Weathers v. Weathers

425 P.3d 131
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 10, 2018
Docket7271 S-16610
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 425 P.3d 131 (Weathers v. Weathers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weathers v. Weathers, 425 P.3d 131 (Ala. 2018).

Opinion

STOWERS, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

A mother appeals the superior court's custody modification order awarding the father physical custody of their daughter 59% of the year. Previously, pursuant to the parties' divorce settlement agreement, the mother had been awarded primary physical custody in large part because the father's employment required him to work overseas most of the year. After the father was retired by his employer due to a downturn in the oil market, he unilaterally took custody and refused to allow the mother to have custody of their daughter except for very limited visitation. The mother moved to modify custody to a 50/50 basis. We conclude that the superior court's custody award was an abuse of discretion because it gave disproportionate weight to grandparent involvement as a factor favoring the father while failing to weigh against the father the statutory best interests factor regarding the willingness and ability of each parent to facilitate and encourage a close and continuing relationship between the child and the other parent. We reverse the custody award and remand to the superior court.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

Dennis and Rowena Weathers married in July 2007, when Dennis was 44 and Rowena was 20. The couple had a daughter, Sally, in April 2008. 1 Dennis had worked on the North Slope in the oil industry for around 20 years, but began to work in Africa and other overseas locations later in his career. From birth through first grade Sally was in Rowena's primary care; Dennis was working overseas for most of those years. He came home to Kenai only occasionally, for somewhere between ten days and two months per year. Rowena kept photographs of Dennis for their daughter and would coach her on who her father was. The child's paternal grandparents lived nearby and had contact with the child.

The parties divorced pursuant to a settlement agreement in April 2014. The parties agreed that Rowena would "have primary physical custody of [Sally]" and that Dennis would "have custody of [Sally] in Alaska during his weeks off from work overseas." Dennis *134 came back from Africa in June 2015 after being directed by his employer, Schlumberger, to take vacation days following a downturn in the oil market. He told Rowena he had been asked to take vacation days because he had so many vacation days accrued. He assumed primary physical custody of his daughter during his time off. He and Sally lived in the family home, and Rowena moved into a single family residence with her fiancé in the same general area where Dennis and the paternal grandparents lived.

For the first two months Dennis was back home, he allowed Rowena very limited visitation with their daughter; they met at a McDonald's for lunch, they went to the park for an hour, and Sally attended a lake party with her mother. Dennis eventually allowed weekend overnights starting in September. But he did not want to give Rowena too many overnights and lose the 50% reduction in child support the settlement agreement gave him "during periods of visitation that exceed[ed] 27 days."

Rowena asked Dennis in August 2015 when he was going back to work. He said he did not know and that it might be October 4. He received a termination letter on September 18, 2015, effective the same day, but did not inform Rowena. He later testified that his company was still trying to find a place for him before the termination paperwork was finished; that between September and December 2015, he was still hoping to be employed in his company's Gulf of Mexico or United Kingdom projects; and that if his company could not find a place for him by the time he got his first retirement check on December 1, he would then be terminated permanently.

In early October Rowena again asked Dennis when he was going back to work. Despite his termination letter from his employer, he answered that he was not sure and again failed to advise Rowena that he had already received the termination letter. In response to Rowena's further questioning about his departure date, he told her to stop asking him. In early December, when he got his first retirement check, he called Rowena and told her he had been effectively retired the month before - November. At trial, he described himself as retired or "semi-retired." Rowena approached Dennis about changing the custody arrangement and asked for more time with Sally. Dennis responded that if she wanted more than the weekends he was "giving her" she would have to file a motion with the court.

B. Proceedings

Rowena filed a motion to modify custody in January 2016 seeking a 50/50 shared physical custody arrangement. Dennis opposed the motion, interpreting the settlement agreement as giving him primary custody when he returned to Alaska and arguing his retirement did not constitute a substantial change in circumstances. In April 2016 the court issued an order concluding that Dennis's interpretation of the settlement agreement was "not in sync with the common meaning of the phrase 'weeks off from work overseas,' " finding that Dennis's retirement was a material change of circumstances sufficient to justify a new custody determination, and setting an evidentiary hearing. The court held an interim hearing after which it ordered a 70/30 shared custody schedule during the school year favoring Dennis and a 50/50 schedule during the summer. The court held a full custody hearing on January 10, 2017. Rowena testified and presented testimony from her fiancé and Dennis's sister-in-law. Dennis testified and presented testimony from his father.

The superior court's findings on custody addressed each of the statutory best interests factors under AS 25.24.150(c). 2 With respect to factor one on the child's needs, the court found that Sally had the needs of a normal eight year old, but had spent little time living with both her parents at the same time. With respect to factor two on the capability and desire of each parent to meet the child's needs, the court found that both parents *135 had demonstrated the capability and desire to care for Sally on a regular, consistent basis; Rowena from birth through first grade, and Dennis in the year he had full custody of Sally after returning from overseas. Additionally, the court found that as a semi-retired person, Dennis had ample time to care for Sally, and that Rowena could arrange her classes and homework to allow for ample time as well.

Under factor three on the child's preference, the court found that Sally was too young to express a preference for either parent, but cautioned the parties that Sally appeared to be learning how to manipulate them by telling each what they wanted to hear. Under factor four on the love and affection existing between the child and each parent, the court found that both parents loved Sally and she loved them.

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Bluebook (online)
425 P.3d 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weathers-v-weathers-alaska-2018.