Thomas Giddings v. Nicole Arpin

160 A.3d 314, 2017 WL 2233609, 2017 R.I. LEXIS 61
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 22, 2017
Docket16-74
StatusUnpublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 160 A.3d 314 (Thomas Giddings v. Nicole Arpin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas Giddings v. Nicole Arpin, 160 A.3d 314, 2017 WL 2233609, 2017 R.I. LEXIS 61 (R.I. 2017).

Opinion

ORDER

Thomas Giddings (plaintiff or Giddings) appeals a Family Court order that modified custody in response to an emergency motion for custody brought by the child’s mother, Nicole Arpin (defendant or Arpin). This case came before the Supreme Court on May 2, 2017, pursuant to an order directing the parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not be summarily decided. After hearing counsels’ arguments and reviewing the parties’ memoranda, we are satisfied that cause has not been shown. Accordingly, we shall decide this appeal at this time without further briefing or argument. For the reasons set forth herein, we affirm the order of the Family Court.

On May 4, 2015, defendant called the Warwick Police Department to request a well-being check on her son because she was concerned that plaintiff was driving while intoxicated with their son in his vehicle. Officer John Curley of the Warwick Police Department arrived at the scene and found plaintiff sitting in a parked vehicle with the motor running, while the child played basketball in the parking lot. After plaintiff failed a field sobriety test, he was removed from the vehicle and the child was taken to a family friend’s house. Eileen Cook, a Child Protective Investigator at the Department of Children, Youth, and Families (DCYF), was assigned to the case and placed the child with his mother, defendant.

On May 5, 2015, defendant filed a pro se emergency motion for custody. 1 That same day, a justice of the Family Court entered an. ex parte order that awarded defendant temporary custody and placement of the child. On May 6, 2015, plaintiff moved to vacate the order, which the justice denied. In her order denying the motion to vacate, the justice scheduled the matter for a full hearing to address the issue of child placement and “all issues presenting.” On May 15, 2015, prior to the hearing, the Family Court justice entered a consent order that addressed visitation and ordered five-day alcohol screens for both .parties.

On June 8, 2015, another justice of the Family Court conducted a hearing on defendant’s motion for custody. At the hearing, defendant testified and presented three witnesses: Officer Curley, Eileen Cook, and Charlene Vincent, a friend of both plaintiff and defendant. At the conclusion of defendant’s case, plaintiff moved to dismiss the motion and argued that defendant failed to prove that plaintiff, as the parent with “custody and physical possession of the minor child,” was unfit. The hearing justice reserved decision on this motion.

On June 15, 2015, the hearing justice issued a bench decision on defendant’s custody motion. She noted that defendant’s *315 burden was “to prove a substantial change of circumstances in order to change custody on a permanent basis.” The hearing justice made multiple factual findings, including that, at the time plaintiff was granted sole custody of the child, defendant “was in active addiction.” She noted, however, that defendant had been sober since November 10, 2013, and has had her two other children returned to her. The hearing justice pointed out that she conducted an in-camera interview with the child; and, based on that interview, she believed that the child had missed plaintiff and had a close bond with him. She found that the child also had a good relationship with defendant..

Based on the close bond between plaintiff and the child and the length of time that the child had lived with him, the hearing justice returned placement to plaintiff, with the following conditions imposed: five-day'alcohol screens for the next three months; continued Family Care Community Partnership' (FCCP) services for the child; and a requirement that neither party say anything derogatory about the other party to the child or discuss the court proceedings with him. Additionally, if plaintiff was subsequently arrested for driving while impaired with the child in the car, he could lose placement of the child. The hearing justice then stated that she thought that there should be joint custody and a fixed visitation schedule. When asked whether plaintiff objected to joint custody, his counsel responded, “My client, prior to the hearing today, indicated that he wanted to have the court order of 2013 maintained and that he would provide her visitation.” In reply, the hearing justice noted that “the [c]ourt can certainly give any relief that it wants that was less than was asked for, the [cjourt is going to change the order [to] joint custody.” She then referred the parties to mediation to work out a visitation schedule.

On December 27, 2015, the hearing justice entered an order that restated much of her bench decision. In pertinent part, the order: returned placement of.the child to plaintiff under the above-mentioned conditions, granted joint legal custody of the child to the parties, and ordered that defendant be advised 'of and given access'to all medical, educational, social, religious, and extracurricular activity information. That same day, another order was entered that set forth the visitation schedule. -

On January 12, 2016, plaintiff appealed to this Court. 2 On appeal, plaintiff maintains that a hearing was held' on December 15, 2015, regarding his objection to the proposed order, wherein hé argued “that he was being deprived of procedural due process of law” and that the hearing justice “awarded [defendant] more relief than she prayed for or was deserving of.” The plaintiff also argues that “he was denied notice of the pendency of any .other relief prayed for and was likewise denied the opportunity to prepare and defend[.]” He asks this Court to vacate the order as to the-relief granted to defendant, which she did not request in her motion for custody.

On July 5, 2016, defendant moved to dismiss plaintiffs appeal on the grounds that his prebriefing statement did not comply with Article I, Rule 12A of the Supreme Court Rules of Appellate Procedure. 3 Specifically, defendant argued that *316 plaintiffs unnumbered, three-page pre-briefing statement failed to: identify any specific provision of the hearing justice’s order that he is challenging, note where in the record he raised the issue below, set forth an argument supported by specific facts and law, and develop a “meaningful discussion” of the issues alleged. The defendant also argued that plaintiff, in addition to erroneously citing to a hearing date that never occurred (December 15, 2015), failed to provide this Court with a transcript of the December 7, 2015 hearing where plaintiff allegedly raised the issues below. On October 14, 2016, this Court denied defendant’s motion to dismiss this appeal.

In her statement to this Court, defendant again challenges plaintiffs inadequate and unsupported prebriefing statement, as it required defendant’s counsel to guess what plaintiff is arguing on appeal. Nonetheless, defendant maintains that the hearing justice correctly recognized that a substantial change of circumstances justified a modification of the custody arrangement, ineluding defendant’s sobriety and the return of her other children to her.

The plaintiffs sparse prebriefing statement fails to articulate the issues he is raising on appeal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 A.3d 314, 2017 WL 2233609, 2017 R.I. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-giddings-v-nicole-arpin-ri-2017.