Rogers v. Rogers
This text of 577 So. 2d 761 (Rogers v. Rogers) 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.
Opinion
Randy Layne ROGERS
v.
Leah Munson ROGERS.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
Larry Buquoi, Gonzales, for plaintiff Randy Layne Rogers.
J. Louis Watkins, III, Houma, for defendant/appellant Leah Munson Rogers.
Before SAVOIE, CRAIN and FOIL, JJ.
FOIL, Judge.
This appeal is brought by defendant, Leah Munson Rogers Broadwater, from a judgment which denied her request to modify a joint custody plan by awarding her domiciliary custody of her two minor children. We find no error or abuse of discretion and affirm.
FACTS
The parties were married on June 26, 1982, and two children were subsequently born during the marriage. A physical separation *762 took place in March, 1988, and plaintiff, Randy Layne Rogers, filed a petition for legal separation in April, 1988. He requested that there be joint custody of the children, with him being named the primary custodial parent. Defendant filed an answer in proper person, wherein she agreed to plaintiff being awarded the physical custody of the children subject to her visitation rights if the court should grant legal separation based on mutual fault. A judgment of separation was granted on May 2, 1988, based on mutual fault, awarding joint custody under the conditions agreed upon by defendant. In January, 1989, plaintiff filed a divorce action against his wife, requesting that custody be awarded as it was in the judgment of separation. Prior to a hearing on the matter, defendant signed an affidavit waiving her right to appear and agreeing that a default judgment be entered against her. Thus, by consent judgment, the parties were awarded the joint custody of the minor children, with the plaintiff/father being named as the domiciliary parent, subject to specified visitation rights of the mother.
After living with another person for approximately one year, the defendant married him in June, 1989. In August of 1989, she filed a rule for change of custody, requesting that she be awarded the physical custody of the children. Specifically, she claimed that since the custody decree, the circumstances of the parties had substantially changed in that she had remarried. Defendant also alleged that she could provide a better home and a more stable environment for the children.
After a hearing on the matter, the trial court denied defendant's request for a change of the domiciliary parent. From this adverse judgment, defendant appeals, assigning the following errors:
1. The trial court erred in determining the physical custody of the minor children should not be transferred from their father to their mother;
2. The trial court erred in determining that the mother could not provide a more stable environment for the children;
3. The trial court erred in determining that the father was providing a stable relationship for the children; and
4. The trial court erred in determining that the mother's previous living arrangement prevented the court from granting a change in the physical custody of the minor children.
MODIFICATION OF CUSTODY
La.Civ.Code art. 157 states that, "[i]n all cases of separation and divorce, and change of custody after an original award, permanent custody of the child or children shall be granted to the parents in accordance with Article 146." La.Civ.Code art. 146 provides that changes in custody may be awarded according to the "best interest of the child."[1]
In the leading case of Bergeron v. Bergeron, 492 So.2d 1193 (La.1986), the Louisiana Supreme Court discussed the applicable burden of proof in matters concerning modification of custody decrees. The court stated:
When a trial court has made a considered decree of permanent custody the party seeking a change bears a heavy burden of proving that the continuation of the present custody is so deleterious to the child as to justify a modification of the custody decree, or of proving by clear and convincing evidence that the harm likely to be caused by a change of environment is substantially outweighed by its advantages to the child.
Id. at 1200. However, where no considered decree of custody has been rendered, the "heavy burden" rule stated above does not apply. According to Bergeron, in those cases, a party seeking to modify the custody arrangement must still prove that a change in circumstances materially affecting the welfare of the child has occurred since the original decree and that the modification proposed is in the best interest of the child. The reasons for the change of *763 circumstances rule are that it is desirable to put an end to litigation and undesirable to change a child's established mode of living except for imperative reasons. Id. at 1195. The best interest principle recognizes the child's substantive right to the custodianship that best promotes his welfare, whereas the change of circumstances precept is an auxilliary evidentiary and procedural rule judicially created for the purpose of enforcing and protecting the child's substantive right. Id. at 1196. A trial court's award of custody is entitled to great weight and will not be overturned on appeal unless an abuse of discretion is clearly shown. Id.
In this case, the joint custody decree was entered by the consent of the parties. As no evidence was adduced concerning parental fitness, it was not a "considered decree." Accordingly, the defendant was required to prove the occurrence of a change of circumstances materially affecting the welfare of the children and that the modification which she proposed was in the best interest of the children.
In support of her claim that the best interest of the children requires a change of physical custody to herself, defendant argues she and her husband could provide a stable and normal schedule for the children. They have purchased a mobile home and a small tract of land near Natchitoches, Louisiana. Defendant emphasizes that she and her husband currently both work normal-hour day jobs, Monday through Friday. She would be able to take the children to school in the morning and pick them up in the afternoon. The children would not be required to sleep away from home and stay with babysitters as they must do while they are living with their father. Thus, her main argument is that the work schedule of the father is not in the best interest of the children.
The record reveals that the children's father is employed at a refinery and is required to work twelve-hour shifts, from 6:00 to 6:00 either day or night, for fifteen days a month. He is, however, on a regular schedule. When he works the day shift, he takes the children to his sister's house (which is located right down the road from his house) and puts them back to bed there. The school bus picks them up at his sister's house and drops them off there in the afternoon, where they remain until he gets off of work. When he works the night shift, the children spend the night at his sister's house. His niece and sometimes his nephew (his sister's teenage children) occasionally babysit the children. The children also spend a good deal of time with plaintiff's parents, who also live nearby. When plaintiff is not working, he spends as much time as possible with the children, when they are not in school.
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577 So. 2d 761, 1991 WL 46814, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-rogers-lactapp-1991.