Winternitz v. Winternitz

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 27, 2015
DocketD065131
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Winternitz v. Winternitz, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 2/27/15; pub. order 3/27/15 (see end of opn.)

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

TAMI L. WINTERNITZ, D065131

Appellant,

v. (Super. Ct. No. D536848)

WILLIAM W. WINTERNITZ, JR.,

Respondent.

APPEAL from orders of the Superior Court of San Diego County,

William McAdam, Jr. and Christine K. Goldsmith, Judges. (Retired judges of the

San Diego Sup. Ct.) Affirmed.

Kim M. Robinson, Barbara A. Kauffman and Jennifer A. Hilton for

Appellant.

Edward Stephen Temko and Dennis Geis Temko for Respondent.

Tami Winternitz (Mother) appeals the denial of her move away request

involving her daughter Jamison (born 2001) with ex-husband Dr. William

Winternitz (Father). She asserts the custody evaluator failed to comply with California Rules of Court, rule 5.220 and it was legal error for the family court to

deny her motion to strike the evaluator's defective report. (All rule references are

to the California Rules of Court.) She also claims the family court did not apply

the correct legal standard in assessing her relocation request, including (1) failing

to consider her presumptive right to move under Family Code section 7501,

(2) not weighing all of the factors set forth in In re Marriage of LaMusga (2004)

32 Cal.4th 1072 (LaMusga), and (3) not giving meaningful consideration to

Jamison's custodial preference to remain in her care as required by Family Code

section 3042. (Undesignated statutory references are to the Family Code.) She

also contends the family court abused its discretion by failing to award her any

need based attorney fees after May 21, 2013. We affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. First Move Away Request

The parents married in 1985. Father is an orthopedic surgeon. The couple

had three children: Jill, Jana and Jamison. The couple separated in August 2001,

shortly after Jamison's birth. The Yolo County Superior Court dissolved their

marriage in 2004. To help determine custody of their then three minor children,

the couple stipulated to the appointment of Frank Leek as a custody evaluator. In

his June 2003 report, Dr. Leek addressed Mother's request to relocate the children

to San Diego. Dr. Leek found that Mother manipulated the children. He reported

that therapists who met with both parents concluded that Mother alienated the

children from Father. Dr. Leek initially recommended the children remain with

2 Father. In an amended report, Dr. Leek changed his recommendation to permit

Mother's relocation with the children. He notes changes that occurred over the

year, including Mother's act of alienating the children and the children's strong

opposition to living with Father. Dr. Leek believed that by staying with Mother,

the children would make a less conflicted adjustment and the possibility of

reconciling with Father would be left open.

A March 2005 custody order found that Mother engaged in tactics

"resulting in the alienation of the minor children from Father." Despite this

finding, the court allowed Mother to relocate with the children to San Diego. The

order provided that custody would be modifiable on the children's best interests

without showing a change in circumstance. After Mother moved to San Diego

with the children, Father relocated to San Diego and established an orthopedic

surgery practice there.

B. Instant Move Away Request

After some initial proceedings in the Yolo County Superior Court, Mother

filed a move away request in the San Diego Superior Court seeking an order to

move Jamison with her to Chico, in northern California, where she had purchased

a home. Mother sought to move as she had reconnected with a friend, Evan Said,

to whom she was now engaged, Evan's former employer rehired him to work in

Chico, Mother was unable to find a job in San Diego and she could not afford a

home there. In turn, Father moved to modify custody and visitation, seeking

physical custody of Jamison.

3 In July 2012, Father and Mother met with Family Court Services (FCS).

The FCS report concluded with a recommendation that Mother remain Jamison's

primary caregiver. Father did not agree with the FCS recommendation;

accordingly, he requested a custody evaluation and evidentiary hearing. The

family court granted Father's request and appointed Robert Simon, Ph.D. to

conduct a custody evaluation.

Dr. Simon submitted his custody evaluation report in March 2013,

recommending that the move away request be denied and Jamison placed with

Father. He interviewed Father and Mother, separately and with Jamison. He spent

over 14 hours interviewing Father and over 20 hours interviewing Mother. He

also interviewed Jamison, Jill, Jana, Evan and Cheri (Mother's younger sister). Dr.

Simon admitted making mistakes in the case and Mother's counsel cross-examined

him at length on his conclusions and impartiality.

After considering Dr. Simon's report, hearing testimony and argument from

counsel, the family court denied Mother's move away request and changed

primary custody of Jamison to Father. The family court found that Father met his

burden of showing the planned move would cause substantial detriment to

Jamison. It then addressed the LaMusga factors and found that changing custody

to Father was in Jamison's best interests. Mother filed several requests for an

award of attorney fees and costs, which the family court denied. Mother timely

appealed from the denial of the move away order and the denial of attorney fees

and costs.

4 DISCUSSION

I. Move Away Request

A. General Legal Principles

"A parent entitled to the custody of a child has a right to change the

residence of the child, subject to the power of the court to restrain a removal that

would prejudice the rights or welfare of the child." (§ 7501, subd. (a).)

Accordingly, when a custodial parent proposes to relocate a child, "the

noncustodial parent has the burden of showing that the planned move will cause

detriment to the child in order for the court to reevaluate an existing custody

order." (LaMusga, supra, 32 Cal.4th at p. 1096.) "The extent to which a proposed

move will detrimentally impact a child varies greatly depending upon the

circumstances. We will generally leave it to the superior court to assess that

impact in light of the other relevant factors in determining what is in the best

interests of the child." (Id. at p. 1097.) If the noncustodial parent carries the

threshold burden of showing that the planned move would cause detriment to the

child, the "court must perform the delicate and difficult task of determining

whether a change in custody is in the best interests of the child[]." (Id. at p. 1078.)

As the LaMusga court stated, "[T]his area of law is not amenable to

inflexible rules." (LaMusga, supra, 32 Cal.4th at p. 1101.) Rather, courts must

"exercise their discretion to fashion orders that best serve the interests of the

children in the cases before them. Among the factors that the court ordinarily

should consider when deciding whether to modify a custody order in light of the

5 custodial parent's proposal to change the residence of the child are the following:

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