Zeitner v. Shank

2012 WY 157, 290 P.3d 180, 2012 WL 6200644, 2012 Wyo. LEXIS 161
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 2012
DocketNo. S-12-0142
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2012 WY 157 (Zeitner v. Shank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zeitner v. Shank, 2012 WY 157, 290 P.3d 180, 2012 WL 6200644, 2012 Wyo. LEXIS 161 (Wyo. 2012).

Opinion

BURKE, Justice.

[¶ 1] Appellant, Cody Zeitner, acting pro se, challenges the district court's order denying her petition for modification of custody. No transcript of the hearings on the petition was created, and Ms. Zeitner's statement of the evidence was not approved by the district court pursuant to Wyoming Rule of Appellate Procedure 3.08. Further, Ms. Zeitner's appellate brief fails to comply with several provisions of W.R.A.P. 7.01. Based on the lack of a hearing transcript and the deficiencies in Ms. Zeitner's brief, we affirm.

ISSUES

[¶ 2] Ms. Zeitner (Mother) presents the following issues:

1. Did the trial Judge's decision to admit and review evidence in September, 2011 but fail to acknowledge it in January, 2012, a full four months later, violate due process?
2. Did the trial Judge's personal opinion about the Plaintiff and her marriage, specifically forming opinions based on no facts or evidence, violate the Wyoming Judicial Code of Conduct?
8. Maricopa County Superior Court in Arizona made over 30 rulings. Did misinterpretations and failure to clarify the Arizona[ 1 Court's] 2007 and 2008 orders filed by the maternal grandparents result in an unfair ruling? Were they even relevant to these proceedings?
4. [The trial court] faxed information to the Defendant that was used to discredit the Plaintiff on a Power of Attorney that was filed by mistake. The correct and legal document was admitted into evidence. Did [the court's] ex parte communication with the Defendant violate the Wyoming Judicial Code of Conduct?
5. Plaintiff filed [the] petition based on very specific UCCJEA1 statutes as well as the application of Wyoming statutes on child abuse and abandonment that fell under UCCJEA guidelines. Did [the court's] faflure to rule on the issues in the Plaintiffs initial pleading result in an unfair ruling?

Appellee (Father) did not file a brief.

FACTS

[¶ 3] The parties were married in 1999 in Mesa, Arizona. Two children were born into the marriage: BJS, born in 2000, and AZS, born in 2008. Upon dissolution of the marriage in 2004, the parties agreed they would share joint legal custody of the children and that Mother would have primary residential custody. Seven months after entry of the parties' stipulated divorce decree, Mother filed a petition for sole custody of the children in the Superior Court of Arizona for Maricopa County. The court granted the petition. Ten months later, Father petitioned for sole custody of the children. The Arizona court granted Father's petition by default and awarded sole custody of the children to him. The children's maternal grandparents, Patty and Richard Trembley, were subsequently granted visitation with the children. In May, 2008, the court entered an order "granting grandmother's request to al[182]*182low the minor children, [AZS] and [BJS] to have contact with their natural mother [] during grandparenting time."

[¶ 4] In late 2009, Father relinquished physical custody of AZS to the Trembleys after AZS was hospitalized for an appendectomy. Ms. Trembley collected AZS from the hospital in Arizona and returned with him to her home in Buffalo, Wyoming. Father executed a "Limited Non-Durable Power of Attorney" granting the Trembleys the power to exercise Father's parental rights with respect to the care, custody, and control of AZS for a period of one year. In 2010, the parties' older child, BJS, also moved to Wyoming to live with the Trembleys.

[¶ 5] In the summer of 2011, Father requested that his children be returned to him. When Mother learned of Father's request, Mother moved the children to Cheyenne without Father's knowledge or consent. On July 19, 2011, Mother filed a petition in Laramie County District Court seeking custody of the children. Mother's petition asserted that Father had not contacted AZS during AZS's residence in Wyoming, and that Father had not contacted BJS since April, 2011.

[¶ 6] On August 15, 2011, Father filed a "Petition to Modify Child Custody, Parenting Time and Child Support" in the Arizona Superior Court, seeking to terminate any visitation rights held by Mother and the children's grandparents. Father's petition alleged that he travelled to Buffalo to retrieve his children, but that "[the grandparents refused to tell me where the children were and how to get a hold of them." Father asserted that "no parenting or Grandparenting time should be granted because the children are now missing and the Grandparents refuse to give me any information as to their whereabouts."

[¶ 7] The Laramie County District Court determined that it had jurisdiction to review Mother's petition seeking custody of the children and set the matter for hearing. The hearing commenced on September 27, 2011, and for reasons that are unclear from the record, the hearing was concluded on January 17, 2012. No record of the proceedings was created. The court issued its final ruling denying Mother's petition via email on January 19, 2012.2 On May 16, 2012, the court issued an order memorializing its decision. That order provides, in relevant part, as follows:

The Court's initial thoughts and final email ruling are incorporated herein by this reference. The Court FINDS and ORDERS that the evidence presented is sufficient to find a substantial and material change of circumstances, but that it is in the best interests of the children that Plaintiff's Motion for Emergency Custody be denied. Custody of the two children at issue in this case shall remain with [Father] pursuant to the September 28, 2005 Minute Entry of Maricopa County, Arizona Superior Court Judge Connie Contes. The 2005 Minute Entry is a part of this file and incorporated herein.
The Court used the factors set forth in Wyoming Statute § 20-2-101(a) and § 20-2-101(c) in determining the best interests of the two children. The facts relied upon by the Court in determining the best interests of the children include, but are not limited to, the following:
Behavior and Actions of the Parents
1. WS. § 20-2-201(a)fiv)-Both parties have shown a willingness to disregard this Court's orders and the Arizona Court's orders. However, [Father] expressly stated that he believes [Mother] should have a role in the children's lives. His statement appeared genuine. [Mother] did not convey the same sentiment to this Court about the importance of [Father's] role in the children's lives.
[Mother's] current possession of the children was done in direct violation of the Arizona court Order. [Father] requested that his children be returned to him in the summer of 2011. At the time, the children's maternal grandparents were caring for them in Buffalo, Wyoming with [Father's] permission. The children were only permitted to be in contact with their mother while in the company of the maternal grandparents. When [Mother] learned of [Father's] request to return the children, [Mother] violated the Arizona court [183]*183order which prohibited her contact with the children outside the presence of their maternal grandparents and moved the children to Cheyenne while the grandparents remained in Buffalo, Wyoming and without the knowledge or consent of [Father].

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Bluebook (online)
2012 WY 157, 290 P.3d 180, 2012 WL 6200644, 2012 Wyo. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zeitner-v-shank-wyo-2012.