Martinez v. Gutierrez ( 2017 )


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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    UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL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:
    VICENTE RUBEN MARTINEZ, Petitioner/Appellant,
    v.
    CYNTHIA MARISOL GUTIERREZ, Respondent/Appellee.
    No. 1 CA-CV 15-0861 FC
    FILED 1-24-2017
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
    No. FC2013-006662
    The Honorable Pamela D. Svoboda, Judge
    AFFIRMED
    COUNSEL
    Joseph W. Charles, P.C., Glendale
    By Joseph W. Charles
    Counsel for Petitioner/Appellant
    The Sampair Group, PLLC, Glendale
    By Patrick S. Sampair
    Counsel for Respondent/Appellee
    MARTINEZ v. GUTIERREZ
    Decision of the Court
    MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Judge Lawrence F. Winthrop delivered the decision of the Court, in which
    Presiding Judge Kent E. Cattani and Judge Rick A. Williams1 joined.
    W I N T H R O P, Judge:
    ¶1             Vicente Ruben Martinez (“Father”) appeals the family court’s
    order granting Cynthia Marisol Gutierrez’s (“Mother”) petition to relocate
    their minor child to Mexico. Father argues that Mother committed fraud
    upon the trial court in earlier proceedings and that the trial court’s best
    interest findings and negative findings related to Father are not supported
    by the record. For the following reasons, we affirm.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    ¶2            Mother is a citizen of Mexico and a legal resident of the United
    States. Mother and Father were married in 2010 and had a child in 2012.
    2
    In 2013, Father filed for divorce, and both parties requested to be named the
    primary residential parent of the minor child.
    ¶3           Shortly after filing for divorce, Father filed a motion for a
    temporary emergency injunction, requesting, among other things, that the
    court prohibit Mother from taking the child out of the country for any
    reason unless agreed upon in writing by both parties. The court denied the
    motion.
    1       The Honorable Rick A. Williams, Judge of the Arizona Superior
    Court, has been authorized to sit in this matter pursuant to Article 6, Section
    3, of the Arizona Constitution.
    2      The parties’ decree of dissolution incorrectly stated that Mother was
    a dual citizen of Mexico and the United States. Mother’s answering brief,
    however, clarifies that Mother is a Mexican citizen and legal resident of the
    United States, and she was eligible to apply for U.S. citizenship “within a
    few months of the Relocation hearing.”
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    MARTINEZ v. GUTIERREZ
    Decision of the Court
    ¶4           In December 2013, Judge George Foster conducted an
    evidentiary hearing on Father’s petition for dissolution and heard
    testimony from witnesses, including Mother and Father.
    ¶5           In 2014, after taking the matter under advisement, Judge
    Foster issued a decree of dissolution and best interest findings regarding
    the minor child,3 ordering Mother to be the child’s primary residential
    parent and granting Father visitation rights.4 Father was granted parenting
    time every other weekend and a mid-week parenting period for two hours
    each Wednesday evening.
    ¶6             In his decision, Judge Foster noted that Father’s testimony
    was not credible5 and stated that Father had “unfounded delusions that
    Mother w[ould] abscond to Mexico with the child.” Mother’s new
    relationship with a Mexican national was not “in and of itself [] enough to
    prove by a preponderance of the evidence that Mother would kidnap the
    child to live in Mexico.”
    ¶7            Judge Foster also found that Father was “overbearing and
    aggressive” and “resort[ed] to hyperbole in an effort to control situations.”
    Further, the court noted that Father’s aggressiveness was “suggestive of a
    personality disorder.”
    ¶8           Father filed a motion for reconsideration,6 which was denied.
    Father did not appeal from the decree or the denial of the motion for
    reconsideration.
    ¶9          After Mother and Father were divorced, Mother remarried
    and had another child with her second husband, who resides in Mexico.
    ¶10           In April 2015, Mother filed a petition to modify parenting
    time, requesting permission to relocate to Mexico with the parties’ minor
    3     See Ariz. Rev. Stat. (“A.R.S.”) § 25-403(A).
    4     The court awarded joint legal decision-making authority to Mother
    and Father, with Mother having presumptive decision-making authority.
    5     Judge Foster stated that Father appeared to be “hiding his eyes from
    the Court” during his testimony and that “his body language [was]
    suggestive of a lack of candor.”
    6     Father’s motion for reconsideration made no allegations that Mother
    had committed fraud in her sworn pleadings and/or testimony.
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    MARTINEZ v. GUTIERREZ
    Decision of the Court
    child. Mother requested that Father’s two-hour window of visitation on
    Wednesdays be restructured, with Father instead granted extra parenting
    time during the summer months. Mother asserted that she was willing to
    continue to transport the child from Mexico to Arizona every other
    weekend for Father’s parenting time. In his response, Father requested that
    he be made the primary caretaker of the child because Mother “has resided
    primarily in Mexico since the Decree of Divorce,” which has caused
    “considerable hardship” on the parties and child involved.
    ¶11           In November 2015, Judge Pamela Svoboda held an
    evidentiary hearing on Mother’s petition. Mother testified that she has a
    home in Glendale, Arizona and a home in Rocky Point, Mexico, and that,
    over time, her Mexican home has slowly become her primary home, with
    frequent visits after the birth of her second child. In his closing statement,
    Father’s attorney urged the court to deny Mother’s petition and to order
    that Father should be their child’s primary caretaker, arguing in part that
    Mother had perpetrated a fraud on the court by previously testifying at the
    2013 dissolution hearing that she lived in Arizona.
    ¶12           After the hearing, the court issued an under advisement
    ruling granting Mother’s petition. The court found that Father’s fears that
    Mother would kidnap the child were unwarranted because Mother
    “continues to travel to and from Mexico with [the child] so Father can have
    his parenting time.” Additionally, the child had been residing in Mexico
    with Mother during her parenting time and had already adjusted to life
    there. The court also found that Father had continued to engage in
    overbearing and aggressive behavior, and he had failed to appropriately
    respond to the child’s medical issues. Accordingly, the court found that
    Mother met her burden of showing that relocating to Rocky Point was in
    the child’s best interest.
    ¶13           Father timely appealed. We have jurisdiction pursuant to
    A.R.S. §§ 12-120.21(A)(1) and 12-2101(A)(1).
    ANALYSIS
    I.     Allegations of Fraud
    ¶14           Father argues that the family court’s order should be set aside
    because Mother committed fraud upon the court in 2013. Father asserts that
    Mother lied at the December 2013 dissolution hearing by testifying that she
    lived in Buckeye when, at that time, she already resided in Rocky Point.
    Father also alleges that Mother continued to engage in fraudulent conduct
    4
    MARTINEZ v. GUTIERREZ
    Decision of the Court
    after the dissolution hearing by not being honest with Father about where
    the child really lived.
    ¶15           The court’s dissolution decree and orders concerning legal
    decision-making and visitation in 2014 were not appealed, and became
    final. Further, Father has never filed a Rule 85 motion to set aside the decree
    or those orders on the basis of fraud or newly discovered evidence.
    ¶16           Further, to the extent Father is arguing a new claim of fraud
    upon the court subsequent to the dissolution decree, the record does not
    support Father’s allegations. Mother’s testimony at the relocation hearing
    in 2015 that her Rocky Point home became her primary home after the birth
    of her second child in March 2014 constituted affirmative evidence that she
    was not living in Rocky Point at the time of the dissolution hearing in 2013.
    Although Father, through counsel, argued against the court accepting such
    evidence, it was within the family court’s discretion to accept Mother’s
    testimony and/or otherwise reject Father’s argument that Mother had
    misled the court in 2013, or that the evidence did not otherwise support her
    petition. See Gutierrez v. Gutierrez, 
    193 Ariz. 343
    , 347, ¶ 13, 
    972 P.2d 676
    , 680
    (App. 1998) (noting that the appellate court defers to the trial court’s
    determination regarding the weight to give conflicting evidence).
    ¶17          Moreover, we defer to the trial court’s credibility
    determinations and the reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom. See
    Reynolds v. United Producers & Consumers Co-op., 
    17 Ariz. App. 145
    , 147, 
    495 P.2d 1352
    , 1354 (App. 1972). The trial court found that Father did not
    present any evidence that Mother had misled the court. Therefore, we find
    no abuse of discretion.
    II.    Relocation Determination
    ¶18           Father next argues that the family court abused its discretion
    by granting Mother’s request to relocate with the child to Rocky Point. We
    review a trial court’s grant of relocation for abuse of discretion. Hurd v.
    Hurd, 
    223 Ariz. 48
    , 52, 
    219 P.3d 258
    , 262 (App. 2009).
    ¶19             A.R.S. § 25-408(I) sets forth the factors a court must consider
    pertaining to a relocation request and incorporates by reference the best
    interest factors from A.R.S. § 25-403. A court’s decision on a relocation
    request must contain specific findings as to all relevant factors and the
    reasons its decision is in the child’s best interest. See A.R.S. § 25-408(G);
    Owen v. Blackhawk, 
    206 Ariz. 418
    , 421, ¶ 9, 
    79 P.3d 667
    , 670 (App. 2003). “No
    single factor is controlling” and all “should be weighed collectively.”
    Pollock v. Pollock, 
    181 Ariz. 275
    , 278, 
    889 P.2d 633
    , 636 (1995).
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    MARTINEZ v. GUTIERREZ
    Decision of the Court
    ¶20            Here, as an initial matter, the court acknowledged that joint
    legal decision-making was “logistically possible but more difficult if
    Mother relocates to Rocky Point.” However, after making findings
    regarding the relevant statutory factors, the court concluded that Mother
    met her burden of showing that moving to Rocky Point with the child was
    in the child’s best interest.
    ¶21           Specifically, the court found that although “Father testified
    that he loves the Child very much[,] . . . Mother has been historically, and
    remains, the primary caretaker of the Child.” See A.R.S. § 25-403(A)(1)
    (requiring the court to consider the “past, present and potential future
    relationship between the parent and the child”). Additionally, “Father’s
    only objection to the relocation is he is afraid [Mother] will kidnap the
    Child,” but Father “offers no evidence [Mother] has engaged in any
    concerning behavior which would lead him to this conclusion.”
    ¶22           The court also found that, since the parties’ divorce, Mother
    has travelled weekly between Mexico and Arizona so that Father could see
    the child, and that relocation as proposed would in fact give Father more
    parenting time by allowing him extra time with the child in the summer.
    See A.R.S. § 25-408(I)(4)-(5) (requiring the court to consider the likelihood
    that the parent with whom the child will reside after the relocation will
    comply with parenting time orders and whether the relocation will allow a
    realistic opportunity for parenting time with each parent); A.R.S. § 25-
    408(G) (“To the extent practicable the court shall also make appropriate
    arrangements to ensure the continuation of a meaningful relationship
    between the child and both parents.”).
    ¶23            The court noted Father’s concerns about the child learning
    English, but found that the child could learn English and Spanish at the
    bilingual school at which Mother proposed to enroll her in Rocky Point. See
    A.R.S. § 25-408(I)(3) (the court must consider “the prospective advantage of
    the move for improving the general quality of life for the custodial parent
    or for the child”).
    ¶24            In addition to its findings regarding the factors set forth in
    A.R.S. §§ 25-403 and 25-408, the court also noted that “despite being told
    about his overbearing and aggressive personality . . . Father continued to
    engage in similar behavior since, including engaging in very verbally
    abusive exchanges with Mother.” Those findings were based on the
    documentary and video evidence presented at the hearing. In his
    testimony, Father acknowledged this behavior, and it was reasonable for
    the court to rely on such evidence in reaching its conclusions.
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    MARTINEZ v. GUTIERREZ
    Decision of the Court
    ¶25            On the record before us, we find no clear error in the family
    court’s findings. See Ariz. R. Fam. Law P. 82(A). Accordingly, because the
    evidence supports the court’s relocation decision, the court did not abuse
    its discretion in granting Mother’s petition.
    III.   Negative Findings Regarding Father
    ¶26           Father argues that the trial court abused its discretion by
    adopting Judge Foster’s negative findings about Father’s credibility,
    personality, and conduct.
    ¶27           We do not read the trial court’s ruling to indicate that it
    adopted or relied on Judge Foster’s findings.7 To the extent the court did
    so, however, the court did not abuse its discretion. Judge Foster’s
    observations regarding Father were findings of fact that supported the
    parties’ dissolution decree. Those findings and conclusions were not
    appealed, and the trial court is entitled to rely on them during the pendency
    of the case. Further, as previously noted, the court in 2015 had the
    opportunity to review Father’s correspondence and verbal interactions
    with Mother, and to evaluate Father’s demeanor, and its observations
    regarding Father were consistent with those noted by Judge Foster.
    ¶28            We also note Father failed to provide this court with a
    transcript of the 2013 dissolution hearing. See ARCAP 11(c)(1)(A) (“The
    appellant must order transcripts of superior court proceedings not already
    in the official record that the appellant deems necessary for proper
    consideration of the issues on appeal.”). In the absence of such a transcript,
    we will presume the evidence supports the court’s factual findings and
    conclusions of law. See State ex rel. Dep’t of Econ. Sec. v. Burton, 
    205 Ariz. 27
    ,
    30, ¶ 16, 
    66 P.3d 70
    , 73 (App. 2003).
    IV.    Attorneys’ Fees and Costs
    ¶29           Mother requests attorneys’ fees pursuant to A.R.S. § 25-324.
    In our discretion, we deny that request, but award Mother her costs on
    appeal, subject to compliance with ARCAP 21.
    7      The court’s ruling states that “Mother testified that she adopts, and
    wants the Court to adopt, the A.R.S. § 25-403 findings Judge Foster made in
    the dissolution trial.” However, the court does not state it granted Mother’s
    request.
    7
    MARTINEZ v. GUTIERREZ
    Decision of the Court
    CONCLUSION
    ¶30   The family court’s order is affirmed.
    AMY M. WOOD • Clerk of the Court
    FILED: AA
    8