Sabrina Lynn Welton v. Daniel Westmoreland

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedNovember 17, 2015
Docket2014-CA-00302-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Sabrina Lynn Welton v. Daniel Westmoreland (Sabrina Lynn Welton v. Daniel Westmoreland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sabrina Lynn Welton v. Daniel Westmoreland, (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2014-CA-00302-COA

SABRINA LYNN WELTON APPELLANT

v.

DANIEL WESTMORELAND APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/12/2014 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. ROBERT Q. WHITWELL COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: LAFAYETTE COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: A.E. (RUSTY) HARLOW JR. KATHI CRESTMAN WILSON ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: T. SWAYZE ALFORD KAYLA FOWLER WARE NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - CUSTODY TRIAL COURT DISPOSITION: MODIFIED CUSTODY, AWARDING PHYSICAL CUSTODY OF BOTH MINOR CHILDREN TO APPELLEE, AND GRANTED VISITATIONS RIGHTS TO APPELLANT DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 11/17/2015 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

WILSON, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Daniel Westmoreland filed a complaint seeking modification of the physical custody

of his daughter, Alexice Westmoreland, from his former wife, Sabrina Welton, to him. He

later filed an amended complaint in which he also sought custody of Justice Westmoreland.

Daniel is not Justice’s biological father, but until she was twelve years old, she believed that

he was. Justice’s biological father abandoned her and has never made an attempt to see her since her birth. Although Daniel knew that he was not Justice’s biological father, he and

Sabrina raised her together from the time she was four months old, and in 2004 Sabrina

petitioned a court to change Justice’s surname to Westmoreland. Justice learned that Daniel

was not her biological father only when, in the lead-up to the instant litigation, Sabrina made

a unilateral—and, the chancellor found, “very hurtful”—decision to tell her. After a hearing,

the chancellor modified custody and awarded Daniel physical custody of both children.

¶2. We agree with the chancellor that he had jurisdiction over Justice under the Uniform

Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act. We also agree that under Griffith v. Pell,

881 So. 2d 184 (Miss. 2004), he had authority to grant physical custody of her to Daniel.

Finally, we find no abuse of discretion in the chancellor’s findings that there had been a

material change in circumstances that adversely affected the children and that modification

was in their best interests. Accordingly, we affirm the chancellor’s ruling in all respects.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶3. Justice was born on July 10, 2000. Although Daniel was not her biological father, she

was raised as his daughter from infancy. Daniel and Sabrina were not married at the time,

but they lived together and led Justice to believe that Daniel was her father. In 2004, Sabrina

petitioned a Missouri court to change Justice’s surname to Westmoreland because, according

to Sabrina’s sworn petition, Justice’s biological father had abandoned her and had made no

attempt to see her since birth. Daniel and Sabrina were married in 2005, and on February 6,

2006, a daughter, Alexice, was born to them. The family later moved to Mississippi.

¶4. In August 2011, the Lafayette County Chancery Court entered a decree of divorce

2 terminating the marriage between Sabrina and Daniel. The decree incorporated the parties’

property settlement, child custody, and support agreement. The decree granted the parties

joint legal custody of Alexice and assigned physical custody of Alexice to Sabrina. Daniel

was granted liberal visitation with Alexice, consisting of every weekend, six weeks in the

summer, and holidays. In addition, the agreement “acknowledge[d] that Justice . . . is not the

biological or adopted child of [Daniel], but that Justice . . . has developed a strong bond with

[Daniel] and it is in [Justice’s] best interest that [she] . . . have visitation with [Daniel]

whenever he is exercising visitation with . . . Alexice.”

¶5. After the parties’ divorce, Justice continued to believe that Daniel was her biological

father. Daniel exercised visitation with both girls every weekend, and at Sabrina’s request

the girls also regularly spent weeknights at his house. Sabrina’s employment was erratic.

She was fired from a job in June 2012, and in July 2012 eviction proceedings were initiated

against her for nonpayment of rent. As a result, in August 2012, Justice and Alexice went

to live with Daniel on a full-time basis. Sabrina moved into a cabin in Water Valley that had

limited bathroom facilities and was not suitable for children. From August to December

2012, the girls lived with Daniel, attended school in Lafayette County, and by all accounts

were happy and doing well. A school teacher and a school counselor testified that Daniel

brought the girls to school and attended their parent-teacher conferences, Justice’s basketball

games, and other school functions. These two witnesses rarely ever saw Sabrina.

¶6. While Justice and Alexice were living with Daniel, Sabrina met a man on the internet

(Darren) who at that time lived in the Cayman Islands. Sabrina and Darren met in person for

3 the first time in October 2012 and spent several nights together at hotels in Oxford and

Memphis. In mid-December 2012, Daniel took Justice and Alexice to Missouri to spend the

Christmas holiday with their grandmother (Sabrina’s mother). While her daughters spent

Christmas in Missouri with her family, Sabrina went to the Cayman Islands with Darren.

¶7. In December 2012, Sabrina not only vacationed in the Caymans but also quit her job

in Water Valley. She did so even though she had no other employment prospects. Then, in

January 2013 she abruptly moved to Missouri, taking the girls with her. She did not have a

job lined up in Missouri either. Sabrina not only failed to tell Daniel that she was moving

but also told him a bald-faced lie about where she was taking the girls. The day she left, she

asked him to pack extra clothes for the girls because she wanted them to help her move back

to Oxford, it was raining, and she was afraid they would get muddy. Daniel first learned that

she was actually moving to Missouri, and taking the girls with her, when Justice called him

from the road. Sabrina immediately took the phone from Justice, hung up, and refused to

answer Daniel’s calls. Daniel drove to Missouri that same day, but Sabrina refused to allow

him unsupervised visitation. After moving to Missouri, Sabrina also made a unilateral—and,

the chancellor found, “very hurtful”—decision to tell then-twelve-year-old Justice that Daniel

was not her biological father.

¶8. In February 2013, Daniel filed a complaint for contempt and modification of custody.

Sabrina filed a counterclaim for contempt, alleging that Daniel had not paid support or other

expenses. In April 2013, the chancery court entered a temporary order that visitation should

continue as outlined in the divorce decree, with instructions on when and where to transfer

4 the children.

¶9. In June 2013, only five months after she moved to Missouri, Sabrina decided to move

again. This time she moved to South Florida to live with Darren, again taking the girls with

her. They moved into a house that Darren owns, and Sabrina took a job as the manager of

a Smoothie King. The children are cared for primarily by a full-time nanny. The nanny

arrives early each weekday morning to wake the children, fix breakfast, take them to and pick

them up from school, and help them with their homework. Justice and Alexice testified that

Sabrina and Darren fight constantly.

¶10.

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