Shulka v. Sikraji

2014 WI App 113, 856 N.W.2d 617, 358 Wis. 2d 639, 2014 Wisc. App. LEXIS 898
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedOctober 29, 2014
DocketNo. 2013AP2080
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2014 WI App 113 (Shulka v. Sikraji) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shulka v. Sikraji, 2014 WI App 113, 856 N.W.2d 617, 358 Wis. 2d 639, 2014 Wisc. App. LEXIS 898 (Wis. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

GUNDRUM, J.

¶ 1. Blenda Shulka appeals from two circuit court orders relating to placement and over-trial issues arising out of her divorce from Martin Sikraji. Shulka contends the circuit court erroneously conditioned her continued primary placement of the former couple's children on Shulka moving back to Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, from Lake county, Illinois. Specifically, she argues that (1) Sikraji's motion to modify judgment did not provide her notice that she could lose primary placement of the children if she did not move back to Wisconsin, (2) Sikraji did not meet his burden to show a substantial change in circumstances to justify a modification of placement under Wis. Stat. § 767.451 (2011-12),1 and (3) the court lacked authority to order her to move into a specific school district in Wisconsin. Shulka also appeals the circuit court's determination that she committed overtrial, arguing that the Walworth county circuit court lacks the authority to order her to pay Sikraji's attorney's fees for defending against a family action she filed in a Lake county, Illinois circuit court because the alleged over-litigation occurred "in another forum." For the following reasons, we affirm.

[645]*645BACKGROUND

¶ 2. Shulka and Sikraji divorced in 2007 and have joint custody of their two children, C.S. and T.S. The parties agree both children have some degree of autism, with C.S.'s being mild and T.S.'s being more severe. At the time of the divorce, Shulka was given primary placement, with time divided approximately sixty-four percent/thirty-six percent between the parties.

¶ 3. In October 2011, Shulka filed a "Notice of Intent to Remove Children" from Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, to Lake county, Illinois, because of her desire to move closer to a new job she had taken in Illinois. Sikraji filed an objection to the move and a motion to modify custody and placement, seeking primary placement and sole legal custody regarding medical decisions for the children. After completion of a custody study, Shulka filed motions seeking a temporary order permitting her to move with the children to Illinois, granting her sole legal custody, and modifying the placement schedule. Sikraji then filed a motion for a temporary order granting him primary placement. The family court commissioner (FCC) denied the parties' requests for temporary orders.

¶ 4. An evidentiary hearing before the FCC was held on April 24-25, 2012. In a posthearing brief, Shulka represented that she had secured full-time employment in Deerfield, Illinois, had testified at the hearing that she would move to the Lincolnshire/ Deerfield area, which is in Lake county, Illinois, and had researched multiple schools in that area. At the 2013 de novo hearing before the circuit court, which is the subject of this appeal, Shulka confirmed that she had testified before the FCC at the April 2012 hearing that she "wanted to enroll the children in either Daniel [646]*646Wright School or Half Day School respectively for the different children." At the time of the April 2012 hearing, both children had attended for a number of years Woods School in the Lake Geneva area, approximately thirty-five to forty minutes from Sikraji's residence.

¶ 5. On June 29, 2012, the FCC issued a written decision and order finding that Shulka's new job in the Lincolnshire/Deerfield area was "approximately an hour and a half away from her residence in Walworth County" and permitting her to move with the children to "Lake County, Illinois." The order continued joint legal custody and primary placement with Shulka, but reduced Sikraji's placement time with the children during the school year.

¶ 6. On August 15, 2012, approximately a week before the start of the new school year, Shulka moved from Lake Geneva to Round Lake, Illinois, instead of the Lincolnshire/Deerfield area, and enrolled the children in Big Hollow School there. Round Lake is also in Lake county, but is approximately a half-hour closer to Sikraji's residence than the Lincolnshire/Deerfield area. Shulka subsequently confirmed in her testimony at the 2013 de novo hearing that she "picked" the school "by [her] self."

¶ 7. In February 2013, Sikraji filed a "Motion to Modify Judgment" relating to the June 2012 FCC order. The same FCC held an evidentiary hearing on May 30, 2013, at which it issued an oral decision on Sikraji's motion. On June 24, 2013, the FCC signed a written order ordering Shulka to move back to the Wood School District in Lake Geneva2 and re-enroll the children in [647]*647the Lakeland or Woods Schools located there or lose primary placement of the children. The FCC stated in the order that "[i]n light of the evidence presented at trial, the court reconsiders its order previously issued by way of a written decision on June 29, 2012, and therefore modifies the order." In the decision, the FCC stated that Shulka had "broken the overall spirit" of the 2012 order permitting her to move the children to Illinois with her and modifying placement to accommodate that move and that she did not proceed in multiple respects — including where she and the children would reside in Illinois and what school the children would attend — in a manner consistent with representations she made leading up to the FCC's 2012 order. It further stated that its decision was "based on the fact that every major factor that the court used to make its decision to allow the petitioner to move to .. . Illinois has not taken place in the way that it was presented at the time of the original trial in this matter." The FCC specifically found that at the April 2012 hearing Shulka had provided testimony and evidence that "she wanted to move to the Lincolnshire or Deerfield area and had looked at a condo and townhome in that area."

¶ 8. On June 3, 2013, following the FCC's May 30, 2013 oral ruling on Sikraji's motion but prior to issuance of its written order, Shulka requested a de novo [648]*648hearing before the circuit court. Four days later, on June 7, 2013, Shulka also filed in Lake county, Illinois circuit court a "Motion to Enroll Foreign Judgment for Dissolution of Marriage in the Circuit Court for the Nineteenth Judicial Circuit of Lake County, Illinois," which attached the marital settlement agreement, divorce decree, and June 2012 FCC order permitting Shulka to move to Lake county, Illinois with the children, but made no reference to the FCC's oral ruling of May 30, 2013. In the motion, Shulka requested that the Illinois court "acquir[e] jurisdiction" over this family law case "and also over the parties and minor children."

¶ 9. Sikraji filed a motion in the instant proceeding seeking a ruling that Shulka had committed over-trial by filing the new action in Illinois, which required Sikraji "to defend against" both Shulka's motion for de novo review in Wisconsin and her filing in Illinois. The motion for overtrial was heard at the time of the de novo hearing.

¶ 10. The de novo hearing took place July 25 and August 9, 2013. At the conclusion of the hearing, but prior to ruling on the motion to modify judgment, the circuit court asked Shulka if she would move back to Wisconsin to retain primary placement of the children. She replied, 'Yeah, I mean, if I have to move back to Wisconsin, I'll move back to Wisconsin."

¶ 11.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2014 WI App 113, 856 N.W.2d 617, 358 Wis. 2d 639, 2014 Wisc. App. LEXIS 898, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shulka-v-sikraji-wisctapp-2014.