SHEILA R. v. David R.

719 S.E.2d 682, 396 S.C. 41, 2011 S.C. App. LEXIS 321
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 2, 2011
Docket4900
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 719 S.E.2d 682 (SHEILA R. v. David R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
SHEILA R. v. David R., 719 S.E.2d 682, 396 S.C. 41, 2011 S.C. App. LEXIS 321 (S.C. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

CURETON, A.J.

After the parties’ divorce, the family court entered an order awarding custody of the parties’ minor child, S.R., to David R. (Father) but provisionally placing her with Sheila R. (Mother). The family court later awarded Father “primary physical placement” as well as legal custody. Mother appeals, arguing the family court erred in (1) using its own standard to determine who should receive custody of S.R. and failing to conduct a best-interests analysis when it subsequently granted Father full custody and (2) failing to appoint a guardian ad litem (Guardian) or consider S.R.’s wishes when determining custody. On appeal, Mother also argues the family court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the custody issue at the time of the issuance of its 2009 order. We affirm.

FACTS

Mother and Father married in 1987 and had two daughters. H.R. was born June 5, 1990, and S.R. was born July 20, 1995. In July 2005, Mother filed a complaint seeking separate support and maintenance, equitable apportionment of the marital estate, and custody of both children. Father answered and counterclaimed for the same relief but also petitioned the family court to appoint a Guardian for the children and to require Mother to undergo a psychological examination.

In September 2005, the family court entered a temporary-order appointing Debra L. Walsh as the children’s Guardian, ordering the parties and children to undergo psychological evaluations by Dr. Craig Horne, temporarily placing both *45 children with Mother and allowing Father visitation, and permitting the parties to engage in discovery. In a subsequent order, the family court removed H.R. from Mother’s custody and placed her with Father.

In September 2006, the Guardian served her report, which cited more than one hundred resources and spanned seventy-six pages. The Guardian recorded her observations about both parents and both children in great detail. The Guardian did not recommend either parent receive custody of the children but instead expressed concern that both parents “demonstrate[d] signs of unresolved anger[ ] and an inability to accept full responsibility for their own actions.” According to the Guardian, Father regarded himself as superior to Mother, and Mother refused to address unresolved issues from her childhood that appeared to affect her parenting. Each parent shared with the children inappropriate information about the ongoing conflict and tended to make the non-resident child feel uncomfortable in his or her home. While Father demonstrated an even and patient temperament, he undertook to manipulate those around him by controlling the information available to the Guardian and others and may have engaged in some physical confrontations with the children. While Mother orally expressed a desire to raise both children, she sought custody of only S.R., in whom she encouraged infantile behaviors. In addition, Mother expressed interest in Father’s severing contact with S.R. as Mother had done with H.R. Despite making extensive recommendations concerning the parties’ and children’s future paths, the Guardian’s sole recommendation concerning custody was that the children “should be in the custody of the parent most able to provide them with an environment that allows them to be physically and emotionally safe, and allowed to grow in to fully adult young women.”

The case was tried over five days in September 2007. The family court devoted more than ten pages of its final order to factual findings concerning the parties’, particularly Mother’s, disturbing behavior, with subsections devoted to the observations of Dr. Horne and the family court. This order, dated November 29, 2007, granted Mother a divorce on the ground of one year’s continuous separation, divided the costs of suit between the parties, and equitably apportioned the marital estate. It established a detailed visitation schedule, obligated *46 Father to pay Mother both alimony and child support, and relieved the Guardian from further responsibilities. Notably with regard to the issue of custody, the family court recognized Mother had been the children’s primary caretaker prior to the separation, was an involved parent, exhibited adequate day-to-day parenting skills, and clearly loved the children. Nonetheless, the family court found Mother was “not fit to have custody of the children” due to numerous demonstrations that she lacked appropriate parental judgment in matters involving Father and failed to recognize the negative impact her behavior had on the children.

As a result of these complicated findings, the family court awarded Father sole custody of both children but placed S.R. physically with Mother. In addition, the family court reserved jurisdiction over the issue of S.R.’s custody for a period of eighteen months, 1 adopting a “wait-and-see” approach. It further required Mother and S.R. to complete Parent and Child Transition classes and all parties to undergo family counseling.

Both parties filed and argued motions for reconsideration. On July 8, 2008, the family court entered an order amending Father’s financial obligations to Mother, expanding Father’s visitation "with S.R., establishing sibling visitation between H.R. and S.R., and denying all other relief. Both parties appealed from the November 2007 and July 2008 orders.

Subsequently, each party filed a complaint for contempt against the other. Six of Father’s eight causes of action related to Mother’s alleged violations of the family court’s orders concerning custody and visitation. Mother’s causes of action related to property issues.

On June 5, 2009, following a trial, the family court entered an order finding both parties in contempt of court, awarding Father primary physical placement of S.R. effective immedi *47 ately, and relinquishing its reservation of jurisdiction over S.R.’s custody. 2 The family court found Mother used S.R.’s physical placement with her to prevent S.R. from engaging in the team sports in which Father had enrolled her and to stop the sibling visitation ordered by the family court. Furthermore, the family court found Mother’s inflexibility and refusal to cooperate undermined Father’s healthcare decisions as legal custodian. Specifically, the order noted Mother refused to ensure S.R. cared for her teeth and pursued a costly and questionably beneficial growth hormone treatment for S.R. over Father’s objection. According to the family court, Mother’s behavior constituted a “willful and wanton violation of the Final Order and was done out of disregard for the Court’s order and Father’s authority.” Finally, the family court found Mother failed to comply, albeit not willfully, with requirements that she deliver S.R. timely for visitation with Father. The family court reasoned giving Father both sole custody and primary physical placement was in S.R.’s best interest:

This action is made absolutely necessary because of the ongoing conflict between the Mother and the Father, who has legal custody, about the medical necessity for growth hormone treatment for the child; and the lack of cooperation of the Mother by not complying with the child’s extra-curricular activity schedules related to the swimming classes and the cross country running team that she was enrolled in by the Father.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
719 S.E.2d 682, 396 S.C. 41, 2011 S.C. App. LEXIS 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheila-r-v-david-r-scctapp-2011.