State ex rel. Manuel v. Manuel

619 So. 2d 871, 1993 La. App. LEXIS 2087, 1993 WL 188832
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 2, 1993
DocketNo. 92-1199
StatusPublished

This text of 619 So. 2d 871 (State ex rel. Manuel v. Manuel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Manuel v. Manuel, 619 So. 2d 871, 1993 La. App. LEXIS 2087, 1993 WL 188832 (La. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

GUIDRY, Judge.

Craig Manuel, father of the minor child, Seneca Jenee Manuel, appeals a judgment of the trial court terminating his parental rights and precluding him from participat[872]*872ing in the rearing of the child, Seneca Jen-ee Manuel. We affirm.

On April 6, 1992, John E. and Evelyn R. Broussard, the maternal grandparents of the minor child, Seneca Jenee Manuel, who had been granted custody of the child in a separate proceeding (No. 69544-B), filed a motion for leave to file a petition for termination of the parental rights of Craig Manuel. The motion was granted, the termination petition was filed forthwith and an attorney was appointed by the court to represent the child.

Yolanda Broussard, the daughter of John and Evelyn Broussard, married Craig Manuel in 1985. One child was born of the marriage, Seneca, on November 14, 1986. Six weeks after Seneca was born the couple separated until Seneca was approximately four and one-half months old, at which time they attempted a reconciliation which lasted approximately one month. When the reconciliation failed, Yolanda and Seneca moved in with her parents where they lived together until Yolanda was killed on December 9, 1989.

In September 1987, Yolanda filed a suit for separation from bed and board against Craig. Judgment was granted in her favor making her custodial parent of Seneca and ordering Craig to pay $400 per month child support. Craig failed to make any child support payments and, in January 1988, Yolanda filed a rule for past due child support payments and was given a judgment for arrearages in the amount of $1,650. When Craig still failed to meet his obligation, Yolanda had his wages garnished in July 1988.

The following month Yolanda filed suit for divorce. On October 6, 1988, judgment of divorce was rendered in Yolanda’s favor, granting her custody of Seneca, subject to reasonable visitation by Craig, and continuing Craig’s $400 per month child support obligation. By June 1989, Craig was over $4,000 in arrears on Seneca’s support payments and Yolanda once again had to file a rule for contempt. In that rule, she also sought modification of Craig’s visitation privileges.

We pick up from that point with the trial judge’s narration of events as set out in his reasons for judgment:

On July 11, 1989, Mr. Manuel sought to reduce the child support payments and have a joint custody plan between the parties. As a result of this litigation, a minute entry dated July 25, 1989 shows that a stipulation was entered into whereby the past-due arrearages of child support were made executory in the amount of $4,400; that the future child support was reduced to $75 a month; and the Court pretermitted the question of contempt and joint custody of the child to a later date.
In the criminal proceeding, State of Louisiana vs. Craig Anthony Manuel, No. 44,-086, a bill of information was filed on April 28, 1989 concerning criminal neglect of family to a child by the name of Brittney Polk. This child is the child of Craig Manuel but not the child of Yolanda Manuel. He also has another child by ... [the Polk] woman.
Then by Docket Number 69,655, in a suit entitled John E. Broussard and Evelyn Rochon Broussard vs. Craig Manuel, filed December 14, 1989, the petitioners sought the custody of their grandchild, Seneca Jenee Manuel, age 3, noting that the mother of the child, Yolanda Brous-sard, was the victim of a homicide on December 9, 1989, and that at the time of her death their daughter, Yolanda, had the custody of the minor child. The petitioners noted that Craig Manuel, the father of the child, was a suspect in the homicide [no charges have been filed against Craig in connection with Yolanda’s death] and they allege that he had a very violent temper and, in fact, had been arrested for violent actions in the past against Yolanda Manuel. No significant action was taken in this case other than that the temporary care, control and custody of the minor, Seneca Jenee Manuel, was granted jointly to John E. Broussard and Evelyn Rochon Brous-sard.
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[873]*873... [Since the date of Yolanda’s death], Craig Manuel has had no contact whatsoever with the child or with Mr. and Mrs. John Broussard. He has paid no child support, he has made no attempt to see the child, he has had no visitation rights nor has he sought any, he has not sent any gifts to the child or has had any contact whatsoever, and in fact the only effort that he has made to secure contact with the child has been through these proceedings herein when he requests that the Court deny the petition to terminate his parental rights.
It is quite obvious from the demeanor of Mr. and Mrs. Broussard and their testimony and the love and care that they have given their grandchild that it would be highly desirable that the child stay with them_ Mr. and Mrs. Broussard are the only parents that the child knows ... and they are raising her in a good manner and with love and affection. They admit that they still harbor the suspicion that the murder of their daughter was caused by Craig Manuel.
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Manuel testifies [sic] that he was injured on August 16, 1989, and had back surgery in 1991, which is the reason that he could not pay the child support payments, and notes that he gets $420 a month in maintenance and cure.
Yolanda Broussard had previously charged him with harassment and the minutes of the City Court of New Iberia show that on October 4, 1989 he pleaded guilty to this charge, was sentenced to pay a $280 fine, and received a suspended sentence and was placed on probation on the condition that he would not contact, harass or bother Yolanda Brous-sard. The order also said that he could not contact her concerning visitation until he had a court order authorizing him to do so.
The evidence convinces this Court that Craig Manuel set out on a plan to deprive her of child support, and to deprive the mother or mothers of the other two children that he has of child support, and apparently was successful in doing this. He has hardly spent any time with the child Seneca at all, perhaps two months when the child was first born and one month during a temporary attempt at reconciliation in 1988. Since that time he has literally and figuratively abandoned the child, and this Court so holds.
This Court finds, under the Children’s Code, that the evidence has clearly shown this long period of abandonment, failure to pay child support, harassment against the child’s mother, and the neglect of the child, demonstrates to the Court conclusively that the parental rights of Craig Manuel should be terminated.
This Court is further convinced that the welfare of the child would be greatly damaged if any visitation rights were to occur between this child and her unseen father. Mr. and Mrs. Broussard have indicated a desire to adopt this child, hence the institution of these proceedings, and should the adoption occur it would certainly be in the best interest of the child that Mr. Manuel would be precluded from participating in the rearing of the child. He has not nurtured this child in the past, and he should not do it in the future.

Craig Manuel testified that he had made child support payments to Yolanda for Seneca, but that these payments were made in cash and he had no receipts for

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Bluebook (online)
619 So. 2d 871, 1993 La. App. LEXIS 2087, 1993 WL 188832, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-manuel-v-manuel-lactapp-1993.