Sordelet v. Golsteyn

697 N.E.2d 943, 1998 Ind. App. LEXIS 785, 1998 WL 262616
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 26, 1998
DocketNo. 02A03-9708-CV-299
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 697 N.E.2d 943 (Sordelet v. Golsteyn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sordelet v. Golsteyn, 697 N.E.2d 943, 1998 Ind. App. LEXIS 785, 1998 WL 262616 (Ind. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinions

OPINION

FRIEDLANDER, Judge.

Daniel H. Sordelet appeals the denial of his petition to modify a custody order that awarded physical custody of his daughter, Rachel, to Donna K. Sordelet, his ex-wife and Rachel’s mother. Daniel presents two issues for review, one of which is dispositive of the appeal. We restate that issue as:

Were the court’s findings of fact supported by the evidence?
We reverse and remand for rehearing.

The facts are that Rachel was bom to Donna and Daniel on May 26, 1984 and was the only child of the marriage. On July 28, 1986, the marriage was dissolved by a decree of dissolution entered in the Allen Circuit Court, which granted physical custody of Rachel to Donna and gave liberal visitation rights to Daniel. On December 6,1996, Don[944]*944na filed a Notice of Intent to Change Residence with the Allen Circuit Court, stating her intention to move to Nashville, Tennessee for career-related reasons and also notifying the court that she intended to move Rachel to Nashville as well. Shortly thereafter, Daniel filed an Objection to Removal and Petition to Modify, requesting that the court change physical custody of Rachel from Donna to Daniel. The matter was set for hearing.

Evidence was presented at the hearing, after which the court issued the following findings of fact:

28. That Rachel is a good student and has been involved in athletics since the fifth grade, namely basketball, volleyball, and now soccer.
29. That Rachel played on a “club volleyball” team for two (2) years and which team did not have any students from either St. Charles School, which school she is currently attending or St. Vincent School where she had gone to school, and Rachel adjusted well and made friends with members of the “club volleyball” team which traveled in organized volleyball competition.
30. That Rachel has made two (2) trips to Nashville, Tennessee and has exhibited an ability to relate to a child close to her age who she met while there on those visits.
31. That Rachel changed schools in the fourth and fifth grades from St. Vincent to St. Charles School and made that adjustment well.
32. That Therese Mihlbauer described Rachel as being in early adolescence.
33. That the report of Dr. Newbauer’s psychological testing of Rachel Sordelet was admitted in to [sic] evidence.
34. That Dr. Newbauer’s report reveals that “Rachel seems to have adequate skills in adapting to life and that she has a positive relationship with her parents. She has an adequate sense of self-esteem, and seems to have a positive attitude toward school and her teachers.”
35. That whereas the focus of Dr. New-bauer’s report and psychological testing and interviews were “What will the impact be on Rachel from a move to Nashville, Tennessee and how will this affect her relationship with her father,” Dr. New-bauer acknowledged that his report did not focus on what the impact would be on Rachel if her mother moved to Tennessee without her and Rachel was deprived of the stability of her relationship with her mother and with the post-dissolution family unit created by her mother.
36. That Dr. Newbauer acknowledged that part of his inquiry was to determine if there would be any harm to the child in the move or if the child was coping with the move that it would be important for Rachel to be with the parent that she feels most comfortable with.
37. That his report and testimony acknowledged that her peer relationships are “getting more and more complicated with the advent of boy-girl relationships in particular” and “that certainly raises her anxiety level and is probably is [sic] related also to some of her anxiety about the move at this time in her life when she has recently developed a set of peers that she has become friends with and seems to have developed a good sense of trust with.”
38. That Dr. Newbauer testified that Rachel is now being challenged and persons can meet challenges if they have a supporting living [sic] family unit.
39. That Dr. Newbauer’s testimony was that if Rachel moved she would adjust, and that he did not think that the move would present a challenge that she couldn’t cope with.
40. That Dr. Newbauer also testified that Rachel would have anxiety whether she moved with her mother or if she stayed in Fort Wayne by reason of the altered time with either parent.
41. That Dr. Newbauer testified that the move would cause “no harm” to Rachel.
42. That Dr. Newbauer further testified that Rachel’s anxiety was situational, i.e. arising out of the move, and that said anxiety was not debilitating, and did not require any kind of psychological treatment or counseling.
[945]*94543. That Dr. Newbauer testified that Rachel was very self-centered because of her age.
44. That Dr. Newbauer testified that he saw her involved in a network of friends and he saw that as the biggest cost of her move.
45. That Dr. Newbauer testified that he did not see any significant signs of undue parental influence on Rachel.
46. That Dr. Newbauer acknowledged in his testimony that [Donna] has been the primary caregiver of Rachel for the last ten (10) years of her life and that [Donna] further has provided a female role model for Rachel with regard to her education and professional career.
47. That Dr. Newbauer acknowledged that Rachel’s family unit with her mother and step-father created after the dissolution was a stable one and had a positive influence on Rachel.
48. That Dr. Newbauer further acknowledged the child’s relationship with her primary caregiver as the single most important factor affecting its welfare when the child’s parents do not live together.
49. That Dr. Newbauer further acknowledged that the stability within a household may be more important than geographical stability.
50. That Dr. Newbauer further acknowledged that there was no evidence that Rachel wasn’t content in her home with her mother and there is evidence1 that she was anything but developmentally on course and that further her relationship with her mother as primary caregiver was a stable one.
51. That Dr. Newbauer, notwithstanding his concern with the anxiety created in Rachel by potential separation from her peer group and her relationships with them and. [sic] acknowledged that Rachel could cope with the challenge of the move and that said move would not be harmful to her.
52. That the court conducted an interview with Rachel.
53. That it was obvious from the interview that prior to the filing of Petitioner[’]s NOTICE OF INTENT TO CHANGE RESIDENCE, Rachel had observed minimal, if any, conflict between the parties.
54.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Marriage of Albright v. Bogue
736 N.E.2d 782 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
697 N.E.2d 943, 1998 Ind. App. LEXIS 785, 1998 WL 262616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sordelet-v-golsteyn-indctapp-1998.