Testerman v. Testerman

2008 WY 112, 193 P.3d 1141, 2008 Wyo. LEXIS 117, 2008 WL 4354861
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 25, 2008
DocketS-08-0006
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 2008 WY 112 (Testerman v. Testerman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Testerman v. Testerman, 2008 WY 112, 193 P.3d 1141, 2008 Wyo. LEXIS 117, 2008 WL 4354861 (Wyo. 2008).

Opinion

BURKE, Justice.

[T1] This appeal arises from the divorce proceedings of Marcella Testerman and Gabriel Testerman. The district court awarded primary custody of their ten-month-old daughter to Ms. Testerman, then granted visitation to Mr. Testerman with the aim of having each parent spend approximately equal time with the child. The district court's express purpose in granting this visitation was to prevent Ms. Testerman from moving to California, as she intended to do, so that the child would stay in Cheyenne and develop a relationship with her father. Ms. Testerman has appealed the district court's decision. We will affirm the grant of primary custody to Ms. Testerman, but reverse the district court's decision regarding Mr. Testerman's visitation.

ISSUES

[12] Ms. Testerman lists five issues for our consideration:

1. Did the district court abuse its discretion when, having found that it was in the child's best interests for her mother to have primary residential custody, it disregarded that finding to implement a parenting time arrangement which is the functional equivalent of joint residential custody?
2. Did the district court abuse its disceretion by implementing a parenting plan which conditioned Ms. Testerman's custodial status on her continued residence in Laramie County?
3. Did the district court abuse its discretion in ordering an automatic, anticipatory alternating joint residential custody modification when the child enters the first grade in the absence of evidence or findings that prospectively modifying Ms. Testerman's primary residential custody to joint custody is in the child's best interests?
4. Did the district court abuse its disceretion by ordering an automatic future eusto-dy modification, without requiring a change of cireumstances which affects the child's best interests in her current living arrangement, and without notice and opportunity to be heard?
5. Did the district court abuse its discretion by reaching beyond the record to devise a parenting plan based on an unidentified "Arizona Parenting Plan" in the absence of supporting evidence that such plan was in the best interests of the minor child and without prior notice and opportunity to challenge the applicability of the plan to the custody issues in this case?

FACTS

[13] The Testermans met in Seoul, South Korea, where both were serving in the military. They married on June 18, 2004. They were later transferred to Fort Knox, Kentucky, and served there until both were hon *1143 orably discharged. They moved to Cheyenne, Wyoming, where their daughter was born on March 25, 2006. Mr. Testerman was employed by the Wyoming Highway Patrol, and Ms. Testerman worked at home as the child's primary caretaker.

[14] After the move to Cheyenne, their relationship deteriorated. Ms. Testerman describes their married life as "contentious and bitter, characterized by mutual lack of respect and trust, an inability to communicate, and an almost total inability to agree on any issue involving their child." After a while, Ms. Testerman and her daughter came to occupy only the upstairs of their home, with Mr. Testerman living in the basement. Their interactions were infrequent and acrimonious. While each assigns blame to the other, both agree that Mr. Testerman had little to do with caring for his daughter. When the daughter was approximately six months old, Mr. Testerman commenced divoree proceedings.

[15] Mr. Testerman sought joint custody of his daughter, which he described as "[elqual time with the mother and the father." Ms. Testerman sought primary eusto-dy of her daughter, and indicated that she intended to relocate to California after the divorcee. She had grown up there, and her family, including her mother and two sisters, were willing to help provide care for her child. Ms. Testerman had contacted a former employer in California, and understood that she would be rehired upon her return. She had arranged to stay with her sister until she found her own place to live.

[16] In oral comments following the trial, the district court expressed disapproval of Ms. Testerman's moving to California because, "in reality that is going to terminate Mr. Testerman's relationship with his daughter." The district court signaled its intent to establish a child custody and visitation arrangement that would effectively require Ms. Testerman to remain in Cheyenne, "a place where you don't want to be." The district court provided this explanation:

The two of you decided to have a baby. With a baby you assume responsibilities. In the assumption of those responsibilities, you gave up options in your lives. You gave up freedom in your lives. In return for the joy you get from her, you give up different things. One of the things you give up is in my mind living apart from each other.... I believe that if [Ms. Test-erman and her daughter] live in California that will effectively deprive [the daughter] of the good things that Mr. Testerman can do. I believe that that is not in her best interest.

The district court stated that it would award joint custody of the daughter, and directed the parties to attempt to agree upon a plan that would, at first, allow "brief, frequent opportunities for Mr. Testerman to be with" the child, and then "gradually increase" the "amount of time Mr. Testerman spends with his daughter" so that "within a year" each parent would spend "fairly equal" time with the child.

[17] The parties were unable to agree, so the district court imposed what it called a "Parenting Plan." In the written divorce decree, it provided that the parents would have joint legal custody, a ruling that neither party disputes. The district court also ruled that it was "in the child's best interests for [Ms. Testerman] to have primary residential custody of the child." Then, with regard to Mr. Testerman's visitation, the district court ruled as follows:

c. Beginning Monday, February 12, 2007, [Mr. Testerman] shall have parenting time with the minor child from 5:00 p.m. through 8:00 p.m. on Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays. In addition, on one of the days when he is off work, he will have parenting time between noon and 8:00 p.m. one day per week.
d. When the minor child reaches the age of three, the parenting time referred to in section c immediately above will be increased so that the time between noon and 8:00 p.m. one day per week will be changed to an overnight visit from 5:00 pm. one day to 6:00 p.m. the next day on a weekly basis. This time will be on one of his days off which the court understands rotate periodically. This schedule will continue until the minor child begins the first grade.
e. When the minor child begins the first grade the parents will share the minor *1144 child every four days, including overnights, so for example, [Mr. Testerman] would have the minor child from 5:00 p.m. on a Monday evening and keep her until he takes her to school Friday morning. [Ms. Testerman] would have the minor child from after school on Friday until Tuesday morning when school starts, and then [Mr. Testerman] would have the minor child after school Tuesday until Saturday morning at 9:00 am.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2008 WY 112, 193 P.3d 1141, 2008 Wyo. LEXIS 117, 2008 WL 4354861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/testerman-v-testerman-wyo-2008.