Schwarzinger v. Reuter CA1/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 29, 2015
DocketA140153
StatusUnpublished

This text of Schwarzinger v. Reuter CA1/2 (Schwarzinger v. Reuter CA1/2) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schwarzinger v. Reuter CA1/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 1/29/15 Schwarzinger v. Reuter CA1/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

ISABELLA SCHWARZINGER, Plaintiff and Appellant, A140153 v. (San Francisco City & County DAVID REUTER, Super. Ct. No. FPT-08-375918) Defendant and Respondent.

The parties are the parents of a child born in 2008. After extensive custody litigation in 2010, the court awarded joint legal custody with sole physical custody to appellant. In 2012, appellant raised concerns that respondent might be sexually molesting the child. An investigation by Child Protective Services (CPS) concluded the allegations were unfounded. Respondent, asserting that appellant was harming the child by continuing to press her suspicions, successfully obtained a temporary order giving him sole legal and physical custody. The present appeal is from the July 2013 order making this situation permanent. Appellant contends the trial court denied her a fair trial, lacked a legal basis for the change in custody, made a number of erroneous evidentiary rulings, made findings unsupported by the evidence, and erroneously awarded respondent attorneys’ fees. We conclude that reversal is required because appellant was never permitted to obtain a judicial determination on the abuse allegations that triggered the CPS investigation.

1 STATEMENT OF THE CASE AND FACTS S.S. was born in July 2008. The parties were never married and the child was born after their relationship had ended. Appellant lives in San Francisco; respondent lives in Marin with his girlfriend, Birgit Wick. Respondent shares custody of his two children from a prior marriage, Emelia and Gabriel, with his former wife, Nicole Lamb. After S.S. ’s birth, the parties briefly followed an informal custody arrangement, until appellant asked the court to award her sole legal and physical custody, terminate respondent’s overnight visits, change the child’s hyphenated surname to appellant’s alone, and order respondent to enter a domestic violence treatment program. Under a temporary order issued in August 2009, the parties shared legal custody and S.S. was with respondent for one weekday overnight and on Saturdays from 10:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. At a four-day trial in 2010, at which appellant appeared in propria persona and respondent was represented by counsel, the parties addressed issues including respondent’s anger,1 driving safety,2 wine consumption,3 care of S.S. and his older

1 The court’s Statement of Decision following this trial referred to several incidents. On an occasion when respondent arrived to pick up the child and appellant said she was too sick for a visit, respondent “screamed and ranted at her and called the police to enforce his visit.” When the child was an infant, respondent threatened to obtain breast milk from a hospital to substitute for appellant’s breast milk. Respondent’s former wife testified that during the breakup of the marriage, she called the police because of respondent’s “volatile and erratic behavior,” but she did not remember the incident in detail. 2 Respondent had been found guilty of not using seat belts and talking on a cell phone while driving, had received a ticket for driving with a suspended license, and had a warrant issued for his non-appearance in court. 3 Appellant’s evidence indicated respondent and Wick averaged a half bottle per day; respondent’s former girlfriend estimated three glasses per week, and Wick put it at four or five glasses per week. Respondent at one point was prescribed diazepam for anxiety; the last prescription was in 2008 and he testified he never mixed alcohol and prescription drugs and did not abuse either.

2 children,4 and the effect of the current custody arrangements on S.S. 5 In its July 19, 2010, order, the court (Judge Chaitin) found that appellant was suspicious of the care respondent provided to the child but that there was no evidence he abused alcohol or drugs, presently had violent tendencies or had committed acts of domestic violence; there was evidence he was an appropriate and responsible father to his older children and no evidence he did not care similarly for S.S. The court noted that respondent had demonstrated excessive anger at the height of the breakup of his marriage but this was short-lived and he and his ex-wife were currently “best friends.” The court found, however, that respondent “manifests excessive anger towards [appellant] and is intentionally provocative with her” and that respondent’s “anger issues interfere with the best interests of the child.” The court found that appellant had “extremely high parenting expectations” of herself and respondent which were not always reasonable, that she attempted to control respondent’s parenting and her attempts were exacerbated by respondent’s provocative behavior, and that while her care of the child was excellent, her behavior did not serve the best interests of the child “as demonstrated by her inflexibility and her desire to eliminate the respondent’s name from the child’s surname.” Finding that the parties ultimately would need to accommodate each other’s parenting style to serve the child’s best interests, that the structure of the court’s order should lessen the conflict and that it was anticipated respondent would spend increased time with the child in the future, the court ordered shared legal custody with appellant to have sole physical custody and respondent to have one 24-hour visit and one visit of three and a half hours each week. The court set forth detailed orders to govern the parties’ behavior and decision-making.

4 Respondent presented evidence that his older children have special needs requiring attentive supervision of their diet. His ex-wife, an ex-girlfriend, and respondent’s current live-in girlfriend testified that respondent provided diligent and responsible care for the children. 5 Appellant testified that respondent’s overnight visits interfered with her breastfeeding the child. Respondent testified that much of the time he has the child is spent in the car driving between Marin and San Francisco.

3 A year later, on August 3, 2011, after a hearing at which it heard testimony from the parties and Wick, and both parties were represented by counsel, the court (Judge Sing) entered a permanent custody and visitation order increasing respondent’s visitation to two overnights per week. The court found that respondent had “proved himself to be a responsible and caring parent to both his older children and S.S. ,” and that appellant was suspicious of respondent but her suspicion was not supported by the evidence presented. The court stated its concern “that this anxiety has been noted by the child and is damaging to the child.” The court’s order established a schedule for summer vacations and holidays and continued Judge Chaitin’s order in effect except as modified by the permanent order. The sexual abuse allegations arose in July 2012. According to appellant, on July 22, 2012, S.S. kissed her “with her mouth open,” said that respondent kissed her and her half siblings that way, and said that respondent and Gabriel touch each other’s penises and that respondent sexually touched Wick and Rose, the caretaker, as well as Emelia.6

6 Appellant wrote in a journal, under the date July 22, 2012, “S.S.kissed me again with her mouth open. I asked her if her papa kissed her that way, and she said yes, but not this time . . . last time ‘on Tuesday’. . . and then again that he only kisses G&E that way.

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Bluebook (online)
Schwarzinger v. Reuter CA1/2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schwarzinger-v-reuter-ca12-calctapp-2015.