T.W. v. G.S. CA2/5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 23, 2015
DocketB257777
StatusUnpublished

This text of T.W. v. G.S. CA2/5 (T.W. v. G.S. CA2/5) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
T.W. v. G.S. CA2/5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 9/23/15 T.W. v. G.S. CA2/5 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FIVE

T.W., B257777

Defendant and Appellant, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. PF004541) v.

G.S.,

Plaintiff and Respondent.

APPEAL from orders of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Michelle Williams Court, Judge. Reversed. Law Offices of Melissa Buchman, Melissa B. Buchman, for Defendant and Appellant. Lipton and Margolin, Hugh A. Lipton and Brian Magruder for Plaintiff and Respondent. The family law court issued restraining orders pursuant to Family Code section 3048,1 a child abduction statute, that prohibits plaintiff and appellant T.W. (Mother) from removing her daughter from Los Angeles County absent either the consent of defendant and respondent G.S. (Father) or permission from the court. We consider whether sufficient evidence supports the predicate for the court’s orders, namely, the finding there was a risk Mother would abduct her daughter, G.

BACKGROUND Mother and Father work for the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department (the Department). Mother lives in Lancaster with G., and Father resides in Santa Clarita. At the time of G.’s birth, Mother and Father were no longer romantically involved. Since G.’s birth, Mother has been in a relationship with a man (now her fiancé) who lives in Tehachapi, a city roughly 50 miles northwest of Lancaster. Until the issuance of the orders that are the subject of this appeal, Mother and G. often spent time with her fiancé and his two children in Tehachapi attending family gatherings, birthday parties, and church services. Court custody proceedings between Mother and Father began in 2009 when Father filed a paternity action and obtained custody and visitation orders permitting him to visit G. twice a week. In 2011, Mother filed an Order to Show Cause asking to move to Tehachapi with G. Initial custody proceedings, including an evidentiary hearing, ensued over the next two years and Mother put her plans to move on hold. The family law court made its initial custody determination in December 2013, awarding Mother primary physical custody of G. and granting both parents joint legal custody. The court observed that discord between the parties had resulted in a high conflict parenting situation, that G.’s contact with Mother had been greater than G.’s contact with Father, but that G.’s contact with Father had been limited by Mother’s actions. The court found that Mother had difficulty co-parenting with Father and had

1 All undesignated references are to the Family Code.

2 made allegations against him the court found to be untrue. However, the court also recognized G.’s strong emotional bond with Mother and her stated intention to protect G. from harm. The court concluded: “It is not in [G.]’s best interest to divest Mother of significant parental rights and responsibilities at this time. Rather, the court has ordered a child custody evaluation for more information and insight into a more permanent custody and visitation plan.” The court entered an order for the evaluation pursuant to section 3111, subdivision (a), and set a visitation schedule for the parties. Shortly after the court’s initial custody order, Mother informed Father that she had become engaged to the man she had been seeing and that she intended to relocate with G. to Tehachapi. Father disapproved and immediately moved ex parte for modification of the initial custody order, seeking sole legal and physical custody of G. and asking the court to enjoin Mother from moving G. to Tehachapi. Mother responded that she had the right to move as the primary custodial parent, and she contended her move would not interfere with Father’s custodial rights because she would continue to work in Lancaster and G. would continue to attend therapy and childcare in Lancaster. The court granted Father’s request to enjoin Mother from moving G. outside Los Angeles County pending completion of the custody evaluation.2 The court set the matter for a further hearing approximately five months later, in May 2014. In the weeks that followed, Mother took medical leave from the Department after suffering an injury. She also sold her home in Lancaster and purchased a home in Tehachapi with her fiancé. Mother and G., however, continued to live in Lancaster at Mother’s parents’ house pending further resolution of the ongoing custody proceedings. On May 16, 2014, Father’s attorneys received a copy of the court-ordered child custody evaluation report prepared by Susan Ralston, Ph.D. Five days later, on May 21, Father filed a declaration accompanied by a “Request for Order” Judicial Council form— without notice to Mother. Father’s ex parte filing sought to reverse the existing custody

2 This injunction did not prohibit Mother and G. from visiting Tehachapi. It only prevented Mother from changing G.’s residence to a home anywhere outside Los Angeles County.

3 order and to obtain sole legal and physical custody of G. pending further proceedings in the case. Notwithstanding a prior stipulation that Dr. Ralston’s evaluation report would not be admitted into evidence unless she testified in court, Father’s declaration quoted excerpts from Dr. Ralston’s report to justify his request for custody. Father also asked, in the event the court declined to modify the initial custody order, that the court restrain Mother from taking G. out of the County of Los Angeles at any time. In support of that request, Father submitted a Judicial Council form application for a child abduction prevention order pursuant to section 3048. Father checked boxes on the form to indicate that he thought Mother might take G. without his permission to another county in California (Kern County, where Tehachapi is located) or to another state (Texas). On the portion of the Judicial Council form that asked Father to explain his reasons for thinking Mother might take G. without his permission, he asserted (again, by checking the relevant boxes) that Mother had violated or threatened to violate a custody or visitation order in the past, that Mother had recently done things that made it easier to take G. away without permission, and that Mother had a history of not cooperating with him in parenting. Except as to the assertion that Mother had recently done things that made it easier to take the children away, Father provided no additional information on the form to explain the three abduction factors he asserted were present. As to that factor where a brief explanation was provided, Father stated Mother was living temporarily in her mother’s home and claimed Mother was on disability and had no intention to return to her job working for the Department. Relying on Father’s submission, the court entered a temporary emergency order preventing Mother from taking G. outside Los Angeles County and denied without prejudice all of Father’s other requests relating to a change in custody. In its order, issued on Judicial Council Forms FL-305 and FL-341(B), the court found that there was a risk Mother would take G. without permission for the reasons asserted by Father: she had violated or threatened to violate a court order, her status on disability leave from her job and living temporarily with her mother were things that made it easy for her to take G.

4 away without permission,3 and she had a history of not cooperating with Father in parenting. The court also set a hearing for further proceedings on the temporary emergency order.

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T.W. v. G.S. CA2/5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tw-v-gs-ca25-calctapp-2015.