep, prevented her from leaving, was verbally abusive, drank heavily, struck the children, pushed Maureen, butted her with his shoulder, and grabbed her. Another domestic violence protective order was granted by Superior Court Judge Peter A. Michalski on April 23, 2004, on the grounds that Karsten had refused to return the children after his visitations on multiple occasions and that he contacted Maureen on matters not related to the children in violation of the earlier protective order. The court found by a preponderance of the evidence that Karsten had com *342 mitted a crime involving domestic violence against Maureen and that Karsten posed a threat to the physical safety of Maureen or the children. A similar protective order was again issued on November 1, 2004. A fourth protective order was issued on March 2, 2005 by Judge Michalski in connection with his final decision in the divorce.

The parties stipulated to the appointment of a child custody investigator to assist in the evaluation of the children’s best interests because the ease involved serious allegations of parental behavior problems, including domestic violence and alcohol abuse.

While Maureen was represented by counsel, Karsten represented himself at trial because his attorney withdrew from the proceedings on February 10, 2005 with Karsten’s consent. Karsten requested a continuance in order to obtain new counsel, but his request was denied. Karsten did not provide any discovery leading up to trial, even after the superior court issued an order requiring Karsten to respond to the discovery requests of Maureen.

A trial was held from February 28, 2005 through March 2, 2005 before Judge Miehal-ski. In connection with the property division, Maureen submitted a proposed property division, but Karsten did not. Testimony at trial in connection with the property division, discussed more fully below, was based primarily on Maureen’s proposed property division. The court awarded Maureen $158,560 worth of property, $12,560 more than the $146,000 value of the property awarded to Karsten.

The trial court heard testimony from Maureen, Karsten, a guardian ad litem (GAL) appointed for the children, an Office of Children’s Services investigator, the child custody investigator, the family’s pastor, family members, neighbors, one of the children’s teachers, and the children’s piano teacher. The child custody investigator issued a report, concluding that Maureen bore most of the responsibility for the children over the years, had the most stable source of income, prioritized the children, was organized and responsive to the children’s needs, and had largely refrained from criticizing Karsten in front of the children during the divorce. With respect to Karsten, the custody investigator determined that he was less capable of meeting the children’s needs, that he was less responsible for meeting the children’s needs during the marriage, that he had an unstable employment history, that he was chronically late, and that, besides the piano lessons, he was less involved in the children’s activities than Maureen. The custody investigator also concluded that Karsten “has difficulty separating his emotions from those of his children, insisting that his sadness and despair over the end of the marriage is theirs.” She added that “[Karsten’s] denial, anxiety, and sense of urgency regarding the divorce interfere with his ability to be emotionally available to the children during this difficult time.” The child custody investigator recommended that Maureen be awarded sole legal and primary physical custody.

On June 14, 2005, the superior court issued a decree of divorce and awarded sole legal and primary physical custody of the children to Maureen. In its findings of fact and conclusions of law, the superior court based its decision primarily on Karsten’s erratic behavior and the emotional impact that his behavior had had on the children. The trial court also found that Karsten’s visits should be supervised.

In order to establish Karsten’s income as a piano tuner for purposes of determining child support, Maureen presented an expert witness, a piano instructor, who spoke to the typical volume of business and fees generated by piano tuners. Based on this testimony, the superior court imputed income to Kar-sten in the amount of $40,000. The court also found that Karsten’s “passive-aggressive non-participation and difficulty” entitled Maureen to legal fees.

Maureen filed a motion for entry of additional findings of fact “out of concern that the court’s final order not be vulnerable to legal attack.” In response, the trial court issued additional findings of fact, stating that the property division, while weighted slightly more in favor of Maureen, was equitable given the fact that Maureen would be caring for the parties’ children who “would likely need counseling for years to come.” The *343 additional findings of fact also addressed more specifically how Karsten’s denigration of Maureen in front of the children demonstrated that Karsten could not meet the children’s mental, emotional, and psychological needs, and how Karsten was unable to foster a relationship between the children and Maureen. The trial court also expressly adopted the recommendations of the GAL.

Karsten appeals the superior court’s findings with respect to the property classification and distribution, child custody and visitation, child support, and legal fees. He also argues that Judge Michalski should have re-cused himself from the divorce proceedings because Karsten had criticized one of the judge’s prior decisions on a constitutional issue and Karsten worked to effect a change to the Alaska Constitution to overrule that decision. Karsten was apparently active in the campaign in support of the amendment and was publicly critical of Judge Michalski’s decision.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 P.3d 338, 2006 Alas. LEXIS 191, 2006 WL 3530588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodvik-v-rodvik-alaska-2006.