RONALD BLACKWELDER v. KRISTA SHUGARD

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 30, 2021
DocketA21A0483
StatusPublished

This text of RONALD BLACKWELDER v. KRISTA SHUGARD (RONALD BLACKWELDER v. KRISTA SHUGARD) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
RONALD BLACKWELDER v. KRISTA SHUGARD, (Ga. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

THIRD DIVISION DOYLE, P. J., REESE and BROWN, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. https://www.gaappeals.us/rules

DEADLINES ARE NO LONGER TOLLED IN THIS COURT. ALL FILINGS MUST BE SUBMITTED WITHIN THE TIMES SET BY OUR COURT RULES.

June 28, 2021

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A21A0483. BLACKWELDER v. SHUGARD et al.

REESE, Judge.

Ronald Blackwelder appeals from a Final Order and Decree of Legitimation

(“Final Order”) of the Superior Court of Burke County, which awarded sole custody

of three minor children to Appellee Debbie Dye, the children’s maternal grandmother.

Blackwelder argues that the trial court erred in awarding custody to a third party

absent clear and convincing evidence that the children would suffer physical or

emotional harm if awarded to him, the children’s biological father, and that the

custody determination was based on clearly erroneous factual findings. For the

reasons set forth infra, we disagree and affirm the Final Order.

The procedural history of this case spans more than five and a half years in the

court below. In June 2015, Blackwelder filed a petition for legitimation and custody of two children, M. B. (born in 2011) and A. B. (born in 2013). In December 2015,

Appellee Krista Shugard gave birth to the parties’ third child, M. S.

In November 2017, Blackwelder filed a motion for an emergency hearing,

alleging that Shugard had allowed the children to excessively miss school; that she

appeared to be highly intoxicated, delusional, and incoherent when Blackwelder

would retrieve the children for visitation from her; and that her home was “filthy” and

appeared to be unsanitary and unsafe for the children. Following a hearing, the trial

court entered an Interim Order, awarding primary physical custody of the children to

Blackwelder.

The court found that Shugard had failed a hair follicle drug test after

intentionally falsifying a urine test to conceal her use of methamphetamines. Further,

the Division of Family and Children Services (“DFCS”) had intervened and

temporarily placed the children with Blackwelder.

Noting that Dye had appeared at the emergency hearing and asked for

grandparent visitation and/or custodial rights, the court added her as a second

defendant. The court found that the children had been continuously living in a mobile

home on Dye’s property, which was 200 feet away from where Dye lived. Upon

discovering Shugard’s illegal drug use, Dye had initiated dispossessory proceedings

2 to remove Shugard from the property. The court found that it would be harmful to the

children to prevent them from regular association with Dye and entered a parenting

plan allowing her visitation.

In June 2018, Dye filed a motion to modify and clarify the Interim Order and

for contempt, alleging that, since gaining custody of the children, Blackwelder had

shown himself to be an unfit parent, specifically with regard to a May 2018 incident

in which then-two-year-old M. S. had nearly drowned in a swimming pool and

regarding Blackwelder’s failure to communicate about the child’s injury, in violation

of the parenting plan. The court held a hearing and clarified the Interim Order but

deferred ruling on the contempt motion.

Shugard filed an amended verified answer and counterclaim, raising additional

allegations against Blackwelder and contending that she was drug-free and could

provide a stable home for the children. Following a hearing on February 14, 2019, the

court entered an order, awarding temporary custody to Dye as Blackwelder had failed

a drug test and was living with a woman to whom he was not married, contrary to the

best interests of the children.

The court held a status hearing six months later, and found that Blackwelder

had married and that he disputed the results of the February drug test. At the hearing,

3 the court instructed Blackwelder to bring in an expert witness to support his argument

that the positive result from the hair follicle drug screen was the result of

environmental exposure and not illegal drug use. The court also ordered the parties

to submit to another drug test that afternoon.

Following a final hearing held over three days in November and December

2019, the court entered its Final Order. The court found, inter alia:

[Blackwelder] has one other child, born prior to his relationship with [Shugard]. He has no visitation rights with that child and no cognizable relationship with him. He has a history of domestic violence against those with whom he has shared a residence, including [Shugard]. While drinking beer, and engaging in an angry barrage of text messages to [Dye], he allowed the youngest child, [M. S.] (a toddler), to fall into a pool within a few feet of him, and drown. When the other children directed his attention to their drowned sister, he retrieved her from the pool. Another adult administered CPR and to resuscitate [M. S.] and she was hospitalized. [Blackwelder] then violated [the] Court’s prior order requiring him to notify [Shugard] of any injury to, or hospitalization of, any of the children.

The court made additional findings regarding, inter alia, Shugard’s unmanaged

significant mental health issues and her tumultuous episodes with her new husband.

The court found that the children had “spent significant periods of time in the home

4 of [Dye, who had] provided for their health and dental needs, as well as their

subsistence, education and nurturing.”

The court concluded that:

The procedural history of the case is reflective of the dynamics of the lives of [Blackwelder] and [Shugard] which dynamics have directly injured the children in controversy, presenting a real and present danger of physical, emotional, psychological harm to the children if either of said parties should be entrusted with unsupervised physical custody of them. [Dye] is the only party who has shown that she offers the children a continuously safe and healthful home environment.

Because the children “(have and) will suffer physical or emotional harm if custody

were awarded to either biological parent[,]” the court found that it was in the

children’s best interests to be placed in the sole custody of Dye. Blackwelder appeals

this order.

When reviewing an order in a child custody case, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the trial court’s decision. We will not set aside the trial court’s factual findings if there is any evidence to support them, and we defer to the trial court’s credibility determinations. We review de novo, however, the legal conclusions the trial court draws from the facts.1

1 Mashburn v. Mashburn, 353 Ga. App. 31, 32 (836 SE2d 131) (2019) (citations and punctuation omitted).

5 With these guiding principles in mind, we turn now to Blackwelder’s claims of error.

1. Blackwelder argues that the trial court referred in the Final Order to the

meretricious relationship and the pool “incident,” but that there was no evidence that

any of the children had been harmed by his premarital cohabitation with his current

wife and the pool incident was an isolated event during the 17 months in which he

had custody. Blackwelder further argues that the trial court failed to make any

findings that his delay in notifying Shugard of the injury or his child support arrears

had caused the children any harm.

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816 S.E.2d 683 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2018)
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RONALD BLACKWELDER v. KRISTA SHUGARD, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ronald-blackwelder-v-krista-shugard-gactapp-2021.