Wilcox v. LaClaire

CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedOctober 18, 2021
Docket11, 2021
StatusPublished

This text of Wilcox v. LaClaire (Wilcox v. LaClaire) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilcox v. LaClaire, (Del. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

BRYCE K. WILCOX, § § Petitioner Below, § No. 11, 2021 Appellant, § § Court Below: Family Court v. § of the State of Delaware § MARISSA LACLAIRE,1 § File No. CN13-06261 § Petition No. 20-05447 Respondent Below, § Appellee. § §

Submitted: August 11, 2021 Decided: October 18, 2021

Before VALIHURA, TRAYNOR, and MONTGOMERY-REEVES, Justices.

Upon appeal from the Family Court. REVERSED.

Timothy J. Snyder, Esquire, Curtis J. Crowther, Esquire, Young Conaway Stargatt & Taylor, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware for Appellant.

Curtis P. Bounds, Esquire, Kara M. Swasey, Esquire, Megan McGovern, Esquire, Bayard, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware for Appellee.

1 The Court previously assigned pseudonyms to the parties under Supr. Ct. R. 7(d). VALIHURA, J.

This is an appeal from an order of the Family Court denying a Petition for Parental

Visitation filed by Bryce Wilcox (“Father”) on February 23, 2020.2 Father has been

imprisoned since his son (“C.R.”) was two. C.R.’s mother, Marissa LaClaire (“Mother”)

does not permit telephone contact between Father and C.R., and has withheld all letters

Father has sent C.R. In denying Father’s Visitation Petition, the Family Court declined to

order any change in this status quo, and ordered Mother to keep letters Father sends to C.R.

should C.R. ever desire to read them. The Family Court justified the rejection of his

petition based on the lack of relationship between Father and C.R. and Mother’s testimony

that Father’s contact with C.R. would impair C.R.’s emotional development. Appellant

raises two arguments on appeal.

First, Father contends that the Family Court erred when it denied Father’s request

for contact with his son by telephone and mail because there was insufficient evidence that

such contact would significantly impair C.R.’s emotional development. He argues that

there is no evidence to support Mother’s opinion that future contact between Father and

C.R. would cause any harm to C.R.’s emotional development. Second, Father contends

that the Family Court erred when it justified that denial based upon a lack of relationship

between Father and C.R. when that lack of relationship was a result of Mother and the

Family Court not permitting Father to have contact with his son since August 2015.

2 App. to Opening Br. at A113–119 (hereinafter “A____”) (Hearing Order).

2 Father’s arguments have merit. Delaware law provides for children and non-

custodial parents to enjoy reasonable access to one another by telephone or mail, so long

as that contact would not endanger a child’s physical health or significantly impair his or

her emotional development.3 Mother does not argue that Father’s requested contact by

telephone and mail would place C.R. in any physical danger, and the only support in the

record for impairment to C.R.’s emotional development is Mother’s speculative lay

opinion. Further, the Family Court’s decision overlooks our prior opinion involving these

same parties wherein we addressed Mother’s successful effort to block contact with Father.

As a result, the Family Court’s decision lacks substantial evidence in the record to support

it, is not the product of an orderly and logical process and is REVERSED.

I. Relevant Facts and Procedural Background

Appellant/Petitioner-Below Father and Appellee/Respondent-Below Mother are the

biological and legal parents of C.R., a son born on September 17, 2011. The parties

previously appeared before this Court when we reversed an order granting Mother’s motion

to terminate Father’s parental rights.4 We recounted much of the factual history in that

earlier decision.

3 13 Del. C. §§ 727(a). 4 See generally Whitmore v. Robinson, 223 A.3d 417 (Del. 2019). The captions differ since in both cases the Court assigned pseudonyms in accordance with Supr. Ct. R. 7(d). This Court can take judicial notice of matters involving the same parties. See Johnson v. State, 55 A.3d 839, 2012 WL 5177792, at *1 n.4 (Del. Oct. 18, 2012) (“[t]he Court takes judicial notice of Johnson's unrelated criminal matter”); 29 Am. Jur.2d Evidence § 145 (“[a]n appellate court may take judicial notice of its own records in the same proceeding, and of its records between the same parties involving the same subject matter”). At the hearing giving rise to the present appeal, the Family Court took judicial notice of “all of the orders that have been entered previously.” A26 (Hearing Transcript dated November 30, 2020). See also D.R.E. 202(d)(1)(C) (“The court may, without

3 Mother and Father resided together with C.R. for the first four months of C.R.’s life,

first at the maternal grandmother’s home and then at the paternal grandmother’s home until

January 2012. Mother and C.R. then moved back in with the maternal grandmother, and

Father moved to an unknown location. Four months later, in May 2012, Father moved

back in with the paternal grandmother. From May 2012 until July 2013, Father had regular

contact with C.R. In August 2013, Mother and Father moved into an apartment together

with C.R.

Around September 17, 2013 (C.R.’s second birthday), Mother found evidence of

Father’s drug use and moved out. By May 2014, Father was active in his drug addiction

and had lost his job and housing. Father saw C.R. approximately ten times between

September 2013 and August 19, 2014 when he was arrested and incarcerated for Robbery

First Degree. For six to eight weeks thereafter he had no contact at all with C.R. From

late September or early October 2014 until August 27, 2015, he had, at most, two phone

calls per week with C.R. He will remain incarcerated until February 2028 — through

C.R.’s sixteenth birthday.5

In September 2015, when Father told Mother he faced up to twenty years in prison,

Mother stopped all contact between Father and C.R.6 In December 2015, Father filed a

petition for visitation and refiled it on February 9, 2016 to correct a procedural irregularity.

request by a party, take judicial notice of the records of the court in which the action is pending and of any other court of this State or federal court sitting in or for this State.”). 5 App. to Ans. Br. at B5 (hereinafter “B__”). Father is not seeking to have C.R. brought to the correctional institution, and, thus, 13 Del. C. § 728(d) is not implicated. 6 Whitmore, 223 A.3d at 420.

4 On December 19, 2016, following an unsuccessful mediation, an interim visitation order

granted Father twice-weekly telephone and once-weekly mail contact, with the letters to

be read to C.R. by Mother or Father’s parents (“Grandparents”).7

Following that interim order, Mother filed an Emergency Motion to Modify Contact

on January 3, 20178 seeking an emergency ex parte order to stop the contact ordered by the

interim order until after a hearing on the merits. The basis for her motion was an accusation

that Father was affiliated with a prison gang. The accusation was based on social media

postings.9 The Family Court granted the Motion on January 4, 2017, ex parte, without any

opportunity for Father to respond.10

Since September 2015, Mother had conditioned Grandparents’ continued visitation

with C.R. on them not speaking to C.R. about Father.11 Grandparents filed their own

petition for visitation in July 2016, which was consolidated with Father’s December 2015

petition. At the April 20, 2017 consolidated hearing, the Family Court found no evidence

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