Walet v. Caulfield

858 So. 2d 615, 2003 WL 21487230
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 27, 2003
Docket2002 CU 2009
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 858 So. 2d 615 (Walet v. Caulfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walet v. Caulfield, 858 So. 2d 615, 2003 WL 21487230 (La. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

858 So.2d 615 (2003)

Jan C. WALET
v.
Dr. John Justin CAULFIELD.

No. 2002 CU 2009.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

June 27, 2003.

*616 Michael S. Walsh, Baton Rouge, for Plaintiff-Appellee Jan C. Walet.

Bennett Wolff, Metairie, for Defendant-Appellant Dr. John J. Caulfield.

Before: CARTER, C.J., GUIDRY, PETTIGREW, McDONALD, and McCLENDON, JJ.

PETTIGREW, J.

This is an action for custody of a 6-year-old child. The acknowledged father now appeals from a judgment of the family court that awarded sole custody of the child to the natural mother with the father having visitation every other weekend during the school year. The father also appeals from the court's determination that *617 he post a $100,000.00 bond in accordance with R.S. 9:342 to insure his compliance with the family court's child custody order. We reverse in part, render, affirm in part, and remand with instructions.[1]

FACTS

The record reflects that Jan C. Walet (Ms. Walet) and Dr. John Justin Caulfield (Dr. Caulfield) met at the wedding of a friend in January 1995. Ms. Walet, who holds a master's degree in finance, later moved from her home in New Orleans, Louisiana, to Lancaster, South Carolina, in the fall of 1995[2], and began residing with Dr. Caulfield, a urologic surgeon. Through this relationship, Ms. Walet and Dr. Caulfield conceived a child. In the late spring of 1996[3], Ms. Walet returned to Louisiana. At this time, Ms. Walet was approximately five months pregnant. Ms. Walet subsequently gave birth to a son, Parker Hayes Caulfield Walet, at Woman's Hospital in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on October 11, 1996. Dr. Caulfield, the acknowledged father, visited the child in the hospital following his birth, and voluntarily began paying child support at the rate of $1,200.00 per month.

Ms. Walet returned to South Carolina with the child during Thanksgiving and Christmas of 1996, and subsequently resumed living with Dr. Caulfield in South Carolina in February 1997. In May 1997, Ms. Walet left Dr. Caulfield a note and again returned to Louisiana, dividing her time between her mother's residence in Baton Rouge, and her father's residence in New Orleans. On June 3, 1997, Ms. Walet filed a Motion For Ex Parte Order of Provisional Custody in the Family Court of East Baton Rouge Parish together with a Motion to Establish Custody and Child Support. Service was apparently withheld on these motions, and at some point Dr. Caulfield proposed marriage to Ms. Walet. Ms. Walet initially accepted Dr. Caulfield's proposal, but later broke off their engagement.

On November 25, 1997, Ms. Walet refiled her previous motion for sole custody and child support. Dr. Caulfield was subsequently served with Ms. Walet's motion in Lancaster, South Carolina, on January 19, 1998. In January 1998, Ms. Walet obtained a job selling radio advertising for Centennial Broadcasting in New Orleans. Prior to this time, Ms. Walet supported herself and the child on money from her tax refund and support payments sent by Dr. Caulfield.

Thereafter, Dr. Caulfield retained an attorney in Louisiana and filed an answer together with a reconventional demand seeking joint custody. Dr. Caulfield also requested that the child's name be changed from Parker Hayes Caulfield Walet to Parker Hayes Walet Caulfield. During this time, Dr. Caulfield made repeated trips to Baton Rouge, Louisiana, from South Carolina, for the purpose of spending several hours of supervised visitation with his son.

On October 27, 1998, Dr. Caulfield filed a motion seeking a status conference to fix interim visitation on a regular and periodic basis. Following a hearing on November *618 10, 1998, the family court issued an interim judgment that granted Dr. Caulfield unsupervised visitation with the child on specific days from November 27, 1998, through April 3, 1999. Dr. Caulfield was further ordered to submit to random drug testing "in the manner he had been doing in South Carolina."[4] Dr. Caulfield testified however that he had never been ordered to submit to drug testing in South Carolina.

On December 15, 1998, the family court reduced to judgment an agreement made by the parties in March 1998, that Dr. Caulfield would pay child support in the amount of $1,200.00 per month. Later, on January 25, 1999, the family court amended its earlier interim judgment on visitation to include a provision that Dr. Caulfield's interim visitation be confined to East Baton Rouge Parish. Citing a decline, and the impending liquidation of his solo medical practice in South Carolina, coupled with Ms. Walet's demand that visitation be confined to East Baton Rouge Parish, Dr. Caulfield filed a motion to reduce child support.

In March 1999, Dr. Caulfield closed his practice in South Carolina and was hired by Tulane University Medical Center as an assistant professor of urology and director of its Northshore clinic. The custody matter scheduled for April 7, 1999, was continued and reset for June 18, 1999. Following Dr. Caulfield's move to Louisiana, the relationship between the parties became much more acrimonious.

On June 18, 1999, the parties entered into a consent decree wherein the issue of custody was pretermitted without prejudice to either party. Dr. Caulfield was once again awarded specific periods of visitation with the child every other weekend, commencing June 20, 1999, and extending through October 24, 1999. Since Dr. Caulfield's income had decreased, his child support obligation was reduced to $1,100.00 per month. At this point, Dr. Caulfield was living across Lake Pontchartrain, in Mandeville, Louisiana, and Ms. Walet was residing in New Orleans.

Ms. Walet testified that upon encouragement from her former boss in New Orleans, she obtained a better paying job as an account executive for Guaranty Broadcasting in Baton Rouge. Dr. Caulfield responded by filing a rule for reduction in child support,[5] on December 14, 1999.

During the summer of 2000, Ms. Walet apparently refused to allow visitation between the child and his father on the grounds that the earlier visitation schedule had expired. By January 2001, the parties, *619 with limited success, had agreed on their own to exchange the child every other weekend. Dr. Caulfield asserted that because Ms. Walet had denied him the opportunity to make up a weekend of visitation missed in early January when the child was sick, he kept the child an additional two days on his next weekend visitation. Ms. Walet sought and obtained an emergency order from the family court on January 30, 2001, directing Dr. Caulfield to return the child to Ms. Walet.

Contending that there had been no judicial order or agreement between the parties regarding visitation, Dr. Caulfield sought an emergency writ from this court seeking to have the January 30, 2001 order vacated.[6] Dr. Caulfield argued that absent a determination on custody, the parents were co-tutors of the child sharing equal authority, privileges, and responsibilities. Said application was denied on the ground that the January 30, 2001 order did not make a determination as to legal custody. This court did however remand this matter to the family court for an immediate entry of an interim visitation schedule. Following a hearing on April 3, 2001, a judgment was rendered on April 4, 2001, regarding interim visitation—the family court awarded Dr. Caulfield a weekend of visitation pending a subsequent emergency hearing on April 17, 2001.[7] In addition, Dr. Caulfield was directed to provide Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
858 So. 2d 615, 2003 WL 21487230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walet-v-caulfield-lactapp-2003.