Williams v. Williams

252 P.3d 998, 2011 Alas. LEXIS 38, 2011 WL 2150549
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 2011
DocketS-13527
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 252 P.3d 998 (Williams v. Williams) 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
Williams v. Williams, 252 P.3d 998, 2011 Alas. LEXIS 38, 2011 WL 2150549 (Ala. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

CARPENETI, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

A divorced mother appeals the superior court's denial of four motions to reconsider child support, visitation arrangements, appointment of a court custody investigator, and her share of her ex-husband's military retirement pay. We affirm the superior court's decision on each issue except for visitation, which we decline to reach on mootness grounds. We also reject the mother's claim that the superior court judge handling the case exhibited bias against her.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

After 14 years of marriage, Phyllis and DeJeaux Williams divorced in 2000. They have one child, Camerin, born November 23, 1995. Phyllis and Camerin live in Alaska and DeJeaux lives in Texas. The relationship between the parties is contentious, and the past ten years have seen near-constant litigation on the issues of child support, visitation, custody, and property division. Phyllis raises similar types of issues in her appeal to this court. Both she and DeJeaux are pro se.

A. Military Retirement

DeJeaux was in the military during the parties' entire 14-year marriage. However, the property settlement provisions of the parties' original divorce decree, issued in December 2000, did not specifically address De-Jeaux's future military retirement pay. In July 2001, the superior court amended the decree to hold that upon DeJeaux's retirement, Phyllis was entitled to "one half (#) times 170 months of married military service divided by the total number of months defendant eventually serves in the military." It appears DeJeaux retired sometime in 2006. In June 2007, citing the Uniformed Services Former Spouses' Protection Act 1 (USFSPA), the court awarded Phyllis 35% of DeJeaux's retirement pay. The court explained how it reached this percentage as follows: "50% x *1001 (months of military service during marriage) + (total months of active service)[,] more fully defined as: 50% x 168 months + 240 months = 85%."

In January 2009, citing generally to the USFSPA, Phyllis asked the superior court to increase her entitlement to DeJeaux's military retirement pay from one-third to 50%. The court denied Phyllis's request, explaining that the 85% determination was properly "based upon the number of years the parties were married and the number of years De-Jeaux was in the military."

On April 3, 2009, Phyllis again moved to increase her share of the military retirement to 50%, this time invoking Alaska Civil Rule 60(b) and arguing, in part, that new evidence had been discovered. Phyllis did not say what the new evidence was, though she may have been referring to a copy of the pamphlet entitled "Uniformed Services Former Spouses' Protection Act: Dividing Military Retired Pay," a publication of the Defense Finance and Accounting Service that Phyllis referenced on one of the two pages of her motion. Phyllis filed a similar motion three days later, this time including the aforementioned pamphlet. DeJeaux opposed the motion, arguing that the original determination was proper and nothing had changed since it was made. At an April 23, 2009 hearing, the superior court denied Phyllis's motion, explaining that the court's previous division of the marital portion of the retirement was correct. A written order denying the motion was issued the same day. Phyllis appeals this determination.

B. Visitation

Camerin was five years old when the parties divorced in 2000. In the original divorce proceeding, the parties agreed that Phyllis would have sole legal and physical custody of Camerin, and DeJeaux would have "reasonable rights of visitation as the parties may amicably agree to." In July 2001, finding that the parties were incapable of informally managing DeJeaux's visitation rights in Camerin's best interests, the superior court began formally setting visitation. At the time, DeJeaux was supposed to transfer out of Alaska around October 2001. The court ordered that onee DeJeaux moved, visitation would be permitted during half of summer vacations and on various alternating holidays; the court also ordered that Camerin be accompanied on all flights due to his age. In January 2002, the court ordered DeJeaux to pay two-thirds of all visitation-related travel expenses. -It appears at least one visit took place before 2008.

In October 2006, DeJeaux filed a motion to enforce his visitation rights. DeJeaux alleged that Phyllis was preventing him from speaking to Camerin, refusing to return calls, and interfering with his attempts to plan visitation. DeJeaux stated that he had not seen Camerin in two years. Phyllis responded that she had not interfered in any way, and that the lack of visitation was because DeJeaux did not want to spend the time or money required.

In November 2006, the court noted that it was unclear what visitation had occurred in the previous five years, that the parties disagreed about the reasons for the lack of visitation, and that it could not "determine whether a party has been disobeying the visitation order or whether there were other reasons for the current dispute." The court ordered Phyllis to cooperate with DeJeaux in setting up the Christmas visit to which DeJeaux was entitled under the 2001 visitation order, and it set a hearing for the following January to reevaluate the situation. Because the parties could not agree on the location of the Christmas visit, the visit did not take place.

At the January 2007 hearing, DeJeaux said that although he could not afford to pay travel expenses for the spring visit to which he was entitled, he did want Camerin to visit in the summer. The court ordered that Camerin could visit DeJeaux in Texas in summer 2007, but only after DeJeaux traveled to Alaska and spent time with Camerin there. The court explained that this was necessary because "Camerin has not seen DeJeaux for so long and ... is somewhat apprehensive about traveling to see De-Jeaux," and this arrangement would permit Camerin to "become more comfortable with DeJeaux."

*1002 At an April 2007 status conference, the parties acknowledged that they had not been in phone contact since the previous hearing, but they disagreed about why. 2 DeJeaux told the court that if he paid for a ticket to fly to Alaska, the expense of the flight would limit the activities he and Camerin could do together. The court questioned DeJeaux at length about his finances, then ordered that he must spend four days in Alaska, but could then spend 17 days in Texas with Camerin. It is unclear whether this visit ever took place.

In March 2008, DeJeaux filed another motion seeking an order requiring Phyllis to cooperate with his efforts to interact with Camerin. Phyllis did not respond, and the court staff found that her phone number was out of service. In July 2008, DeJeaux moved again to establish a visitation schedule, stating that he had not spoken to Camerin in a year because he did not know Phyllis's phone number.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
252 P.3d 998, 2011 Alas. LEXIS 38, 2011 WL 2150549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-williams-alaska-2011.