TALEATHA WILLIAMS F/K/A TALEATHA SILVERS v. MICHAEL SILVERS

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 6, 2023
DocketA23A0208
StatusPublished

This text of TALEATHA WILLIAMS F/K/A TALEATHA SILVERS v. MICHAEL SILVERS (TALEATHA WILLIAMS F/K/A TALEATHA SILVERS v. MICHAEL SILVERS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
TALEATHA WILLIAMS F/K/A TALEATHA SILVERS v. MICHAEL SILVERS, (Ga. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

THIRD DIVISION DOYLE, P. J., GOBEIL, J., and SENIOR APPELLATE JUDGE PHIPPS

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. https://www.gaappeals.us/rules

June 6, 2023

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A23A0208. WILLIAMS v. SILVERS.

DOYLE, Presiding Judge.

Taleatha Williams (“the mother”) appeals from the trial court’s order granting

Michael Silvers’s (“the father”) petition for modification of child custody and child

support regarding the couple’s three children and denying her motion for

modification and contempt. Williams argues that the trial court (1) abused its

discretion by granting the father’s modification petition because it was contrary to the

evidence and not in the best interests of the children; and (2) the trial court abused its

discretion by denying and dismissing her contempt count alleged against the father

in her first amended modification petition. For the reasons that follow, we affirm in

part and vacate and remand in part. This Court reviews for an abuse of discretion an order modifying or declining

to modify child custody and child support, and evidentiary findings will be affirmed

if there is any evidence to support them.1 Additionally, a “trial court [has] wide

discretion to determine whether court orders have been violated, and that

determination is to stand on appeal in the absence of an abuse of discretion.”2

Viewed in this light, the record shows that the consent final judgment and

decree of divorce incorporating the parties’ settlement agreement, parenting plan, and

child support worksheet was entered on September 10, 2020 (“final agreement”). The

parties had three children born in 2015, 2016, and 2018, and they shared joint legal

and physical custody, rotating week-on/week-off custody beginning every Monday

at 8:00 a.m. if there was no school. The mother had major decision-making authority

for extracurricular activities, non-emergency healthcare, religious upbringing, and

educational decisions.3 Neither party was responsible for paying the other party any

child support, and they were required to split the expenses accrued for the children

1 See Brazil v. Williams, 359 Ga. App. 487, 490 (1) (b) (859 SE2d 490) (2021). 2 Blair v. Blair, 272 Ga. 94, 96 (1) (527 SE2d 177) (2000). 3 With regard to school, the agreement stated that the children would attend school in Gordon, Whitfield, or Murray Counties in Georgia, unless otherwise agreed to in writing by both of the parties.

2 equally. The mother was tasked with maintaining the children’s current health care

plan unless health insurance through one of the parties’ places of employment became

available.

On March 2, 2021, the mother filed a petition for modification of custody,

contending that she lived in DeKalb County, Alabama, and the father lived in Gordon

County, Georgia, at the time the final agreement was entered. She maintained that a

material change in circumstances had occurred since entry of the final agreement, and

it would be in the best interests of the children if she had sole physical custody.

The father responded and counter-petitioned for modification of custody,

requesting that he be awarded primary physical and legal custody, that the mother be

granted visitation, and that he be granted child support. On July 26, 2021, the mother

amended her petition by adding a contempt claim against the father, alleging that he

failed to give her right of first refusal, failed to allow her to contact the children by

phone, failed to timely notify her about a move, and failed to pay certain monetary

obligations under the settlement, including his half of the children’s expenses and his

portion of monthly payments toward debt accrued during the marriage.

The hearing did not occur until April 19, 2022, with the bulk of the evidence

being the parties’ testimony. The evidence showed that the mother had moved to

3 northern Alabama a few months before entry of the final agreement, but during that

time, she exercised her parenting time at her grandmother’s home in Murray County,

Georgia. During the year following the divorce, the oldest child attended virtual

school through Gordon County, where the parties had lived in the marital home, and

the mother began exercising her visitation in Alabama, where she lived with her then-

boyfriend, whom she later married. At some point, the father left the marital home

and moved into his grandmother’s house in Murray County, Georgia, where he lived

until approximately December 2021, when he moved in with his new wife. The

mother’s home in Alabama was about two hours and fifteen minutes away from the

father’s current home in Murray County, Georgia — a grueling commute during the

mother’s school-year parenting weeks. The mother would drive the children to their

current school during her custody weeks, and her grandmother would pick them up

after school until their step-father could retrieve them in the afternoon for the trip

back to Alabama.

During the father’s custody weeks, the mother testified that he would not pick

up her phone calls, and she would call others to try and get in touch with the children,

either their paternal grandmother or their step-mother. The mother testified that the

father refused to co-parent with her and was hostile about working out disputes; she

4 testified that they rarely spoke. The mother would attempt to call him, and he would

tell her to text instead, and then he would ignore her text messages and not respond

to her. The father stated that the mother either called while he was at work or too

close to bedtime to speak to the children, and he contended that it was untenable to

expect him to compromise on transportation when the mother moved so far from their

previous marital home.

Pursuant to her authority over extra-curricular activities, the mother registered

the children for gymnastics in Alabama, but the father refused to bring them on his

parenting weeks. She attempted to arrange a visitation schedule swap with the father

to facilitate the lessons, but he refused. Additionally, without her approval as final

decision maker, he registered the children for softball and t-ball in Murray County,

Georgia, and he told the mother that he would do as he liked. The father also refused

to give one of the children her prescribed medication, stating that he thought it made

her too sleepy, and he did not agree to her seeing certain physicians at an Alabama

university.

Following the hearing, the trial court granted the father’s counter-petition,

denied the mother’s petition for modification, and denied and dismissed the mother’s

contempt claim. The trial court did not make specific findings regarding the

5 testimony, simply indicating that the parties stipulated to a change in circumstance

and finding that the best interests of the children were served by the father being the

primary physical custodian. This appeal followed.

1. The mother first argues that the trial court abused its discretion by granting

the father’s petition for custody modification because the ruling was contrary to the

evidence presented at the hearing and in the record, and the ruling was not in the best

interests of the children. We disagree.

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Related

Alejandro v. Alejandro
651 S.E.2d 62 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2007)
Blair v. Blair
527 S.E.2d 177 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2000)
Odum v. Russell
802 S.E.2d 829 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2017)

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TALEATHA WILLIAMS F/K/A TALEATHA SILVERS v. MICHAEL SILVERS, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taleatha-williams-fka-taleatha-silvers-v-michael-silvers-gactapp-2023.