Taglieri v. Monasky

876 F.3d 868
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 30, 2017
DocketNo. 16-4128
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 876 F.3d 868 (Taglieri v. Monasky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taglieri v. Monasky, 876 F.3d 868 (6th Cir. 2017).

Opinions

BOGGS, J., delivered the opinion of the court in which McKEAGUE, J,, joined. MOORE, J. (pp. 879-84), delivered a separate dissenting opinion.

OPINION

BOGGS, Circuit Judge.

Our decision in this ease is controlled by the 1980 Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction (“Convention” or “Hague Convention”), which dictates that a wrongfully removed child must be returned to the country of habitual residence. Our precedent has demonstrated that where a child lives exclusively in one country, that country is presumed to be the child’s habitual residence. In fact, we have gone so far as to call such cases “simple.” Because we hold that in this case the country of habitual residence is Italy and that there is no grave risk of harm to the child under the meaning of the Convention, we must affirm the district court’s judgment ordering the return of A.M.T. to Italy under the Hague Convention.

I

Domenico Taglieri, a citizen of Italy, was studying for a doctoral degree at the University of Illinois at Chicago, when he met Michelle Monasky, an American citizen who was joining his research team. The two colleagues began dating and eventually married in September 2011. Taglieri received his Ph.D. in 2011 and obtained a post-doctoral appointment at the University of Illinois at Chicago. The two made the mutual decision to move to Italy to pursue career opportunities, with Taglieri leaving first in February 2013. According to Tagli-eri, he had made it clear that he considered Italy to be his long-term destination, as he was licensed to practice, medicine in Italy and would have had to acquire certifications and meet onerous requirements to practice in the United States. But in an email Monasky sent to. Taglieri in April 2013, she wrote: “don’t think that [the fact that we are moving to Milan or Rome] means we are done with the US [for good.]”

Taglieri began working ,at a hospital in Palermo, Italy, in February 2013. In June 2013, he,switched to a new position as an anesthesiologist at Humanitas Hospital in Milan. The next month, Monasky moved to Italy to join Taglieri in Milan. She received a fellowship with University Vita Salute San Raffaele in Milan in September. 2013. In April 2014, Monasky was given a two-year-fellowship with. Humanitas Hospital, with a significant increase in pay. Taglieri had a one-year contract with Humanitas Hospital,-which the hospital did not offer to renew, and he began looking elsewhere for a new position. In June 2014, he secured a permanent position with Maria Cecilia Hospital in Lugo, a city outside of Ravenna that is about two hours and forty minutes by car southeast of Milan. In addition, he found an apartment in Lugo where he could stay during the workweek.

Monasky became pregnant in May 2014. According to Taglieri, the couple had decided to start a family and .try for a child. Monasky .disputes this description, stating that she had become pregnant despite her wishes because of .Taglieri “becoming more aggressive with sex.” She recounts in particular one occasion where Taglieri allegedly got on top of her and insisted, “[S]pread your legs, or I.will spread them for you.’,’.In addition to sexual abuse, Mo-nasky alleges that Taglieri frequently slapped or hit her with force, causing her to grow increasingly fearful. Taglieri acknowledges “smack[ing]” Monasky once in March 2014, but denies that he-struck her again after that time. The district .court in this case concluded that Taglieri had “struck Monasky on her face in March 2014,” and found Monasky’s further testimony with respect to the domestic abuse credible.

' Tension was increasing in the marriage for other reasons in addition to the physical and sexual abuse. The long-distance arrangement of Taglieri’s frequent travel and stays in Lugo while Monasky was in Milan put greater strain on the marriage. Furthermore, in accordance with" Italian law, Monasky was required to suspend her work and go on maternity leave in January 2015, in anticipation of the upcoming birth of her child. She encountered difficulties in having her academic credentials recognized by Italy, to the degree that she wrote to the United States Senator of her family’s home state of Ohio for assistance. Monasky did not speak much Italian and had significant problems performing basic tasks, such as calling someone to fix the electricity, as a result. Finally, her pregnancy was medically complicated, with Mo-nasky suffering a near-miscarriage early on.

All of these stressors produced a rocky relationship. Monasky applied for jobs in the United States, contacted American" divorce lawyers, and researched American health- and childcare options. But the couple also investigated Italian child-care options and discussed purchasing items for the baby, such as a stroller, car seat, and night light. Monasky sought an Italian driver’s license and she and Taglieri moved to a larger apartment in the Milanese suburb of Basiglio under a one-year lease under Monasky’s name (with the option 'to break the lease on three months’ notice). By January, “emails between the parties, reflecting words of affection, suggest that their relationship was less turbulent than before.” Serenity, if it did exist, was short-lived. In early February, the two began “having a lot of fights,” and arguing over how the birth would proceed. Mona-sky e-mailed Taglieri regarding a possible collaborative divorce. At the same time, she sought quotes for the cost of moving to back to Ohio,

At a subsequent pregnancy-check-up appointment in mid-February, doctors recommended that labor be induced. Monasky declined and the two left despite Taglieri’s protestations. According to Taglieri, he was angry, concerned, and embarrassed that Monasky had refused the procedure, rejected the advice of fellow physicians, and declined to stay at the hospital. During the forty-minute ride home, the pair argued over Monasky’s decision. Minutes before they arrived at their apartment, Monasky told Taglieri that she had begun experiencing contraction-like pains and asked him to bring her back to the hospital. Taglieri refused, advising that they should wait and see how things progressed. By this point, it was after ten o’clock in the evening. The two arrived at the apartment and continued to argue. -During this “heated conversation,” Taglieri called Mo-nasky “the son of a devil” and told her that she could take a taxi back to the hospital if she wanted to return. Sometime during the very early morning hours of the next day, Monasky- took a taxi to the hospital—having experienced contractions all night long. Taglieri contends that Monasky left while he was sleeping, and he immediately went to the hospital once he awoke and learned that Monasky was already on her way.

After protracted labor, A.M.T. was born via an emergency caesarean section. Tagli-eri and Monasky’s mother, whom he had brought from the airport, were present for the birth. After Monasky was released from the hospital after a week’s stay, Tag-lieri returned to Lugo while Monasky endured a “difficult” recovery in Basiglio, cared for by her mother. Her recovery was hampered by a previous surgery, which— coupled with the caesarean section—made rising or sitting strenuous. Taglieri returned to Basiglio at the beginning of March, following the departure of Mona-sky’s mother, and Monasky broached the subject of divorce once more. She renewed the discussion in an e-mail sent the next day, noting that although Taglieri “seemed ...

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876 F.3d 868, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taglieri-v-monasky-ca6-2017.