Sofia Khalid-Schieber, f/k/a Sofia Tanweer Hussain v. Haroon Hussain

827 S.E.2d 6, 70 Va. App. 219
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedApril 30, 2019
Docket1204184
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 827 S.E.2d 6 (Sofia Khalid-Schieber, f/k/a Sofia Tanweer Hussain v. Haroon Hussain) 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.

Bluebook
Sofia Khalid-Schieber, f/k/a Sofia Tanweer Hussain v. Haroon Hussain, 827 S.E.2d 6, 70 Va. App. 219 (Va. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Beales, O’Brien and Senior Judge Annunziata Argued at Alexandria, Virginia PUBLISHED

SOFIA KHALID-SCHIEBER, F/K/A SOFIA TANWEER HUSSAIN OPINION BY v. Record No. 1204-18-4 JUDGE RANDOLPH A. BEALES APRIL 30, 2019 HAROON HUSSAIN

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY David A. Oblon, Judge

Rebecca Wade (Wade, Grimes, Friedman, Meinken & Leischner, PLLC, on brief), for appellant.

A. Van McFadden (The McFadden Law Office, PLLC, on brief), for appellee.

This case concerns a review of a trial court’s custody modification order regarding the

parties’ three children. At the conclusion of ore tenus hearings, the trial court entered an order

largely granting father Haroon Hussain’s motion for a modification of custody of the children.

Mother Sofia Khalid-Schieber now challenges the custody modification order on appeal.

I. BACKGROUND

On appeal, we are required to view the facts in the light most favorable to father because

he was the prevailing party before the trial court. See Wright v. Wright, 61 Va. App. 432, 451

(2013). So viewed, mother and father were married in 2001 and had three children together –

daughter S.H., son I.H., and daughter H.H.1 At the time of the trial court’s ruling in April 2018,

S.H. was 15 years old, I.H. was 13, and H.H. was 9.

1 We use initials, instead of the children’s names, in an attempt to better protect their privacy. In the summer of 2011, mother traveled to England with the three children, with father’s

consent, to visit mother’s family. When she stayed longer than planned and father could not get

in contact with her, he filed legal action in the Family Division of a court in London that

culminated in an order directing mother to return with the children to Virginia, where the family

actually lived. Mother returned to Virginia in late December 2011, and mother and father

thereafter separated. They eventually entered into a custody agreement in which they agreed to

joint legal and physical custody of the three children and in which they established a 50/50

schedule for physical custody. The custody agreement was entered as an order of the trial court

on July 25, 2014. On December 22, 2014, the trial court entered a final decree of divorce, which

incorporated the provisions of the July 25, 2014 order. In October 2015, mother married Todd

Schieber.

On January 20, 2017, father filed a “Petition to Modify Custody of Minor Children”

alleging a material change in circumstances and seeking full legal and physical custody of the

children. (During the ore tenus hearing on April 4, 2018, father modified his request to instead

seek only joint legal and physical custody of the older children and to seek sole legal custody and

sole physical custody of H.H.) On January 16, 2018, mother filed a “Motion to Modify Custody

and Visitation,” also alleging a material change in circumstances and seeking sole legal and

physical custody of all the children. The motions of mother and father were consolidated, and

ore tenus hearings on the motions were conducted between April 2, 2018 and April 5, 2018 and

on April 9, 2018.2

At the ore tenus hearings, father testified that, for approximately one month after the

finalization of the divorce in December 2014, the parties followed the terms of the custody

2 During these proceedings, the trial court also considered and ruled on an order for mother to show cause why she should not be held in contempt for violating the July 25, 2014 custody and visitation order. The show cause is not at issue in this appeal. -2- agreement, but that after that point, he began facing difficulties in picking up the children to

spend his custodial time with them. According to father’s testimony, when he would arrive to

pick up the children, the children would often delay for hours, would not cooperate in leaving

with him, and would refer to father derisively using pronouns such as “him” rather than using a

name for him. He testified that mother would not help or encourage the children to come with

him – and essentially encouraged the children not to go with him.

Father also testified that, when the children went to his house, they would not bring along

with them the clothes or sports equipment needed for their weekend sports activities, requiring

father to return to mother’s house to retrieve their necessities. He testified that, when he

purchased clothes or other items for the children while they were in his physical custody, the

children would take those items back to mother’s house so they did not have their necessities

when they returned to father’s house. He also testified that he began to have the meetings to

exchange the children at a police station and that, even there, the children would often refuse to

go with him. He testified that he contacted the police on multiple occasions when he was unable

to pick up the children for his custodial time. He also introduced into evidence an emergency

motion that he filed with the court in July 2017 seeking to prevent the continued denial of his

access to the children.

The trial judge found that “Mother and Mr. Schieber, by their own admission, do not

encourage the kids to go with father. . . . They want the rebellion from the children who refer to

the father as a pronoun.” The judge also found that “Mr. Schieber acts like father’s not even a

human being. He won’t even acknowledge his presence. He is modeling poor behavior in front

of the kids.” In addition, “[n]either the mother, nor Mr. Schieber has been willing to encourage

the kids to go with the father, and the children don’t want to go with the father” for his scheduled

custody time. The trial judge found that these circumstances placed father in an “absolute

-3- no-win situation.” The trial judge also found that “exchanges [were] filled with great drama and

anxiety.”

Mother testified that father abused her and the children. Two police officers who

investigated allegations of physical and sexual abuse testified concerning their investigations.

Officer Munoz testified that his investigation did not result in bringing any charges, and

Detective Cooper testified that, except for one instance, father was not criminally charged and

that, even for the one investigation that resulted in charges, those charges were dropped. Two

officials of Fairfax County Child Protective Services (CPS) – who conducted assessments

investigating allegations of abuse by father – testified that they closed those assessments because

they found the claims against father to be unsubstantiated. Father also introduced into evidence

documentation from CPS regarding why it closed its investigation into father. He also testified

that he did not abuse the children and that, in the various investigations against him, CPS never

made any findings of abuse or neglect. After considering the evidence, the trial judge found that

“these investigations never resulted in a finding against the father” and that there was “no history

of family abuse, despite a large amount of unproven allegations.” In fact, the trial judge found

that the only allegation of abuse that was proven was that of mother’s assault on father during an

argument when father began to record mother with his cell phone and mother knocked the phone

out of his hand onto the ground. The judge noted that the consequence of the allegations against

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