Schafer v. Kibling

43 Va. Cir. 614, 1996 Va. Cir. LEXIS 507
CourtFairfax County Circuit Court
DecidedNovember 26, 1996
DocketCase No. C119464
StatusPublished

This text of 43 Va. Cir. 614 (Schafer v. Kibling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Fairfax County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schafer v. Kibling, 43 Va. Cir. 614, 1996 Va. Cir. LEXIS 507 (Va. Super. Ct. 1996).

Opinion

By Judge Thomas S. Kenny

This matter came on for a custody hearing on October 7,9, and 10, at die conclusion of which I recessed the case for review of depositions and submission of written closing arguments. After careful review of the arguments and consideration of all the evidence in the case, the court awards sole legal custody of the child to the mother, with appropriate visitation to the father.

Counsel have also requested a ruling on the admissibility of Father’s Exhibit 40. The exhibit will be taken into evidence. Furthermore, the order denying the father’s request to submit rebuttal evidence has been entered. The court has heard three full days of ore terms testimony, has reviewed hundreds of pages of depositions, received scores of exhibits, and considered over fifty pages of closing arguments (including footnotes). Enough is enough.

The parties’ son, Corey, is an eight-year-old boy, who has lived with his mother his whole lite. He has asthma and allergy problems, as well as possible attention deficit disorder and a history of some behavioral problems at school. The testimony of his treating physicians was that his medical condition is improving as he gets older as a result of normal maturation, good medical, management, and good care by his mother, who has educated herself extensively in the management of die child’s physical conditions.

[615]*615The father has absented himself on several occasions from the boy’s life for extended periods. Part of Ibis time, he was in Japan, and part of the time, he was in the Midwest while Corey lived here in Virginia with his mother. However, he returned to Virginia in 1993, living just a few miles from the mother and son but made no attempt to contact them for several months. Subsequently, after a visitation schedule was negotiated by the parties and their counsel in the summer of 1994, he left again on an extended business trip and did not attempt visitation again for many months.

The tether claims that his attempts at visitation have been hampered by the mother, and in fact, he says that she has alienated Corey from him. The evidence does not support this. While Ms. Schafer is clearly not on good terms wife her former husband, there is nothing in fee evidence to support fee conclusion that she has tried to prevent him from having a relationship wife Corey. In establishing feat relationship, however, she has attempted to ensure feat Corey’s medical condition will be monitored and cared for adequately. It is this behavior on her part feat Mr. Kihling interprete as alienation. While fee court agrees wife him feat Ms. Schafer is extraordinarily protective of Corey and has attempted to exercise considerable control over fee conduct of visitation,1 fee teds are that (1) asthma is a serious medical condition, and (2) it has improved “in no small part,” to quote Dr. Napolitano, as a result of her high level of care. Her concern about feat improvement being undone (or of some more calamitous event occurring) is legitimate and understandable.

The court finds that Ms. Schafer has set conditions to fee father resuming full visitation wife his son that were intended to ensure that M. Kibling was conversant wife Corey’s condition and wife the appropriate response to a deterioration in feat condition. This does not and cannot amount to alienation.

The court further finds that fee father has made fee necessary efforts to familiarize himself wife Corey’s medical problems and to equip himself and his home as a suitable place for Corey to visit Accordingly, there should be no bar to the establishment of a normal visitation regime, which will include alternate weekends from Saturday morning until Sunday evening, as well as Friday afternoon (after school) and evening on those Fridays which do not precede his regular weekend visitation. The father will also have two weeks of visitation in fee summer. The parties should work out a schedule for holidays, birthdays, Mother’s Day/Father’s Day, and the like.

[616]*616A troubling aspect of this case is that Corey seems to have been given significant power over file terms and times of his visitation. EspeciaEy since the father’s custody petition was filed in this case, Corey has been reluctant to go on visitation. His therapist has suggested that if he decides in the course of a weekend visitation that he wants to return home to his mother, he should be allowed to do so then and there. That is a suggestion that the court declines to adopt An eight-year-old is simply too young to be dictating filings like that to his parents. It is to be hoped that with file uncertainty of the custody dispute behind him, Corey’s reluctance to leave his mother and visit his father will abate.

This is a custody case that never should have been brought The amount of money that has been spent on attorneys, experts, and deposition costs is enough to have sent Corey to a top-rated private college. The combined attorneys’ fees and costs in this case exceed $88,000.00! It is a petition by a father who has never been actively involved in his child’s life for any extended period of time, seeking to take custody from a mother who has been highly protective but generally successful in being a single parent to her child. Having found no evidence of alienation or any reasonable basis for an objective observer to believe that alienation had occurred, I am at a loss to understand why this is here. We leave this crucible of litigation in no different position from what had been substantially agreed to by fire parties in 1994, except for a huge drain on the resources of parties who can ill afford it This is a direct result of the father’s actions in this litigation. The court therefore orders the father to pay $35,000.00 of file mother’s attorney’s fees in this matter. If the parties are unable to agree on a schedule for such payment the court will inpose one.

Also before the court for consideration at the time of this custody hearing was supposed to be an issue of establishing the proper level of child support No evidence was presented on that issue, and accordingly, no ruling is made as to it

July 2,1997

By Judge Leslie M. Alden

This matter came before the Court on April 9,1997, upon Defendant Todd R. Kibling’s (“Kibling”) Motion to Recalculate Child Support. At the hearing, the Court ruled that each party’s pre-tax benefits will be included as income in determining monthly child support payments. The Court took under advisement how “extraordinary medical expenses” should be defined and [617]*617apportioned by the parties (i.e. according to the terms of the property settlement agreement (“PSA”) or statute and case law), and which expenses incurred in treating Corey Kihling qualified as “extraordinary medical expenses.” The Court additionally took under advisement the issue of Mr. Kibling's requested deviations from the child support guidelines.

Extraordinary Medical Expenses "Defined

Virginia Code Ann. §20-108.2 sets out presumptive guidelines in determining child support Once tire presumptive amount of child support (including extraordinary medical expenses) is determined under the guidelines, it is permissible for a court to deviate from them if there is a finding that applying the guidelines would be "unjust or inappropriate” under the circumstances; such a finding would he based in a large part on “the best interests of the child.” § 20-108.1(B). Section 20-108.2(D) states:

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Related

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477 S.E.2d 290 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 1996)
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436 S.E.2d 457 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 1993)
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436 S.E.2d 463 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 1993)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 Va. Cir. 614, 1996 Va. Cir. LEXIS 507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schafer-v-kibling-vaccfairfax-1996.