State on behalf of Brooklynn H. v. Joseph B.

CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 5, 2024
DocketA-23-833
StatusUnpublished

This text of State on behalf of Brooklynn H. v. Joseph B. (State on behalf of Brooklynn H. v. Joseph B.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State on behalf of Brooklynn H. v. Joseph B., (Neb. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL (Memorandum Web Opinion)

STATE ON BEHALF OF BROOKLYNN H. V. JOSEPH B.

NOTICE: THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PERMANENT PUBLICATION AND MAY NOT BE CITED EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY NEB. CT. R. APP. P. § 2-102(E).

STATE OF NEBRASKA ON BEHALF OF BROOKLYNN H., A MINOR CHILD, APPELLEE, V.

JOSEPH B., APPELLANT, AND CHARLOTTE H., APPELLEE, AND PHILIP B. AND MARIA B., INTERVENORS-APPELLEES.

Filed November 5, 2024. No. A-23-833.

Appeal from the District Court for Otoe County: JULIE D. SMITH, Judge. Affirmed. Joseph B., pro se. No appearance for appellees.

RIEDMANN, Chief Judge, and MOORE and BISHOP, Judges. BISHOP, Judge. I. INTRODUCTION Joseph B. and Charlotte H. are the parents of Brooklynn H. Joseph has been incarcerated since shortly after Brooklynn’s birth in 2011. In August 2017, the Otoe County District Court granted Joseph’s parents visitation with Brooklynn, during which time Joseph was permitted to have unlimited telephone contact with his daughter. When Charlotte began denying the grandparents their visitation, thus precluding Joseph from exercising his telephone contact with Brooklynn, Joseph sought various relief from the district court, including two separate contempt actions. In April 2023, the district court found Charlotte in contempt, and when she failed to comply with the court’s purge order, Charlotte was ordered to serve 3 days in jail. Joseph filed a second contempt action alleging that since the court’s previous contempt order, Charlotte had denied visitation on six different visitation dates. The court entered an order in September 2023 finding

-1- Charlotte in contempt for willfully denying visitation on one of those six occasions. Her sanction was an admonishment that she require and not simply encourage Brooklynn to attend all court-ordered visitation. Additionally, when the grandparents called the day before a scheduled visit, Charlotte was ordered to return their call within 5 hours. Joseph, pro se, appeals, claiming the district court erred in receiving certain evidence, denying his request for visits at the correctional facility, denying a motion to continue, failing to find more incidents of contempt, and failing to adequately sanction Charlotte. Finding no error, we affirm. II. BACKGROUND In August 2017, the district court granted Joseph’s parents, Maria B. and Philip B., visitation with Brooklynn every other weekend from Saturday evening to Sunday evening and every year on Father’s Day. Joseph was allowed to have unlimited telephone contact with Brooklynn when she was visiting with his parents. Charlotte began denying visitation to Joseph’s parents, thus interfering with Joseph’s rights to his telephone visitation with Brooklynn. Joseph began filing numerous requests for relief. 1. FIRST CONTEMPT ACTION Although not contained in our record, Joseph filed a contempt action against Charlotte for failing to abide by the 2017 visitation order on numerous dates in 2021 and 2022. We know this because on April 3, 2023, the district court entered an order finding Charlotte in contempt of court for denying visitation on numerous dates in 2022, but not other dates in 2021. She was sentenced to 21 days in jail but could “purge herself of the contempt sanction by abiding by the terms of the grandparent visitation order between the date of this order and September 15, 2023.” The court verbally instructed Charlotte, “[J]ust make sure that you’re not denying any grandparent visitation between now and September 15th. If you do, one of the other parties can file an affidavit with the court and you would actually have to serve the jail term.” On April 11, 2023, Joseph, pro se, filed a “Motion to Execute Sentence,” alleging that Charlotte “again defied the Court’s Orders” on April 8 by denying his parents their visitation, which also denied Joseph his telephone visitation with his daughter. Joseph requested that the district court enter an order “executing the 21-day jail sentence on . . . Charlotte . . . for her willful failure to abide” by the court’s order. Joseph filed another such motion on August 24, seeking the same relief, but adding further alleged denials of visitation on April 22, May 6, May 20, and June 3. A hearing took place on September 14, with the court informing the parties that “this hearing is on whether the mother should have to serve the jail term pronounced by the Court on April 3rd or whether she has been in strict compliance with the custody order.” The court received evidence “in the form of affidavits.” Joseph offered several exhibits, including affidavits from his parents, his sister, and himself. Charlotte’s counsel offered exhibit 16 (Charlotte’s affidavit) and re-offered some previously received exhibits. Joseph objected, “doing . . . kind of blanket objections” because he had not “looked at them” and had not “received anything yet.” Brooklynn’s guardian ad litem offered her own affidavit, marked as exhibit 17. Joseph made the same “blanket objections” because he had not received it yet. All exhibits were received “subject to the rules of evidence.”

-2- The court further advised that any exhibits or portions thereof containing statements that were irrelevant, lacked foundation, or constituted hearsay would be disregarded. The district court reminded the parties that the April 3 order sentenced Charlotte to 21 days in jail beginning “tomorrow at 9 a.m.” but that Charlotte “could purge herself of having to go to jail by strictly complying with the terms between April 3rd and September 15th.” The court indicated that it would read the exhibits that morning and “if the Court grants the motion to execute the jail sentence, the clerk will also issue a commitment for the sheriff’s office, and [Charlotte will] be required to report to jail tomorrow morning at 9 a.m.” The court suggested to Charlotte that she fill out an application for work release “sooner than later in case the Court grants the motion.” The court inquired where Brooklynn would stay if Charlotte was ordered to jail; Charlotte indicated that Brooklynn would stay with a friend. At that point, Joseph requested that temporary custody be placed with his parents “because they’re next of kin.” Charlotte’s counsel objected to the request, indicating that it was “not properly before the Court and not within the contempt action.” On September 14, 2023, the same day as the hearing, the district court entered an order granting Joseph’s request to “execute sentence,” as modified. The court concluded that during the period of the purge order, from April 3 to September 15, Charlotte denied visitation on April 8. Although the court noted that Charlotte “encouraged” Brooklynn to go with her grandparents that day, “[w]hether to follow the court order is not Brooklynn’s decision.” The court added, “The mother has a duty to do more than encourage Brooklynn to go on visits – she needs to require it.” As for the other dates noted (April 22, May 6, May 20, June 3), the court found that while the grandparents said Charlotte denied or refused their visitation on those dates, they did not indicate how she did so. Whereas Charlotte indicated that the grandparents never showed up to get Brooklynn on any of those weekends. Further, the court pointed out that the grandparents had their visits with Brooklynn on Father’s Day weekend and on June 24, although June 24 “was not without incident.” The court observed that the grandparents alleged that Charlotte interfered with the June 24 visit; the guardian ad litem requested that grandparent visitation be suspended after that visit. (The record reflects that the court entered an order on July 26 denying the guardian ad litem’s request to suspend visitation.) The court also noted that according to Charlotte, since the July 26 order, the grandparents canceled or refused visitation.

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

Related

Velehradsky v. Velehradsky
688 N.W.2d 626 (Nebraska Court of Appeals, 2004)
Martin v. Martin
881 N.W.2d 174 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 2016)
State v. Boswell
316 Neb. 542 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 2024)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State on behalf of Brooklynn H. v. Joseph B., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-on-behalf-of-brooklynn-h-v-joseph-b-nebctapp-2024.