Wee v. Eggener

225 P.3d 1120, 2010 Alas. LEXIS 25, 2010 WL 843619
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 2010
DocketS-13465
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 225 P.3d 1120 (Wee v. Eggener) 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
Wee v. Eggener, 225 P.3d 1120, 2010 Alas. LEXIS 25, 2010 WL 843619 (Ala. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

WINFREE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Following a five-day custody trial between unmarried parents regarding their young son, the trial court found that the father has a history of domestic violence. It nonethe *1122 less awarded shared physical custody and temporary joint legal custody, deferring final determination of legal custody for one year. When issuing its oral findings and conclusions, the trial court also granted the father's request for a mutual no contact order.

The mother appealed the trial court's awards of temporary joint legal custody and shared physical custody. She argued that a court may not award any type of custody to a parent who has a history of domestic violence unless the statutory presumption against custody is overcome, and that the court failed to find the father had overcome that presumption. She also appealed the trial court's deferral of final legal custody, its award of unsupervised visitation to the father, and the mutual no contact order.

After oral argument, we issued an order: (1) vacating the trial court's order awarding shared physical custody and temporary joint legal custody to the father; (2) vacating the shared physical custody schedule ordered by the trial court; (83) remanding limited jurisdiction to the trial court to establish a reasonable unsupervised visitation schedule for the father; and (4) vacating the mutual no contact order as it applied to the mother contacting the father. We now explain the basis for our decision.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

IJhyshain Wee and Charles Eggener's son was born in September 2004. The two have never married, but began cohabiting when Wee became pregnant. Within a few months of their son's birth their relationship became strained and plagued with abuse accusations.

Wee reported that the relationship deteriorated due to verbal and physical abuse Eg-gener directed towards her. In July 2006 one such incident led to a long-term protective order against Eggener. Wee claimed she sought that protective order after Eg-gener grabbed her, causing a large bruise on her upper arm. Wee explained Eggener grabbed her when she attempted to leave the house during one of his "rage outburst[s]." Two weeks after obtaining the protective order, Wee modified it to allow Eggener contact with their son. And two months after obtaining the protective order, Wee "rescinded" or asked for a dismissal of the proceedings.

Wee also detailed a January 2007 incident when Eggener's escalating anger frightened her, and out of concern for her safety and that of their son, she attempted to dial 9-1-1. Wee claimed Eggener disconnected the call, pushed her onto the bed, and restrained her movement. Eggener confirmed he took the phone out of Wee's hand and hung it up. But Eggener claimed he had been unaware Wee actually had dialed 9-1-1, because she often picked up the phone and threatened to call for help without dialing any number.

Wee testified that Eggener often physically restrained her, as during the January 2007 incident or when she would threaten to leave the house with their son or call for help after tiring of Eggener's shouting. Wee claimed that while restraining her, Eggener would shout at her for periods of five to fifteen minutes, sometimes when their son was watching. She claimed this sort of incident happened about three or four times a month.

Eggener admitted that he and Wee argued when their son was young, but he blamed the arguments on his desire to increase Wee's involvement in their son's life and in household chores. Eggener testified that during these arguments Wee would threaten to take their son and leave the country, to go to a shelter, or to call the police and claim Eggener physically abused her. Eggener estimated that Wee made threats like these at least twice a week. Eggener also claimed Wee twice threatened to kill their son.

According to Eggener, Wee became depressed around December 2007. Eggener thought that about that time their son began preferring Eggener's company to Wee's, contributing to Wee's depression. During this time Wee told Eggener she thought he might be sexually abusing their son. Although Eg-gener claimed this allegation was unfounded, Wee went to the Office of Children's Services (OCS) and alleged Eggener was sexually abusing their son. Wee then filed for a protective order against Eggener on behalf of her son based on the abuse allegation. At *1123 the same time, Wee filed for a protective order against Eggener on her own behalf.

In early January 2008 the superior court granted Wee's motion on behalf of the son for a twenty-day ex parte protective order against Eggener. At the subsequent hearing Wee withdrew the son's motion for a long-term protective order but pursued her own domestic violence protective order against Eggener. The court granted Wee's motion for a domestic violence protective order against Eggener based on the order granted in 2006, finding that she was "still in fear." The court also ordered a 4/3, 3/4 custody schedule.

B. Proceedings

In early 2008, shortly after Wee filed for the domestic violence protective orders, Eg-gener filed a complaint for sole legal and primary physical custody of their son. Wee countered with her own request for sole legal and primary physical custody. On December 30, 2008, after a five-day trial, the trial court entered its custody orders.

The trial court first found that: the child's relationship with each parent was loving and affectionate; both parents were capable of providing for the child's needs; and the child had spent his whole life with both parents. The court also found there was no evidence that substance use affects the child's well-being.

The trial court stressed that the custody case focused on two issues-Eggener's alleged child sexual abuse and domestic violence. With regard to the former, the court found Wee failed to prove that any sexual abuse had occurred or that the child was in danger in that regard. The court then addressed Wee's claim that Eggener has a history of domestic violence under AS 25.24.150(g) and (h). 1

The trial court noted Eggener had two domestic violence orders entered against him, one in 1994 and one in 2006. 2 The trial court noted that it had granted the 2008 order "based on the prior granting of the 2006 domestic violence protective order finding that [Wee was] still in fear." The trial court stated it must consider all incidents of domestic violence, but the age and nature of each incident would influence its finding. Considering those factors, the trial court found the 1994 incident "attenuated by age," yet it "hald] some weight in determining this case." The trial court noted that the incident, which involved Eggener restraining his teenage daughter, was "consistent with" the 2006 incident involving Eggener restraining Wee. The trial court also found Eggener's actions in January 2007, when he disconnected Wee's 9-1-1 call and restrained her, constituted domestic violence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
225 P.3d 1120, 2010 Alas. LEXIS 25, 2010 WL 843619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wee-v-eggener-alaska-2010.