Turfler v. Torrez ( 2021 )


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  •                       NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION.
    UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.
    IN THE
    ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION ONE
    In re the Matter of:
    FRANK TURFLER and SHERRY TURFLER, Petitioners/Appellants,
    v.
    MEGAN MARIE TORREZ, Respondent/Appellee,
    and
    JOSEPH HOLLISTER, Respondent/Appellee.
    No. 1 CA-CV 20-0647 FC
    FILED 8-24-2021
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
    No. FC 2020-050135
    The Honorable Alison Bachus, Judge
    AFFIRMED IN PART;VACATED IN PART; REMANDED
    COUNSEL
    State 48 Law Firm, Scottsdale
    By Jillian Hansen, Ankita Gupta, Robert Hendricks, Stephen Vincent
    Counsel for Petitioners/Appellants
    Cordell Law LLP, Scottsdale
    By Kristina Cervone
    Counsel for Respondent/Appellee, Megan Marie Torrez
    TURFLER v. TORREZ
    Decision of the Court
    MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Judge Michael J. Brown delivered the decision of the Court, in which
    Presiding Judge Randall M. Howe and Judge Brian Y. Furuya joined.
    B R O W N, Judge:
    ¶1            Frank and Sherry Turfler (“Petitioners”) appeal the superior
    court’s ruling on their third-party petition relating to C.H., who was born
    in 2007. They challenge the court’s denial of their requests for legal
    decision-making and placement, as well as the court’s decision to limit their
    visitation with C.H. to one day per month. For the following reasons, we
    affirm in part, vacate in part, and remand for further proceedings.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2           C.H.’s mother, Megan Marie Torrez (“Mother”), and his
    father, Joseph Hollister (“Father”), were never married. Until these
    proceedings began Father was not involved in C.H.’s life.
    ¶3            Petitioners are not biologically related to C.H., but they claim
    they have been “intricately involved” in his life, as both he and Mother
    “resided in [Petitioners’] home from approximately 2007 to 2016.” Mother
    disputes Petitioners’ description of the relationship, asserting they “greatly
    exaggerated their role” in C.H.’s life. According to Mother, she and C.H.
    only lived with Petitioners “on-and-off between the years of 2008 and 2015,
    and the off periods were substantial in nature.”
    ¶4            C.H. has various behavioral issues and has had problems at
    home and in school. He was admitted to inpatient treatment in August
    2019. The next month, Mother signed a six-month power of attorney,
    delegating parental powers to Mrs. Turfler, and C.H. began living full-time
    with Petitioners. Petitioners believed this would be a permanent
    arrangement. But according to Mother, she made the temporary delegation
    to Petitioners because C.H.’s therapist suggested a “temporary change of
    scenery” could help C.H. adjust to his new medication, so she allowed him
    to be enrolled in a school in Petitioners’ district.
    ¶5            On December 24, 2019, however, Mother picked up C.H. from
    Petitioners’ home and told them he would not be returning to their
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    residence. C.H. did not return to Petitioners’ home from that point. The
    next day, he was again admitted to inpatient treatment.
    ¶6           Shortly thereafter, Petitioners petitioned for legal decision-
    making and placement/visitation rights over C.H., and also moved for
    temporary orders. Petitioners alleged that Mother could not care for C.H.,
    did not provide appropriate medical treatment or maintain his medication,
    and subjected him to unnecessary inpatient treatment “to be rid of him.”
    They also contended Mother has unaddressed mental health issues and will
    not seek proper treatment.
    ¶7            Mother, on the other hand, asserted that she provided
    appropriate care for C.H., and that based on the advice of medical
    professionals she approved his periods of inpatient treatment. She also
    denied having declining mental health issues. In addition, in light of C.H.’s
    behavioral health, she expressed concerns about Petitioners’ care of C.H.,
    arguing they offer a less structured, more indulgent environment, and they
    undermine her parenting by encouraging secret communications. After a
    temporary orders hearing, the court denied the motion for legal decision-
    making and placement, but permitted Petitioners to have visitation on the
    first Saturday of every month.
    ¶8            The superior court appointed a best interests attorney
    (“BIA”), who conducted an investigation, including interviews with
    Petitioners, Mother, Father, and C.H. The BIA filed a pretrial statement
    summarizing her investigation and ultimately recommending that Mother
    should retain legal decision-making and placement, but that C.H. should
    have a “significant relationship” with Petitioners, including visitation on
    weekends, holidays, and summer break. C.H. told the BIA he would like
    to stay with Petitioners.
    ¶9             Mother and Sherry Turfler testified at trial. The superior
    court then affirmed its prior ruling that Petitioners stood in loco parentis to
    C.H., which neither party disputed. Next, the court looked to the best
    interests factors listed in A.R.S. § 25-403(A) and found that Mother’s mental
    health issues did not prohibit her from parenting effectively, and that no
    credible evidence showed Mother is failing to address C.H.’s mental or
    physical health. After summarizing the evidence in detail, the court denied
    Petitioners’ request for legal decision-making and placement and granted
    visitation for eight hours on the first Sunday of every month. The court
    awarded $1,500 in attorneys’ fees and costs to Mother, finding in part that
    Petitioners acted unreasonably in the proceedings by discussing the
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    TURFLER v. TORREZ
    Decision of the Court
    litigation with C.H. during visitation. Petitioners timely appealed, and we
    have jurisdiction under A.R.S. § 12-120.21(A)(1).
    DISCUSSION
    ¶10           We review the superior court’s interpretation and application
    of A.R.S. § 25-409 de novo. Chapman v. Hopkins, 
    243 Ariz. 236
    , 240, ¶ 14
    (App. 2017). In addition, we review a decision on child custody matters for
    an abuse of discretion. In re Marriage of Diezsi, 
    201 Ariz. 524
    , 525, ¶ 3 (App.
    2002). We will sustain the court’s findings on appeal if they are supported
    by substantial evidence. Graville v. Dodge, 
    195 Ariz. 119
    , 129, ¶ 44 (App.
    1999). Finally, we review the court’s award of attorneys’ fees for an abuse
    of discretion. 
    Id. at 131, ¶ 56
    .
    ¶11             Before turning to the merits of the appeal, we address
    Mother’s argument that Petitioners failed to comply with certain briefing
    requirements, ARCAP 13, by failing to include (1) record cites in their
    Statement of the Case and (2) pincites in their Statement of Facts. Mother
    also argues Petitioners presented issues that did not align with their
    arguments. As such, she asks us to impose sanctions under ARCAP 25.
    Though Petitioners should have been more thorough with their record
    citations and more precise with their arguments, we decline to impose a
    sanction because the errors did not significantly impair Mother’s ability to
    prepare her answering brief, and more importantly, “because a child’s best
    interests are involved.” See Diezsi, 
    201 Ariz. at 525, ¶ 2
    . Moreover, Mother’s
    brief itself is not a model of appellate advocacy. Her decision to include a
    18-page block quote from the superior court’s ruling is unhelpful, and she
    failed to address several points Petitioners have raised. Regardless of either
    party’s briefing deficiencies, we consider the issues presented based on our
    own review of the law and the appellate record.
    I.     Legal Decision-Making and Placement
    A.     A.R.S. § 25-409(A)
    ¶12           Petitioners argue the superior court erred in failing to engage
    in a full analysis of A.R.S. § 25-409(A). Although we do not understand
    why this argument is included in Petitioners’ briefing, given that the
    superior court found that they stand in loco parentis to C.H., we briefly
    address the issue.
    ¶13          Section 25-409(A) permits a third party to petition for legal
    decision-making authority and placement of a child. It operates as a
    threshold standing requirement at the pleading stage, which the petitioner
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    TURFLER v. TORREZ
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    must satisfy before the court will analyze his petition on the merits under
    § 25-409(B). See Chapman, 243 Ariz. at 240, ¶¶ 15–17. The petition need only
    set forth “sufficient allegations . . . that the statutory elements exist, not proof
    of those elements,” and the facts alleged in the petition need not be
    “uncontroverted.” Id. at 242–23, ¶¶ 21 n.2, 24. Here, after receiving
    Petitioners’ petition, the court scheduled a temporary orders hearing—and
    later, a full trial—rather than summarily dismissing it. We therefore
    presume the court analyzed the petition, found sufficient allegations under
    § 25-409(A), and proceeded to the § 25-409(B) stage of the proceedings.
    B.      A.R.S. § 25-409(B)
    ¶14            Petitioners argue the superior court erred in conducting its
    analysis under A.R.S. § 25-409(B). We agree. Section 25-409(B) establishes
    a “rebuttable presumption that awarding legal decision-making to a legal
    parent serves the child’s best interests.” A third party may rebut this
    presumption if he can show “by clear and convincing evidence that
    awarding legal decision-making to a legal parent is not consistent with the
    child’s best interests.” Id. To determine a child’s best interests, the court
    “shall consider all factors that are relevant to the child’s physical and
    emotional well-being,” including the 11 factors enumerated in § 25-403(A).
    The court is required to “make specific findings on the record about all
    relevant factors and the reasons for which the decision is in the best interests
    of the child.” § 25-403(B).
    ¶15           First, the court erred in denying Petitioners’ request for legal
    decision-making because it applied an incorrect legal standard. The court
    held: “Petitioners have not established by clear and convincing evidence
    that based on their in loco parentis status, it is in the Child’s best interest that
    they be awarded sole legal decision-making authority.” However,
    Petitioners’ burden under § 25-409(B) was to rebut the presumption that
    awarding legal decision-making to Mother was in C.H.’s best interests, not
    to affirmatively prove that it was in C.H.’s best interests for Petitioners to
    be awarded legal decision-making authority.
    ¶16              In addition, the court’s best interests findings regarding legal
    decision-making, as required by § 25-403(B), are inadequate. Though the
    court listed the § 25-403(A) factors and provided related facts for each of
    them, it did not explain the “reasons for which the decision is in the best
    interests of the child,” § 25-403(B). See Downs v. Scheffler, 
    206 Ariz. 496
    , 499,
    ¶ 9 (App. 2003) (“[A] custody decision without the specific findings
    required by § 25-403 is deficient and, as a matter of law, constitutes an abuse
    of . . . discretion.”). Without more detailed findings, we “cannot ascertain
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    TURFLER v. TORREZ
    Decision of the Court
    . . . how the court weighed the statutory factors to arrive at its conclusion”
    and we are “deprived . . . of a meaningful opportunity to assess the family
    court’s best interests finding.” Reid v. Reid, 
    222 Ariz. 204
    , 207, ¶¶ 13, 20
    (App. 2009).
    ¶17            Here, despite its extensive recitation of facts and evidence, the
    court did not explain how it weighed the factors to arrive at its conclusion.
    In its analysis of the § 25-403(A) factors, many of the facts supported both
    Mother’s and Petitioners’ positions. See Owen v. Blackhawk, 
    206 Ariz. 418
    ,
    421–22, ¶ 12 (App. 2003) (remanding for further findings where court made
    detailed findings that “do not favor either parent”). The court also briefly
    referenced the BIA’s pretrial statement, but failed to offer any explanation
    for either agreeing or disagreeing with the BIA’s summary or
    recommendations. Nor can we tell whether the court placed too much
    weight on a single factor. See Reid, 222 Ariz. at 207, ¶ 13 (“Without further
    explanation,” the appellate court “cannot say that the trial court did not
    focus too much attention on [one factor] to the exclusion of other relevant
    considerations.”) (quotation and citation omitted). For instance, several
    times the court mentioned Mother’s allegation that Petitioners had
    discussed the pending litigation with C.H., which is significant because the
    evidence on that point was disputed.
    ¶18           Second, the court erred in failing to consider Petitioners’
    request for placement.1 The court conducted a thorough analysis regarding
    legal decision-making, but did not make findings, conduct analysis, or
    mention “placement” in its ruling, apart from a few non-substantive
    references to “parenting time.” We will not presume the court’s legal
    decision-making analysis was intended to extend to the issue of placement
    without any evidence to support that inference. Therefore, we vacate the
    provisions of the order regarding legal decision-making and placement,
    and remand for the court to apply the proper standards and to explain its
    reasoning on the record in compliance with § 25-403(B).
    1      The record indicates the parties treated “placement” as a separate
    issue, and thus the superior court should have resolved it. Although
    “placement” as used in § 25-409(B) is not defined by statute, see A.R.S. § 25-
    401, we will not attempt to discern its application or meaning without a
    fully-developed record, which must include the superior court’s analysis of
    whether Petitioners met their burden of proving C.H. should have been
    placed with them.
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    II.   Visitation
    ¶19            Petitioners argue the superior court erred in issuing its
    visitation ruling.2 A third party may petition the court for visitation rights,
    defined as the “schedule of time” spent with a child by “someone other than
    a legal parent.” A.R.S. §§ 25-401(7), -409(C). The court may grant visitation
    “on a finding that [it] is in the child’s best interests” and that “[t]he child
    was born out of wedlock and the child’s legal parents are not married to
    each other at the time the petition is filed.” § 25-409(C)(2).
    ¶20            “In deciding whether to grant visitation, the court . . . shall
    give special weight to the legal parent’s opinion.” § 25-409(E). Fit parents
    are entitled to a rebuttable presumption that they act in their “child’s best
    interest in [making] decisions concerning . . . visitation.” McGovern v.
    McGovern, 
    201 Ariz. 172
    , 177, ¶ 17 (App. 2001) (citing Troxel v. Granville, 
    530 U.S. 57
    , 68–69 (2000)). For special weight to be given to a parent’s opinion,
    he or she need only be a legal parent, not a custodial parent or in any way
    a “model parent[].” In re Marriage of Friedman, 
    244 Ariz. 111
    , 119, ¶¶ 30–31
    (2018); see § 25-401(4) (defining “[l]egal parent” as a “biological . . . parent
    whose parental rights have not been terminated”); Ward v. Ward, 
    88 Ariz. 130
    , 139 (1960) (finding parent is presumed to be fit if no adjudication of
    unfitness). If parents disagree, both “opinions are entitled to special
    weight” and “the parents’ conflicting opinions must give way to the court’s
    finding on whether visitation is in the child’s best interests.” Friedman, 244
    Ariz. at 113, ¶ 1.
    ¶21          The court applied the wrong standard in deciding the extent
    to which Petitioners could exercise visitation with C.H. In its ruling, the
    court explained it “considered all relevant factors regarding the Child’s best
    2       Mother argues Petitioners failed to properly plead visitation in their
    original petition. In their petition, Petitioners requested sole legal decision-
    making and primary care or “[p]arenting [t]ime,” and suggested Mother
    could have visitation with C.H. Following the temporary orders hearing,
    the superior court noted that because placement was not ordered for the
    third party, it construed the request as a request for visitation, and it
    ordered visitation on the first Saturday of each month. In their pretrial
    statement, Petitioners requested visitation as an alternative to legal
    decision-making and placement, and Mother testified at trial that she
    agreed with allowing Petitioners visitation for one day each month. Thus,
    Mother cannot complain now that Petitioners failed to properly request
    visitation.
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    TURFLER v. TORREZ
    Decision of the Court
    interests . . . giving deference to the parents’ position” and “applied the
    presumption that Mother has, and the parents shall, continue to make
    decisions that are in the Child’s best interests.” These statements are in
    accord with the standard for visitation in § 25-409(C), (E) and McGovern,
    
    201 Ariz. at 177, ¶ 17
    . But the court also found: “There has been no credible
    showing that either parent is unfit. The Court finds Petitioners have failed
    to show the Child’s best interests will be substantially harmed absent
    judicial intervention.” To be awarded visitation rights, Petitioners were not
    required to make a showing of parental unfitness or substantial harm to
    C.H., as these requirements have been explicitly overturned by our
    supreme court. Friedman, 244 Ariz. at 116, ¶ 19 (disavowing Goodman v.
    Forsen, 
    239 Ariz. 110
     (App. 2016)).
    ¶22           Second, the court abused its discretion in finding that Father
    agreed with Mother’s opinion on visitation. Early in the case, Mother
    opposed Petitioners’ visitation with C.H., but after the court temporarily
    granted visitation of one day per month, she argued Petitioners should be
    limited to that amount. Father, however, remained more open about C.H.
    having broader contact with Petitioners. After the temporary order
    hearings, the court noted that Father’s position on visitation was “not
    clear.” Father told the BIA he thinks C.H. should remain with Mother, but
    he “understands the bond” C.H. has with Petitioners and “would be in
    agreement with [C.H.] having an ongoing relationship that would include
    visits.” He stated that “if he had custody, [C.H.] could spend the summers
    with the [Petitioners].” At trial, Father briefly commented that he believed
    C.H. should remain with Mother, but did not address visitation.
    ¶23             In its ruling, however, the court stated: “Father testified he
    agrees with Mother’s position.” Substantial evidence does not support this
    factual finding because Father never stated an opinion on the proffered
    visitation plan. Though Mother is the custodial parent, and Father has had
    limited contact with C.H., his opinion is entitled to equal weight with
    Mother’s. To the extent his opinion about visitation conflicts with hers,
    “neither parent is entitled to a presumption in his or her favor,” and the
    superior court’s “factually supported determination of whether visitation
    is in the child's best interests controls.” Friedman, 244 Ariz. at 119, ¶ 34. We
    vacate the visitation order and remand for further consideration of Father’s
    opinion and application of the proper legal standard.
    III.   Attorneys’ Fees – Superior Court
    ¶24           Petitioners argue the superior court erred in awarding
    attorneys’ fees and costs to Mother. The court “may order a party to pay a
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    TURFLER v. TORREZ
    Decision of the Court
    reasonable amount to the other party” for attorneys’ fees and costs, “after
    considering . . . the reasonableness of the positions each party has taken
    throughout the proceedings.” A.R.S. § 25-324(A). The court ordered
    Petitioners to pay $1,500 of Mother’s fees and costs, finding Petitioners
    acted unreasonably by discussing the litigation with C.H., which
    “undermined Mother’s ability to parent.” We conclude the court abused its
    discretion in considering this allegation. The reasonableness portion of
    § 25-324(A) refers to a party’s legal positions, not the reasonableness of a
    party’s conduct in general. See In re Marriage of Williams, 
    219 Ariz. 546
    , 548,
    ¶¶ 9–10 (App. 2008) (quotation and citation omitted). On remand, the court
    shall reconsider the award of attorneys’ fees and costs.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶25           For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the superior court’s
    ruling regarding § 25-409(A), but we vacate the remainder of the court’s
    ruling and remand for further proceedings consistent with this decision,
    including taking additional evidence if the court deems it appropriate. In
    our discretion, we deny Petitioners’ request for attorneys’ fees under § 25-
    324 but award taxable costs to Petitioners upon compliance with ARCAP
    21.
    AMY M. WOOD • Clerk of the Court
    FILED: AA
    9
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1 CA-CV 20-0647-FC

Filed Date: 8/24/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 8/24/2021