Shari Sims-Bernard v. Stephen P. Bernard

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedOctober 8, 2013
Docket2090122
StatusUnpublished

This text of Shari Sims-Bernard v. Stephen P. Bernard (Shari Sims-Bernard v. Stephen P. Bernard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Shari Sims-Bernard v. Stephen P. Bernard, (Va. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Frank, Huff and Senior Judge Coleman UNPUBLISHED

Argued at Richmond, Virginia

SHARI SIMS-BERNARD MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 2090-12-2 JUDGE ROBERT P. FRANK OCTOBER 8, 2013 STEPHEN P. BERNARD

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF CHESTERFIELD COUNTY Harold W. Burgess, Jr., Judge

William G. Shields (The Shields Law Firm, on briefs), for appellant.

Kimberlee Harris Ramsey; Scott D. Landry, Guardian ad litem for the minor children (John H. Taylor; FloranceGordonBrown; Duty, Duty & Landry, on brief), for appellee.

Shari Sims-Bernard, mother, challenges the trial court’s ruling that awarded sole legal

custody to Stephen Bernard, father, and that mother’s visitation be supervised. On appeal, mother

assigns error to the sufficiency of the evidence in five separate assignments of error. Mother also

claims error to the trial court’s failure to order family and psychological review of the children and

the trial court’s authorizing Child Protective Services (CPS) to determine the amount of contact

mother has with the children. For the reasons stated, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

BACKGROUND

On appeal, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to father, as the prevailing party

below. Brown v. Burch, 30 Va. App. 670, 681, 519 S.E.2d 403, 408-09 (1999).

By order of December 22, 2010, mother was awarded joint custody with father of the two

minor children born of the marriage, with primary physical custody to father. Mother was granted

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. specific visitation. The children, both girls, were twelve and thirteen years old at the time of the

September 17, 2012 hearing.

In that order the trial court recalled mother’s prior diagnosis of “Delusional Disorder,

Jealous Type” and the court still perceived “questionable behavior” on mother’s part. The trial

court concluded mother “has ways to go in her treatment.” As a result, the trial court ordered

mother to continue counseling with Mario Gomez, M.D., and Denis Kilgore, a Licensed Clinical

Social Worker and Ph.D. in social work, and to follow all treatment recommendations. The

children were ordered to continue counseling. The parents were ordered to participate in co-parent

counseling. It was further ordered that neither parent disparage the other in the children’s presence,

“nor discuss disputed issues with the children, nor discuss the divorce litigation.” Mother was also

ordered not to discuss with the children her perceived fear of the father.

Based on a complaint made to CPS that the children were underweight and malnourished,1

mother filed a motion for a change of custody and to award mother full custody of the children. The

children’s guardian ad litem moved the trial court to modify the December 22, 2010 order to award

sole legal custody to father and to suspend or restrict mother’s visitation.

Mother had asked for an expedited hearing and for an expedited medical emergency

hearing, but the trial court denied those motions, finding “no exigent medical circumstances exist at

this time.” Mother also moved the court for a family evaluation, requesting father, father’s current

wife, and the children submit to physiological and psychiatric examinations, in particular “to

examine the suitability of the home . . . and the methods of discipline employed by the Bernards

1 After an investigation, CPS determined the charge was unfounded. Instead, CPS determined that mother was an alleged abuser/neglector of the children. This opinion was based on “[t]he feelings that the girls had that they were not safe in their own home appeared to be coming from their mother . . . and their worries and concerns about their health also were coming from [their mother].” -2- . . . .” The trial court, by order of September 17, 2012, took the motion under advisement “pending

the evidence presented at the upcoming scheduled hearing . . . . ”

At the September 17, 2012 hearing, Dr. Denis Kilgore testified he saw nothing that would

prevent mother from seeing the children or having contact with them. He further opined mother

should not be denied additional visitation or custody. However, Dr. Kilgore conceded he had never

seen the children nor observed their interaction with mother. Kilgore, on cross-examination,

admitted his opinion was based solely on mother’s self-reporting.

Dr. Leigh Hagan, Ph.D., who saw mother four times between 2010 and 2012, opined that

mother was entitled to greater access to the children. Dr. Hagan qualified his opinion by indicating

he had not seen the children.

Mother called two neighbors who both testified mother was an excellent mother who never

spoke inappropriately of father.

Mother testified of her close relationship with the girls and denied saying anything

derogatory about father. Specifically, she denied telling the girls that father beat her or raped her,

that father looked at pornography and the girls should keep their bedroom door closed, and that

father is paying off everyone involved in the litigation. The trial court rejected mother’s testimony,

as well as the testimony of Drs. Kilgore and Hagan.

Father testified that the girls were earning As and Bs in school, and were seen by the

pediatrician for regular checkups and illnesses, in addition to regular sports physicals. They were

within their normal height and weight ranges for their respective ages. Father also testified that the

reason he called the police to his home was because one of the girls was “out of control” and was

slamming doors and being physically abusive, striking father. The cause of this outburst was that

father caught her with a cell phone which father had prohibited. He testified that he does not allow

-3- the children to have free access to cell phones because they are not responsible enough and that they

would call their mother incessantly.

Father also testified that the children’s behavior would change upon returning home from

visitation with their mother. They would often be withdrawn and would not speak to anyone.

Jamie Bernard, father’s present wife, confirmed father’s description of the girls’ behavior

upon returning from visitation with mother. She also testified she saw mother at a softball game use

a key to scratch father’s automobile. Mother’s attendance at the game also violated the December

22, 2010 court order which specifically barred mother from attending extracurricular activities

unless such activities occurred during scheduled visitation.

Katie Bernard, the parties’ adult child, characterized father’s relationship with her two

sisters as “normal.” She never heard father disparage mother. Katie heard mother on several

occasions tell the children they were too skinny and that father beat the mother. She heard her

mother tell the girls their father watched pornography and that the girls should “watch out” for him

and close their bedroom doors when they change clothes. Katie also confirmed that mother, in front

of the girls, said father “bought off” everyone. Katie noticed that the two girls, upon returning from

visitation with mother would be hostile, rude, and non-talkative.

By its letter opinion dated September 24, 2012, the trial court made a number of factual

findings: the children were not malnourished; the mother’s thinking and conduct towards father and

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