In re Marriage of Levites ( 2021 )


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    Appellate Court                        Date: 2022.03.31
    10:47:37 -05'00'
    In re Marriage of Levites, 
    2021 IL App (2d) 200552
    Appellate Court        In re MARRIAGE OF DMITRY LEVITES, Petitioner and
    Caption                Counterrespondent-Appellee, and NURIANA LEVITES, Respondent
    and Counterpetitioner-Appellant.
    District & No.         Second District
    No. 2-20-0552
    Filed                  March 3, 2021
    Decision Under         Appeal from the Circuit Court of Lake County, No. 17-D-747; the
    Review                 Hon. Charles William Smith, Judge, presiding.
    Judgment               Affirmed.
    Counsel on             Lena Goretsky Winters, of Winters Family Law Firm, and David
    Appeal                 Winters, Andrew Foreman, and Bide Akande, of Porter Wright Morris
    & Arthur LLP, both of Chicago, for appellant.
    No brief filed for appellee.
    Panel                  JUSTICE BIRKETT delivered the judgment of the court, with
    opinion.
    Justices Jorgensen and Schostok concurred in the judgment and
    opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1       After her previous appeal (In re Marriage of Levites, No. 2-20-0254 (2020) (Levites I)
    (unpublished summary order under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 23(c))) was dismissed for
    want of jurisdiction, respondent and counterpetitioner, Nuriana Levites, again appeals the order
    of the circuit court of Lake County denying her amended petition for relocation, seeking to
    relocate with her child from her marriage to petitioner and counterrespondent, Dimitry Levites.
    In this appeal, respondent argues that the trial court erred in assigning her the burden of proving
    by a preponderance of the evidence that relocation was in S.L.’s best interests and that the trial
    court’s judgment denying her amended petition for relocation was against the manifest weight
    of the evidence. We affirm.
    ¶2                                        I. BACKGROUND
    ¶3       We summarize the relevant facts appearing in the record on appeal. Respondent is 34 years
    of age and currently resides in Chicago. Petitioner is 49 years old and currently resides in
    Highland Park. Respondent was born and educated in Russia, and she previously lived in
    Moscow with her family. Petitioner is a United States citizen and, for at least the past 21 years,
    has owned and operated a business making dental prosthetics and implants.
    ¶4       In March 2013, respondent lived in Moscow and vacationed in Jamaica, where she met
    petitioner, who lived in Illinois and was also vacationing in Jamaica. Respondent testified that
    petitioner aggressively courted her, calling her many times a day and flying her to Illinois. On
    August 20, 2014, the parties were married. During the marriage, a child, S.L., was born to the
    parties. On April 26, 2017, petitioner filed a petition for dissolution of marriage.
    ¶5       As respondent later learned, petitioner had three previous marriages. In 1997, petitioner
    was first married, and in 1998, the first marriage was dissolved; no children were born from
    that first marriage. In 1998, petitioner married for a second time, and during the marriage,
    petitioner and his second wife had twins. In 2001, petitioner divorced his second wife; he does
    not appear to have regular contact with his children from that marriage. In 2003, petitioner
    married his third wife, with whom he had a son. In 2011, petitioner and his third wife divorced.
    Respondent testified that she remembered seeing his son only three times during her marriage
    to petitioner, even though a parenting schedule had been set. Finally, after petitioner’s and
    respondent’s divorce had been initiated, petitioner married his fifth wife, Anat, in a purely
    religious ceremony, which S.L. attended. Later, still during the pendency of the dissolution
    proceedings here, petitioner divorced Anat in a purely religious ceremony. 1
    ¶6       The parties’ marriage was marred with allegations of abusive behavior. Respondent
    testified that petitioner was very controlling and isolating. Specifically, respondent testified
    that petitioner controlled the parties’ finances and repeatedly confiscated respondent’s credit
    cards. Respondent also testified that petitioner attempted to interrupt respondent’s
    relationships with her parents and her sister and discouraged or prevented their visits and even
    telephone or video communications.
    1
    The marriage to Anat was never legally solemnized. Because there was no legal effect to the
    marriage, petitioner was not committing bigamy.
    -2-
    ¶7         According to respondent, petitioner used illegal drugs, like cocaine, during the marriage.
    Petitioner denied that he used illegal drugs. Petitioner was tested once for illegal drug use, and
    the test found no illegal drugs. Even though respondent made additional allegations that
    petitioner was continuing to use illegal drugs, no further testing was ordered.
    ¶8         Respondent also testified that petitioner committed abusive acts during the marriage.
    Specifically, respondent testified that, sometime in the first half of 2015, when S.L. was about
    seven months old, petitioner took S.L. from her, physically pushed respondent from the house,
    and locked the doors, resulting in respondent crawling through a window to get back inside the
    house. Respondent further related that petitioner threatened to have her deported and would
    manufacture claims of abuse to prevent her from having custody of or seeing S.L. again.
    ¶9         Continuing, respondent testified about a November 2015 incident. The incident began with
    petitioner speaking ill of respondent’s family. He then dragged her throughout the house,
    choked her, and pushed her so that she fell down, apparently all while she held S.L. Respondent
    testified that she was in S.L.’s room screaming to the neighbors for help. Respondent testified
    that petitioner’s behavior had her so scared that she ran, still holding S.L., out of the child’s
    room and downstairs. There, petitioner pushed her, S.L. still in her arms, from the house.
    Respondent went to the house of Stella Picchietti, a neighbor, who generally corroborated
    respondent’s testimony about a fight between petitioner and respondent. On the next day,
    respondent filed a report with the police. Respondent stayed with a friend for the next few
    days.
    ¶ 10       According to respondent, on April 17, 2017, shortly before petitioner filed his petition for
    dissolution of marriage, petitioner became aggressive after some illicit drug use and forbade
    respondent from communicating with anyone, even her parents. Respondent testified that she
    was going to record petitioner’s ravings but petitioner grabbed her phone and submerged it in
    the sink and then struck respondent. Respondent called the police emergency number. She also
    obtained an emergency order of protection against petitioner.
    ¶ 11       Following this incident and the grant of the emergency order of protection, petitioner
    moved out of the marital residence and stayed with his friend, Uladimir Marozau. Under
    adverse direct examination, petitioner testified that he had been friends with Marozau for about
    13 years at that point. Marozau helped him to find a divorce attorney, and on April 26, 2017,
    petitioner filed his petition for dissolution of marriage. Petitioner agreed that he informed
    Marozau about the progress of the divorce from respondent and instructed his attorney to
    include Marozau in receiving all divorce-related correspondence.
    ¶ 12       On May 23, 2017, the trial court entered a mutual no-contact order, which precluded both
    parties from engaging in harassing conduct, committing physical abuse, interfering with the
    other’s personal liberty, or stalking each other. The order also set a parenting schedule, with
    S.L.’s primary residence with respondent and petitioner having parenting time on two weekday
    evenings and one overnight on the weekend; custody exchange was ordered to occur at a
    neighbor’s house.
    ¶ 13       The record shows that, during the latter part of May 2017, petitioner transferred substantial
    sums of money and goods to Marozau. He transferred approximately $27,000 in cash and 11
    cars worth approximately $125,000. The cars were transferred to a business in which Marozau
    had an interest and that was controlled by a friend of Marozau. The record does not indicate
    the relationship between petitioner and Marozau’s friend. Petitioner explained that the transfer
    -3-
    occurred to allow Marozau’s business to sell the cars. These transactions appear to have been
    accomplished before May 29, 2017.
    ¶ 14        On May 26 and 27, 2017, petitioner exercised his overnight parenting time. During the
    afternoon of May 27, 2017, the parenting exchange occurred at the Highland Park police
    station. Petitioner was accompanied by Marozau. Petitioner, on adverse direct examination,
    testified that Marozau became aggressive during the exchange and told the police that he would
    shut down the police department and that he would kidnap S.L. Petitioner testified that, for his
    and S.L.’s safety, the police asked Marozau to leave. The police also told petitioner that he
    should consider Marozau’s statement as a threat to be taken seriously, and they informed
    petitioner that they would contact the Department of Children and Family Services
    (Department) because of Marozau’s statement.
    ¶ 15        On Memorial Day, May 29, 2017, at about 5:20 a.m., Marozau entered the marital
    residence and beat respondent, ultimately dragging her out of the house and down the
    driveway. Neighbors Howard and Barbara Dane had been awakened by their dog, and Howard
    observed Marozau make his entrance into the home; Barbara called the police. Howard went
    outside and confronted Dimitry Voronin, who was driving a car that had been parked outside
    the marital residence and who was apparently assisting in the offense. By the time Marozau
    had dragged respondent to the end of the driveway, police arrived and restrained and arrested
    Marozau and Voronin. Respondent testified that she had been severely beaten, she had bruises
    all over her body, and hair had been ripped from her head. Petitioner testified that, on the next
    court date, May 30, 2017, he did not observe any bruising on respondent; the court orders
    memorializing the May 30 hearing did not note that respondent demonstrated observable or
    obvious marks of violence.
    ¶ 16        Respondent filed an emergency petition seeking to suspend petitioner’s visitation and to
    require supervised visitation once petitioner’s parenting time resumed. Respondent also
    requested the appointment of a guardian ad litem. On May 30, 2017, the trial court ordered that
    both parties were precluded from having S.L. in Marozau’s presence. In a separate order,
    Robert Lewinthal was appointed as S.L.’s guardian ad litem.
    ¶ 17        Regarding the May 29, 2017, incident, Marozau was charged with a number of offenses,
    and bail was set at $1 million. On May 30, 2017, Marozau, with his attorney present, called
    petitioner from the jail. Petitioner recounted on adverse direct examination that Marozau had
    demanded $200,000 and had stated, “otherwise I will get some thoughts in my mind.”
    Petitioner agreed to provide the $100,000 bail money and promised that they would talk after
    Marozau had been released on bond. Petitioner explained that he decided to post the bond
    money for Marozau, not because he felt threatened by Marozau’s statement, but because
    Marozau held nearly $125,000 of his property, namely, the cars he had transferred to
    Marozau’s business to sell on his behalf. Petitioner testified, however, that he had no further
    contact with Marozau following the May 30 call from the jail.
    ¶ 18        In posting Marozau’s bond, petitioner did not pay it directly in his own name. Instead, he
    obtained a cashier’s check and gave it to Vladimir Pechenev, a friend, with the instruction to
    pay Marozau’s bond. Petitioner explained that he used an intermediary to post the bond,
    because Marozau’s attorney had advised him to proceed in that fashion.
    ¶ 19        Petitioner was interviewed by Lewinthal shortly after Marozau’s attack on respondent.
    According to Lewinthal, petitioner minimized his relationship with Marozau, calling him an
    “acquaintance, not a friend.” Lewinthal also testified that petitioner claimed that he had not
    -4-
    spoken with Marozau since the attack. However, Lewinthal later learned that, the day after the
    attack, petitioner had spoken with Marozau and agreed to post bond. Further, while Lewinthal
    believed that Pechenev had posted Marozau’s bond, petitioner eventually admitted to him that
    he had provided the money for the bail.
    ¶ 20       Unsurprisingly, petitioner and respondent had a poor relationship. During the pendency of
    this case, respondent reported a number of threats by petitioner. On November 16, 2017, a
    plenary order of protection was issued against petitioner, which covered only respondent and
    not S.L. At the hearing, respondent testified that petitioner would threaten her during the
    visitation exchanges and that, after each of three specific exchanges, she reported the threats
    to the police. Petitioner, for his part, denied making threats.
    ¶ 21       Respondent testified that, around the time when petitioner made the threats, S.L. would
    repeat what respondent believed to have been phrases petitioner taught her. Respondent
    testified that, specifically, S.L. would say, “Dad told me Mom was bad, Mom was bad,” or
    would sing, “Mom is bitch, Mom is bitch, Mom is bad,” like a “mantra” that S.L. would repeat
    “all the time.”
    ¶ 22       Respondent testified that, in May 2018, S.L. began saying things about petitioner’s private
    parts. Respondent filed a police report. The Department investigated the allegations of abuse
    and determined them to be unfounded.
    ¶ 23       Respondent also presented testimony from petitioner’s neighbors from when petitioner was
    living in the marital residence without her. The neighbors testified that on several occasions
    they directly observed S.L. playing outside with no adults within their observation. On cross-
    examination, it was developed that the neighbors could not see into petitioner’s house or garage
    when they made their observations. Petitioner denied that he let S.L. play outside unsupervised
    and testified that he or another adult was observing her when she was playing outside.
    ¶ 24       For his part, petitioner testified that, earlier in the pendency of this case, respondent
    frequently canceled his parenting time, claiming that S.L. was ill. Makeup time for the missed
    visits was generally ordered; petitioner acknowledged that he did not believe that he had
    missed any parenting time. Moreover, as the case progressed, it appears that petitioner
    consistently exercised his visitation.
    ¶ 25       On March 5, 2019, respondent filed her petition for relocation, seeking the court’s approval
    to relocate with S.L. to either New York or California. On April 15, 2019, respondent filed her
    amended petition for relocation, seeking the court’s approval to relocate to California. At the
    hearing, respondent testified that she was prompted to seek relocation by concern for her and
    S.L.’s safety, although respondent admitted that she did not believe that petitioner would harm
    S.L. Respondent testified that she would live with her sister in Beverly Hills and that she had
    leads on three jobs, but she had no written offers or even any details to present. According to
    respondent, her primary employment lead was working for a law firm that catered to the
    Russian expatriate community in Los Angeles. However, throughout the proceedings,
    respondent requested an interpreter, maintaining that her English language skills were not up
    to the task of testifying and understanding the proceedings. Finally, respondent testified that
    the schools in the area in California had received high marks, according to websites she had
    visited. Lewinthal disputed that respondent had investigated the schools and had found them
    to be of adequate quality, and he testified and reported that respondent had not looked into
    them. In his report, Lewinthal noted that he had researched the elementary school that
    respondent planned for S.L. to attend and that it was a good school with above average scores.
    -5-
    ¶ 26       On June 13, 2019, Dr. Frances Pacheco, a psychologist, filed her report advising the trial
    court on the allocation of parental responsibilities pursuant to the trial court’s order. The court’s
    June 27, 2018, order empowered Pacheco to interview the parties and S.L., to provide the court
    with input regarding S.L.’s best interests and the allocation of parental responsibilities.
    Pacheco recommended, pertinently, that respondent be allowed to relocate to California and
    that petitioner’s visitation with S.L. in California be supervised. Pacheco remarked in her
    report that, when S.L. was with petitioner, his then-wife, Anat, was S.L.’s primary caretaker
    and that petitioner had commented to Pacheco that, if respondent were allocated anything other
    than supervised visitation with S.L., he would withdraw his contact with S.L. out of fear that
    respondent would continue to make allegations of abuse. Petitioner was questioned about this
    and denied that he made the statement. Pacheco also remarked that she doubted that either
    parent “had the willingness and ability *** to encourage and facilitate a positive relationship
    between [S.L.] and the other parent.”
    ¶ 27       On September 6, 2019, respondent filed her counterpetition for dissolution of marriage. In
    the counterpetition, respondent adopted Pacheco’s recommendations, including requiring
    petitioner to have only supervised visitation with S.L. in California. It should be noted,
    however, that, throughout the great majority of this case, petitioner enjoyed unsupervised
    visitation, including overnight visits, and had about half of the parenting time.
    ¶ 28       Lewinthal testified regarding his involvement with the case and the best interests of S.L.
    He “had no objections” to respondent’s request to relocate, because petitioner had said during
    a personal interview that, if respondent received unsupervised parenting time, petitioner might
    withdraw his contact with S.L. Petitioner denied making the statement. On direct examination,
    he clarified the context of the remark, made to both Lewinthal and Pacheco. Petitioner
    explained that he feared that respondent would continue to make unfounded allegations of
    physical and sexual abuse and that S.L. would be psychologically torn up by the investigations.
    Petitioner explained that, to spare him and S.L. the pain of the allegations and investigations,
    he might feel compelled to withdraw from S.L. if respondent received unsupervised parenting
    time.
    ¶ 29       The matter proceeded to a hearing on respondent’s counterpetition for dissolution of
    marriage and her amended petition for relocation. On March 3, 2020, following the hearing
    (which occurred over several days during November 2019 and January 2020), the trial court
    denied respondent’s amended petition for relocation “without prejudice.” Respondent appealed
    the ruling on the amended petition for relocation, and in a summary order filed August 5, 2020,
    we dismissed the appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
    ¶ 30       Matters proceeded apace in the trial court. On August 11, 2020, respondent noticed up all
    outstanding matters for hearing, including the amended petition for relocation. On August 27,
    2020, those matters were heard. During the August 27 hearing, the parties did not present any
    new evidence or any new arguments regarding the amended petition for relocation. The trial
    court orally denied the petition and explained that, because all pending matters had been
    resolved, namely the division of marital assets and the allocation of parental responsibilities,
    the orders were final and it was denying respondent’s request to include Illinois Supreme Court
    Rule 304(a) (eff. Mar. 8, 2016) language. On August 27, the court entered the orders on
    parental allocation, a marital settlement agreement, and a no-contact order. On September 8,
    2020, the court filed the written order denying the amended petition for relocation. The written
    order provided, pertinently:
    -6-
    “1. On the issue of Relocation of S.L. to the State of California, [respondent] did
    not present new or additional evidence and no further testimony was propounded by
    [respondent];
    2. Based on the reasons stated on the Record on March 3, 2020[,] and based on no
    new evidence being brought before the court the Amended Petition for Relocation is
    hereby DENIED.
    3. The Court’s findings as contained in the March 3, 2020, ruling on the amended
    petition for relocation are incorporated herein as if set forth verbatim.
    4. By separate orders, the financial matters and allocation of the marital assets/debts
    are resolved by agreement per the parties[’] Marital Settlement Agreement and the
    issues of parenting time and parenting responsibility are resolved per the Parental
    Allocation Judgment.”
    ¶ 31       The trial court expressly incorporated its oral remarks from the March 3, 2020, hearing into
    the September 8, 2020, order. In those remarks, the court first defined the evidence it had
    considered: the evidence from the hearing, Pacheco’s report, and Lewinthal’s reports and
    testimony. Next the court defined the relevant legal rules it applied in its analysis: the statutory
    factors and the case law discussing the application of the factors. It noted that it was particularly
    sensitive to the issue of a custodial parent who is seeking relocation and has been interposing
    roadblocks, “however slight,” in the relationship between the child and the noncustodial parent.
    ¶ 32       Next, the trial court discussed the facts it found to be “extremely disturbing.” The first issue
    was Marozau’s May 29, 2017, attack and attempted kidnapping of respondent. The court
    labeled as “important to the Court’s ruling and to this case” the fact that petitioner provided
    the money to post Marozau’s bond. Regarding petitioner’s in-court testimony and statements
    to Lewinthal that “he knew nothing about the attack, that he was fearful of [Marozau], and
    [that] he virtually had no or limited knowledge of [Marozau],” the court found them to be
    “absolutely incredible.” The court was also troubled that petitioner posted bond for Marozau
    “so that [Marozau] could be on the street and [respondent] could be terrorized by the action
    that this individual was still at large.” While the court concluded that petitioner had approved
    of Marozau’s attack on respondent, it expressly declined to find that petitioner had directed the
    attack to proceed or that petitioner knew in advance that the attack would occur. The court
    reasoned that, because petitioner’s involvement had been investigated by the police and the
    parties neither deposed Voronin, Marozau’s accomplice, nor called him to testify about
    petitioner’s involvement, it could not conclude that petitioner’s involvement was more than
    after-the-fact approval as evidenced by the posting of bond.
    ¶ 33       The trial court did not find just petitioner’s testimony about Marozau’s attack and
    attempted kidnapping to be unworthy of belief; it also “had huge credibility issues with a lot
    of the testimony of [respondent].” The court first noted its overarching determination that
    respondent had attempted to interfere with petitioner’s relationship with S.L. It then honed in
    on respondent’s allegations of sexual abuse against petitioner, noting that the Department had
    “investigated those complaints, police departments ha[d] investigated those complaints and
    found no basis for them whatsoever.” The court highlighted an August 12, 2019, medical report
    in which S.L. was diagnosed with vaginal inflammation, but it noted that “there was no follow-
    up, there was no [Department] call, [and there was] nothing to support [respondent’s] assertion
    that [petitioner] had molested the child.”
    -7-
    ¶ 34       Petitioner also did not escape unscathed from the trial court’s review of each parent’s
    interference with the other’s relationship with S.L. The court noted that there was testimony
    that, when S.L. was returned to respondent after parenting time with petitioner, S.L. would
    sing or say that respondent was bad. The court determined petitioner’s denial to be incredible.
    ¶ 35       The court chastised both parties for “attempt[ing] to use this child and attempt[ing] to use
    the court system and attempt[ing] to use the law enforcement authorities to garner an advantage
    in their case.” The court then noted that, prompted by Marozau’s attack, respondent filed her
    petition (and then amended petition) for relocation nearly two years after petitioner filed this
    dissolution action, which raised the heat in the already contentious divorce proceedings.
    ¶ 36       The trial court turned to its application of the legal rules to the facts, keeping in mind the
    troubling issues it had just explained. In the first half of this part of its comments, the court
    mentioned and distinguished the cases that respondent had provided. In the second half, the
    court made specific analyses of each of the statutory factors. We excerpt the relevant portions
    of the court’s remarks.
    ¶ 37       In the case-law portion of its remarks, the trial court stated that “[t]he only basis that [it]
    could find to support [petitioner’s] request [for relocation] is her physical safety.” After
    distinguishing a case, the court stated:
    “I do not in any way mean to minimize what happened here, but it is the only
    instance, that’s one instance, it’s a very serious instance, and thank goodness the
    neighbors were alerted because I don’t know what [Marozau] would have done if he
    was successful in getting [respondent] to his car. I know that he had her out of the
    house, that she sustained injury, she was treated at the hospital, he just didn’t get her in
    the car before the police thankfully arrived. That one instance weighs heavy on this
    court, but I cannot say that that alone is a basis for granting this petition. Rather, I’m
    concerned by the conduct of [respondent] that once I grant relocation to the state of
    California, she will seek to have the California authorities investigate her claims of
    sexual abuse of the child which I have already found lack credibility.”
    The court then noted that it was to consider any and all relevant evidence in reaching its
    decision and that the factors from In re Marriage of Eckert, 
    119 Ill. 2d 316
     (1988), were not
    exclusive. No single factor controlled and weight should be given to each of the factors.
    “One single factor that favors [relocation] is the violence. And if there were
    enough—if the petition and the evidence had shown that there were other good reasons
    to relocate to California, i.e., schools, i.e., economic opportunity, i.e., that [respondent]
    was moving because somebody she had entered into a relationship with was relocating,
    those are cases where in many of those cases relocation ha[d] still been denied.”
    The court discussed In re Marriage of Demaret, 
    2012 IL App (1st) 111916
    , and In re
    Parentage of P.D., 
    2017 IL App (2d) 170355
    , in which relocation was denied even though the
    mother would have garnered a huge salary increase if she had been allowed to relocate.
    “In this case, I don’t have that she even has a job. There was an allegation that she was
    going to be employed as a paralegal in a law firm. Throughout these proceedings now
    going on three years[,] [respondent] has at all contested hearings utilized a court
    interpreter, which suggests she has very limited use of the English language, so what
    job she was going to get—she never produced a job offer sheet, a letter from a potential
    employer, or anything that indicated how she was going to support herself and the child.
    -8-
    She did testify that she had the assistance of her sister, but the sister never testified.
    There was testimony that there was a two-bedroom apartment that was available, which
    meant the child necessarily would be sharing *** a room in the apartment, a bedroom
    with her mother.
    The type of planning and specificity that I see in cases where relocation has been
    allowed was totally lacking in this case. I’m not sure how [respondent] was going to be
    able to support herself and the child. I had no particulars on the school. The child is
    now of school age. And I also have, if you will, the advantage of looking at two years
    of a normal parenting schedule. Initially there were orders in this case that prohibited
    [petitioner] from seeing the child. There was an order of protection sought that named
    the child as a protected party; that was later amended. But throughout a period of two
    years, there were no violations to the order of protection, [petitioner] committed no act
    of violence towards [respondent], and he is regularly seeing the child, he regularly has
    overnights with the child. Therefore[,] it was my conclusion that if I were to allow
    relocation, I would be essentially terminating [petitioner’s] parental rights. The idea
    that [petitioner and respondent] could have some sort of cooperative relationship in
    traveling from one coast to Chicago is pure folly. Both parties have been guilty of doing
    everything to undermine the other that they possibly could. So the Court could not find
    that [respondent] would cooperate with seeing that the parent-child relationship would
    continue. And again, I was able to at least look at over the last two years the child has
    been with her father on a regular basis, has seen her father, and I would be putting the
    child in a situation where I don’t know that she would ever see her father again.
    I’m reviewing my notes as I speak, but I find that there was an incident where
    [respondent] was videotaping [petitioner] and trying to make a case he was violating
    the order of protection. She denied that and her own e-mails belied her testimony. In
    examining her during trial, I asked her specifically if she believed that [petitioner]
    would harm the child and she said no.”
    The trial court discussed In re Marriage of Eaton, 
    269 Ill. App. 3d 507
     (1995), explaining that,
    in that case, the reviewing court
    “noted that the case was made difficult by the good faith of the parties in regard to the
    petition for removal. I don’t have anything close to that here. I have bad faith between
    these parties and actions which indicate that they will not cooperate in fostering a good
    relationship.
    And then another [passage] from that case [says] [a]ny removal will have some
    effect on visitation but the real question is whether the visitation schedule is both
    reasonable and realistic to create—there’s no way we could do that in this case.
    [Respondent] has no economic ability to participate in the cost of travel of the child
    and has demonstrated no inclination to want to do that.”
    ¶ 38        The trial court distinguished several other cases. In so doing, it made the determination that
    petitioner had a strong interest in seeing and maintaining his relationship with S.L. The court
    also noted that requesting relocation to be with a spouse or to continue a committed relationship
    is a weighty factor but that, here, respondent was not seeking to further such a relationship but
    was instead seeking to move away from petitioner. The court stated that the desire to move to
    another state, without more, was insufficient to show that the move would be in the best
    interests of S.L. However, the court acknowledged that respondent’s desire to move in this
    -9-
    case “is compelling only because of the serious physical threat to [respondent] presented by
    [Marozau].”
    ¶ 39        While the trial court maintained that its discussion of the case law’s application of the
    factors governing relocation sufficiently covered the statutory factors, it nevertheless expressly
    analyzed the facts in light of the current statutory factors, presented in section 609.2 of the
    Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act (Act) (hereinafter sometimes referred to as
    the relocation statute) (750 ILCS 5/609.2 (West 2018)). As this is relevant to respondent’s
    contentions, we excerpt the court’s comments in full on this topic:
    “I do want to review the relatively recent amendment to our statute of [section]
    609.2 [of the Act] setting forth the factors that the Court must consider when ruling on
    a petition for relocation. One, that the circumstances and reasons for the intended
    relocation, she has good reason to be fearful of [petitioner], but that does not answer
    the question of what the effect is on the child. The fact that the parties for two years,
    almost three years, have carried on a normal visitation parenting time schedule is an
    indication that the burden has not been met. The reasons, if any, why the parent is
    objecting to the relocation, [petitioner] tells me he’s objecting because he wants to be
    part of his daughter’s life. Does he have about as much animus towards [respondent]
    as she does toward him? I would acknowledge that. At the same token, I do believe that
    he is sincerely interested in the child.
    The third factor is the history and quality of each parent’s relationship with the
    child, specifically whether a parent has substantially failed or refused to exercise
    parental responsibilities allocated to him or her in the parenting plan. In this case[,] we
    don’t even have a parenting plan, which is kind of embarrassing considering the length
    of the litigation. But again, the factor of this criminal case [against Marozau] was part
    of the reason for the delay. I find that the history has been that he utilizes all of his
    parenting time. I have reviewed Exhibit 21 in the case, which was a series of e-mails
    where on many occasions [respondent] was not willing to change a pickup time, change
    a pickup location, in any way cooperate with [petitioner] in seeing that the child had
    time with her father.
    The fourth factor is the educational opportunities for the child in the existing
    location and the proposed new location. I know very little from the report or from the
    testimony at trial concerning the schools that the child would be going to. There was a
    generalization that the schools in Beverly Hills are very good and allegedly better than
    Chicago. I know that the child, based on [respondent’s] current location, will be going
    to schools in the Lincoln Park area of Chicago. Those schools have a good reputation.
    The fifth factor is the presence or absence of extended family at the existing
    location and the proposed location. The only factor here that weighs in favor of
    [respondent’s] petition is the fact that her sister lives in Los Angeles. I have nothing
    about family in this area. There was testimony about [respondent’s] mother visiting,
    but she is not a citizen. She comes here on a travel visa. And so there is no—it’s very
    hard on [respondent], from the testimony I heard, she has no family support system
    here. But all she’s going to have out in Los Angeles is one sister. I know that from the
    testimony that—from other [of petitioner’s] relationships, marriages, there are [S.L.’s]
    cousins and siblings, half-siblings that are in this area.
    - 10 -
    The sixth factor is the anticipated impact on the relocation of the child. And frankly,
    there was no testimony, so nothing was presented in the way of evidence that the child
    would be negatively or positively impacted by this relocation.
    Seven, whether the Court will be able to fashion a reasonable allocation of parental
    responsibility between the parents if relocation occurs. I find that far from meeting the
    burden on that, exactly the opposite is true. These parties will not cooperate with each
    other. The history of interference with parenting time is prolonged to the future and,
    again, I am very fearful that no matter what I might write in an order that this Court
    would retain jurisdiction, that [respondent] would seek a different view from the courts
    out in California.
    Eight is the wishes of the child. Due to her tender years, nothing was put forth in
    this, and that’s not unexpected.
    Nine, possible arrangements for the exercise of parental responsibilities of the
    parental—appropriate for the parents’ resources and circumstances. These parties do
    not have a lot of resources. Unfortunately, what resources they have been expended in
    three years of litigation with attorneys, [guardian ad litem] fees, and [evaluators
    pursuant to section 604.10(b) of the Act (750 ILCS 5/604.10(b) (West 2018))]. So there
    isn’t a lot of money. And a child at the age of five cannot just be put on a plane.
    Somebody is going to have to take her or parenting time would have to take place in
    California. It will be expensive. So it would be very difficult to arrange that.
    Ten is minimization of the impairment of the parent-child relationship by parent’s
    relocation. As I have already stated, it is this Court’s opinion that allowing the
    relocation will effectively terminate [petitioner’s] involvement in the child’s life. I’m
    not saying he couldn’t overcome that, but from the evidence presented to me to date, I
    don’t see any way that he would be—that [respondent] would foster [petitioner’s]
    involvement in the child’s life.
    Any other relevant factors bearing on the child’s best interests. I know it’s argued
    that if [respondent] is happier, the child will be happier. The relocating part, the parent
    is happier. I can’t make that generalization. I don’t—while I received extensive, by
    volume, of paper reports from the [guardian ad litem], I don’t have any feel for how
    this child would react to relocation, and I know that generally children like stability.
    And there has been a stable, long-term pattern of parenting time with both mom and
    dad overnights. And while it’s been rocky for most of the time, over the last year, really,
    I have not dealt with any motions concerning the parties’ parenting time.
    So I’m going to state for the record that the five Eckert case criteria are pretty
    subsumed into the statutory factors and the 2016 amendment to the statute.
    So I think I have covered the reasons why I’m going to deny the motion for
    relocation. I’m denying it without prejudice. I remain very troubled by what went on
    here. I remain very concerned that [petitioner] was involved to some extent in the
    violence against his wife. If there is any violence towards her, I will not—I would have
    to reconsider my holding today that one act is not sufficient reason to allow the
    relocation of the child. I don’t think it’s in the child’s best interests. It’s in
    [respondent’s] best interests, and it’s in everybody’s best interests that these parties
    have limited contact with each other. But at some point—and they both have taken the
    - 11 -
    parenting class—at some point they are going to have to work cooperatively on an
    allocation judgment and division of parenting responsibilities.
    So it is denied for now without prejudice. If something comes up, a better plan, the
    plan put forth in this case is simply not acceptable to this Court, did not in a legal sense
    meet the requirements of the Eckert case or of the statute to grant relocation.”
    ¶ 40      On September 23, 2020, respondent filed her notice of appeal, within 30 days of the
    September 8, 2020, denial of her amended petition for relocation. On October 21, 2020, this
    court issued its mandate in Levites I.
    ¶ 41                                          II. ANALYSIS
    ¶ 42       As an initial matter, we note that petitioner has not filed a brief in this appeal. We will
    nevertheless consider the appeal under the principles of First Capitol Mortgage Corp. v.
    Talandis Construction Corp., 
    63 Ill. 2d 128
    , 133 (1976) (allowing the consideration of the
    appeal on only the appellant’s brief where the record is simple and the errors can be considered
    without the benefit of additional briefing).
    ¶ 43       On appeal, respondent argues that the trial court erred in discerning a burden of proof
    within section 609.2 of the Act and in assigning it to her. She also argues that the court’s
    judgment was against the manifest weight of the evidence. Before turning to respondent’s
    issues on appeal, we must first address a jurisdictional issue.
    ¶ 44                                           A. Jurisdiction
    ¶ 45       Respondent asserts that we have jurisdiction over this appeal, reasoning that the September
    8, 2020, denial of her amended petition for relocation was a final order because the other
    pending issues had been resolved in the August 27, 2020, orders. This assertion is apparently
    belied by Illinois Supreme Court Rule 369(b) (eff. July 1, 1982), which provides that, “[w]hen
    the reviewing court dismisses the appeal or affirms the judgment and the mandate is filed in
    the circuit court, enforcement of the judgment may be had and other proceedings may be
    conducted as if no appeal had been taken.” Stated in the negative, “a trial court may not rule
    on a petition that is filed before the appellate court issues its mandate if the petition involves
    issues that were presented to the appellate court for review.” Longo v. Globe Auto Recycling,
    Inc., 
    318 Ill. App. 3d 1028
    , 1035 (2001). The proceedings on remand from Levites I would
    appear to fall squarely within that prohibition: on March 30, 2020, respondent filed her notice
    of appeal in Levites I. On August 5, 2020, we issued our summary order dismissing Levites I
    for lack of jurisdiction. On August 11, 2020, respondent noticed up all outstanding matters for
    hearing, including the amended petition for relocation. On August 27, 2020, the trial court
    orally indicated that it was denying the amended petition, and, on September 8, 2020, the trial
    court entered the written order denying the amended petition for relocation. On September 23,
    2020, respondent filed her notice of appeal in this case, and on October 21, 2020, we issued
    the mandate in Levites I.
    ¶ 46       Longo initially appears to be on all fours with this case. In Longo, the defendants timely
    appealed the October 8, 1998, final orders and a November 4, 1998, order denying the
    defendants’ motion for reconsideration. Longo, 
    318 Ill. App. 3d at 1034
    . On March 24, 1999,
    the appellate court dismissed the first appeal. 
    Id. at 1035
    . On May 21, 1999, the trial court
    vacated the October 8 final orders. 
    Id. at 1032
    . On August 11, 1999, the appellate court issued
    - 12 -
    its mandate with respect to the first appeal. 
    Id. at 1035
    . On August 18, 1999, the trial court
    denied the plaintiff’s motion to vacate or to reconsider the May 21 order, and the plaintiff
    timely appealed. 
    Id.
     The appellate court concluded that the trial court lacked jurisdiction over
    both the defendant’s petition to vacate the May 21 order as well as the May 21 order itself. The
    appellate court reasoned that jurisdiction was lacking because the defendant had reinitiated
    proceedings in the trial court on the issue that had been appealed before the appellate mandate
    had issued and revested the trial court with jurisdiction. 
    Id.
    ¶ 47       While the timing of the actions in Longo lines up closely with the timing in this case, there
    is a significant distinction between the cases. In Longo, the first appeal was taken from final
    orders. Here, by contrast, the appeal in Levites I was taken from an unappealable nonfinal
    order. The difference in the inherent appealability of the order in the first Longo appeal and
    the nonfinal order in Levites I determines the outcome here.
    ¶ 48       Generally, the timely filing of a notice of appeal divests the trial court of jurisdiction and
    confers jurisdiction upon the appellate court. Huber v. American Accounting Ass’n, 
    2014 IL 117293
    , ¶ 8. However, “[t]he filing of a notice of appeal from an order or judgment which the
    supreme court rules do not make appealable neither deprives the trial court of jurisdiction to
    proceed with the case nor vests the appellate court with jurisdiction to consider it.” North
    Community Bank v. 17011 South Park Ave., LLC, 
    2015 IL App (1st) 133672
    , ¶ 24. Thus,
    because the appeal in Levites I from the nonfinal order was not made appealable by the supreme
    court rules (such as Illinois Supreme Court Rule 304(a) (eff. Mar. 8, 2016)), it was essentially
    a nullity and did not deprive the trial court of its jurisdiction to proceed, even on the very
    subject matter of the Levites I appeal. This also makes sense in the context of this case. If the
    appeal from an unappealable order were to divest the trial court of jurisdiction while the
    appellate court sorted it out, and only upon the issuance of the appellate mandate would
    jurisdiction be restored to the trial court, then a bad-faith litigant could file a notice of appeal
    on any order, halt the proceedings in the trial court until the appellate mandate, and repeat the
    process over and over so as to prolong the action in the trial court indefinitely and drain the
    resources of the other litigant or litigants.
    ¶ 49       This principle is also embodied in Callen v. Akhter, 
    66 Ill. App. 3d 421
     (1978), which
    provides guidance here. In Callen, the defendant appealed from a judgment entered on remand
    following an interlocutory appeal that was dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. The appellate
    court held that the trial court had jurisdiction to enter the judgment on remand, although the
    mandate had not yet been issued, because (1) the prior appeal was a premature interlocutory
    appeal and, thus, the trial court never lost jurisdiction and (2) the parties voluntarily
    participated in the matter on remand, thereby waiving any jurisdictional objection. 
    Id. at 424
    .
    The fact that the appellate court in Callen had dismissed the improper appeal for lack of
    jurisdiction before the trial court once again took up the issues was an important factor in the
    decision, as was the waiver of the problem presented by the lack of the mandate. Similarly
    here. Levites I was dismissed before respondent sought to have the ruling on the amended
    petition for relocation finalized, and both parties fully participated despite the lack of a
    mandate. Thus, under the reasoning of Callen, jumping the gun and resuming litigation on the
    same issue as presented in the abortive first appeal does not affect our jurisdiction over this
    appeal.
    ¶ 50       Finally, there is a very good reason to apply North Community Bank and the reasoning in
    Callen to the facts presented here. This case involves the custody of a child and is accelerated
    - 13 -
    pursuant to Illinois Supreme Court Rule 311(a) (eff. July 1, 2018). Another dismissal on the
    arguable ground of lack of jurisdiction would frustrate the expediency with which we are to
    address these kinds of appeals. S.L., whose best interests are paramount, would continue to
    languish in uncertainty. While it would be different if respondent appealed again from a
    nonfinal order, in this appeal we are not clearly and unequivocally without jurisdiction, and
    there is sufficient authority supporting the invocation of our jurisdiction along with
    considerations of the nature of this matter. Accordingly, we conclude that we have jurisdiction
    over this appeal and now turn to respondent’s substantive contentions.
    ¶ 51                                         B. Burden of Proof
    ¶ 52       Respondent argues that the trial court erred in its application of section 609.2 of the Act.
    Respondent notes that, in 2016, the Act was amended and section 609 (750 ILCS 5/609 (West
    2014)) (hereinafter sometimes “the removal statute”) was repealed and replaced with section
    609.2. Section 609 provided that the party seeking removal bore the burden of proving that
    removal was in the child’s best interests: “The burden of proving that such removal is in the
    best interests of such child or children is on the party seeking the removal.” 750 ILCS 5/609(a)
    (West 2014); see also Eckert, 
    119 Ill. 2d at 324
     (concluding that the party seeking removal
    bore the burden of proof under the removal statute (citing Ill. Rev. Stat. 1985, ch. 40, ¶ 609)).
    Respondent contends that section 609.2 does not include a burden of proof to establish whether
    relocation is in the best interests of the child. Respondent notes that the trial court relied on
    In re Marriage of Kavchak, 
    2018 IL App (2d) 170853
    , ¶ 65, in determining that “the burden
    of proof [was] on respondent” to demonstrate that relocation was in S.L.’s best interests.
    Respondent contends that Kavchak’s statement about the burden of proof in relocation cases
    is rooted in section 609 and that the repeal of section 609 and its replacement with section
    609.2 deliberately omitted a burden of proof altogether in favor of a focus on the child’s best
    interests. Respondent concludes that the improper assignment of the burden of proof is
    reversible error. See In re Marriage of Riess, 
    260 Ill. App. 3d 210
    , 216-17 (1994) (the statute
    then in effect expressly assigned the burden of proof to the movant; the trial court erred by
    assigning to the nonmoving party the burden of proof).
    ¶ 53       To evaluate respondent’s argument, we must interpret section 609.2. The interpretation of
    a statute presents a question of law. In re Marriage of Earlywine, 
    2012 IL App (2d) 110730
    ,
    ¶ 18. We review de novo questions of law. 
    Id.
    ¶ 54       When embarking on statutory interpretation, we seek to ascertain and give effect to the
    legislature’s intent. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. v. Hamer, 
    2013 IL 114234
    , ¶ 18. The best
    indication of legislative intent is the language of the statute given its plain and ordinary
    meaning. 
    Id.
     We may not depart from the language of the statute and read into the provision
    exceptions, limitations, or conditions. 
    Id.
    ¶ 55       Respondent essentially contends that the trial court imported the burden-of-proof
    requirement from the removal statute, despite the fact that it does not appear in the relocation
    statute. Indeed, the burden-of-proof language is not present in the relocation statute. Instead,
    section 609.2 provides that the party wishing to relocate must provide notice to the other party,
    who then may or may not object to the proposed relocation. 750 ILCS 5/609.2(c)-(e) (West
    2018). If there is no objection, then the relocation will go forward as proposed. 
    Id.
     § 609.2(e).
    If there is an objection, then “the parent seeking relocation must file a petition seeking
    permission to relocate.” Id. § 609.2(f).
    - 14 -
    ¶ 56       Respondent proposes that the omission of the burden-of-proof language from section 609.2
    means that the legislature intended to remove the burden of proof from the statute so that there
    would be no burden of proof in relocation proceedings. Instead, according to respondent, the
    relocation statute now focuses solely on the child’s best interests. Id. § 609.2(g) (the trial court
    “shall modify the parenting plan or allocation judgment in accordance with the child’s best
    interests”). Respondent’s contention is not without foundation. Generally, the omission of any
    of an original statute’s language in an amended version of the statute indicates an intention to
    change the law. Hamer, 
    2013 IL 114234
    , ¶ 25. However, respondent’s contention is
    unworkable.
    ¶ 57       In the first place, section 609.2(f) places on the relocating parent the obligation to file a
    petition seeking approval to relocate. 750 ILCS 5/609.2(f) (West 2018) (“the parent seeking
    relocation must file a petition seeking permission to relocate”). Respondent concedes that this
    is at least “a burden of moving forward.” (Emphasis omitted.) However, the burden of proof
    typically consists of both the burden of producing evidence that will satisfy a trial court of the
    existence of an alleged fact and the burden of persuading a fact finder that the alleged fact is
    true. Hamer v. Cain, 
    2012 IL App (1st) 112833
    , ¶ 12. Thus, respondent concedes that the
    burden of production rests on the parent seeking relocation when the other parent objects to
    the proposed relocation. The burden of persuasion is also a necessary corollary to give section
    609.2(f) its full meaning, because the act of “seeking permission to relocate” implies that the
    adjudicating tribunal must be persuaded to give its permission. Otherwise, there would be no
    purpose for the parent seeking relocation to file a petition seeking permission to relocate—the
    relocating parent would need file only a petition to relocate. Section 609.2(f), in conjunction
    with section 609.2(g), makes the best interests of the child the focus of what must be proved
    in the petition seeking permission to relocate. 750 ILCS 5/609.2(f)-(g) (West 2018). Therefore,
    section 609.2(f) implies that the parent seeking relocation has the burden of proving that the
    relocation is in the best interests of the child, as measured by the factors set forth in section
    609.2(g). 
    Id.
    ¶ 58       Indeed, several cases have held that the party seeking permission to relocate bears the
    burden of proof. E.g., Kavchak, 
    2018 IL App (2d) 170853
    , ¶ 65 (relying on Eckert and In re
    Marriage of Collingbourne, 
    204 Ill. 2d 498
    , 521 (2003), both preamendment cases, in stating
    that “[t]he party seeking judicial approval of the proposed relocation must establish by a
    preponderance of the evidence that the relocation is in the child’s best interests”); In re
    Marriage of Fatkin, 
    2018 IL App (3d) 170779
    , ¶ 34 (relying on In re Parentage of P.D., 
    2017 IL App (2d) 170355
    , ¶ 15, in stating that “[t]he parent seeking relocation has the burden of
    proving, by a preponderance of the evidence, that relocation would be in the child’s best
    interest”), rev’d on other grounds, 
    2019 IL 123602
    ; P.D., 
    2017 IL App (2d) 170355
    , ¶ 15
    (relying on both the preamendment section 609 and In re Rogan M., 
    2014 IL App (1st) 141214
    ,
    ¶ 6, which itself expressly relied on the now-repealed section 609(a), in stating “[t]he parent
    seeking removal has the burden of proving, by a preponderance of the evidence, that removal
    would be in the child’s best interest”). Tracing back through these cases shows that they, in
    fact, relied on either the removal statute (750 ILCS 5/609 (West 2014)) or other cases that drew
    their burden-of-proof principles from the removal statute. As respondent properly notes, cases
    cited in support of a point are only as good as the authority on which they themselves are
    relying. See Doe 1 v. North Central Behavioral Health Systems, Inc., 
    352 Ill. App. 3d 284
    , 287
    (2004) (where the case cited does not address the issue being contested on appeal, its
    - 15 -
    precedential value is limited). Thus, because the foregoing cases state the burden-of-proof rule
    as derived from authority preexisting the 2016 amendment to the Act, we cannot simply
    unreflectively rely upon them, especially where respondent has expressly challenged the trial
    court’s imposition on her of any burden of proof in deciding her petition for relocation.
    ¶ 59       That does not mean that section 609.2 is without a burden of proof. 2 As noted, the burden
    of proof is composed of a burden of production and a burden of persuasion. These ideas serve
    to regulate the administration of a trial. The party bearing the burden of production must bring
    forth sufficient evidence to support his or her contention, and the party bearing the burden of
    persuasion must convince the fact finder that his or her contention is true. An analogy may be
    helpful here. The Code of Civil Procedure (Code) defines summary judgment with nowhere
    stating a burden of proof. 3 735 ILCS 5/2-1005 (West 2018). Despite this absence, it is beyond
    argument that the party moving for summary judgment shoulders the burden of first producing
    sufficient evidence to support its claim and, ultimately, of persuading the trial court that it is
    entitled to summary judgment pursuant to the standards set forth in the Code. Country Mutual
    Insurance Co. v. Hilltop View, LLC, 
    2013 IL App (4th) 130124
    , ¶ 23. So, too, the relocation
    statute. Section 609.2 sets forth the procedures to accomplish an uncontested relocation. 750
    ILCS 5/609.2(c)-(e) (West 2018). The procedure in case of a contested relocation is defined in
    section 609.2(f) (id. § 609.2(f)), and the standards to be applied by the court in both
    uncontested and contested relocations are defined in section 609.2(g) (id. § 609.2(g)).
    ¶ 60       Respondent’s view, that there is no burden of proof, is simply unworkable. The trial court
    is charged with determining the child’s best interests in light of the factors in section 609.2(g).
    The question is how the court does that. If there is no burden of proof, then there is neither a
    burden of producing evidence on the relevant factors nor a burden of persuading the finder of
    fact that the relevant factors are proved. If that is the case, then, under respondent’s view, the
    court is expected to somehow formulate a determination of the child’s best interests, much like
    Athena springing fully formed from the brow of Zeus. The legislature cannot have left such a
    weighty issue to be determined by some undefined deus ex machina. Dynak v. Board of
    Education of Wood Dale School District 7, 
    2020 IL 125062
    , ¶ 16 (legislature is presumed not
    to have intended an absurd or inconvenient result). There must be a burden of proof.
    ¶ 61       Indeed, the language of section 609.2(f) seems to imply the existence of both a burden of
    production, in that the relocating parent must petition to relocate and produce evidence on the
    child’s best interests, and a burden of persuasion, in that the parent seeking relocation must
    obtain the trial court’s permission to relocate by convincing the court that it is in the child’s
    best interests to relocate. 750 ILCS 5/609.2(f) (West 2018). The court must still view the
    evidence and arguments through the prism of the child’s best interests, as set forth in section
    609.2(g), but someone must demonstrate that, on balance, the consideration of the child’s best
    interests favors relocation. That someone, structurally, simply must be the parent seeking
    relocation. As aptly observed by Justice Knecht in an unreported case grappling with precisely
    2
    We note that the general rule in civil cases is that the moving party bears the burden of proof.
    Watkins v. American Service Insurance Co., 
    260 Ill. App. 3d 1054
    , 1062 (1994).
    3
    We are mindful that this is not a perfect analogy, because the Code provision on summary
    judgment was not amended to remove the language regarding a burden of proof. Our purpose is simply
    to show that, even in a vacuum, courts must adopt concepts necessary for the logical and orderly
    disposition of matters in front of them.
    - 16 -
    this issue, “[w]e do not know if the burden of proof language was purposely or inadvertently
    left out of the relocation statute, but we believe there must be a burden of proof.” Brown v.
    Groothuis, 
    2018 IL App (4th) 180346-U
    , ¶ 86.
    ¶ 62        Respondent argues that the legislative intent to remove the requirement of a burden of proof
    is evident when we consider a rejected version of the relocation statute. According to
    respondent, what became section 609.2 represents a compromise between the repealed section
    609, which placed the burden expressly on the relocating parent, and the proposed-but-rejected
    plan to place the onus entirely on the nonrelocating parent, who would be required to file an
    objection or the relocation would be allowed. 98th Ill. Gen. Assem., House Bill 1452, 2013
    Sess. House Bill 1452 also omitted the express burden-of-proof language from the proposed
    section 609.2 in favor of requiring the trial court to determine whether the relocation would
    serve the child’s best interests. Respondent derives further support for her argument from other
    provisions that implement the scheme to require the objecting parent to take action, but we do
    not believe that they are particularly relevant, especially because the House Bill 1452 version
    ultimately was not passed.
    ¶ 63        Respondent also discerns that the now-repealed section 609, with its express burden-of-
    proof language, provided that the default position was for the status quo, while House Bill
    1452, with its requirement that the parent objecting to relocation affirmatively act or the
    relocation would occur, set the default for relocation. While we are inclined to agree with this
    observation, the fact that House Bill 1452 was not passed suggests that, ultimately, the decision
    to change the default from the status quo or nonremoval to relocation was similarly rejected.
    Moreover, that the relocation statute that was actually enacted, section 609.2 of the Act,
    omitted the express burden-of-proof language from the repealed section 609 does not suggest
    a change in the default, although the relocation statute as enacted certainly makes the process
    of obtaining judicial approval easier if the parties agree. Indeed, the fact that, if the
    nonrelocating parent simply “fails to sign the notice” of relocation, then the parties must litigate
    the relocation, suggests that the regime represented by the repealed removal statute has only
    been modified, not done away with altogether. 750 ILCS 5/609.2(f) (West 2018). While we
    appreciate respondent’s argument, the rejection of a 180-degree change to the statutory
    framework from that which had prevailed, and the subsequent adoption of a new framework
    that maintains the key requirement that relocation be litigated in cases of disagreement, cannot
    be interpreted as broadly as respondent suggests. Instead, the change in the statute suggests the
    recognition that allowing the parties to agree would minimize the expenditure of both the trial
    court’s and the parties’ resources. The fact that the litigation requirement was kept in cases
    where the parties disagree or do not communicate suggests that the old framework was not
    entirely rejected.
    ¶ 64        Two minor points remain for us to make. First, given that a “burden of proof” holds within
    it the concepts of a burden of production and a burden of persuasion, as well as the concept of
    the quantum of evidence necessary to prove the point, suggests that the phrase itself is not
    without ambiguity. If, in fact, the “burden of proof” concept was ambiguous in the now-
    repealed section 609, then its omission from the relocation statute is of considerably
    diminished import. Hamer, 
    2013 IL 114234
    , ¶ 25 (“[a]n amendment of an unambiguous statute
    indicates a purpose to change the law, while no such purpose is indicated by the mere fact of
    an amendment of an ambiguous provision”). While we do not declare section 609 to have been
    - 17 -
    ambiguous, the inherent uncertainty of the concept of “burden of proof” undercuts the force of
    respondent’s analysis.
    ¶ 65        Second, the cases mentioned above interpreting section 609.2 and attributing to the
    relocating parent the burden of proving that the relocation is in the child’s best interests were
    released in 2017 and 2018. Since their release, the legislature has not amended section 609.2.
    “[W]here the legislature chooses not to amend terms of a statute after judicial construction, it
    will be presumed that it has acquiesced in the court’s statement of legislative intent.” Board of
    Education of City of Chicago v. Moore, 
    2021 IL 125785
    , ¶ 30. Granted, the relocation statute
    has been in existence only a brief time and the judicial gloss imparted to it is still relatively
    trifling. Cf. 
    id.
     (the provision at issue had been interpreted in 1987 and there had been
    “numerous” amendments not disturbing the original judicial interpretation). Therefore, the
    principle of legislative acquiescence is not particularly weighty here, but it is undeniably
    present. While not determinative, it supports our interpretation of section 609.2.
    ¶ 66        For these reasons, then, we reject respondent’s contention that the legislature removed the
    burden of proof from section 609.2. Because we hold that section 609.2 places on the parent
    seeking relocation the burden of proving that relocation is in the child’s best interests, the trial
    court did not err in assigning that burden to respondent in its March 3, 2020, order.
    ¶ 67                         C. Denial of the Amended Petition for Relocation
    ¶ 68       Respondent contends that the trial court’s denial of her amended petition for relocation was
    against the manifest weight of the evidence. As discussed above, in 2016, the Act was
    amended, and the former removal statute was repealed and replaced with the relocation statute.
    The relocation statute changed somewhat the procedures a party must follow to take his or her
    child out of the state, allowing the parties to agree to a relocation without the necessity of filing
    a petition and undergoing a hearing. 750 ILCS 5/609.2(c)-(e) (West 2018). Section 609.2(f)
    applies where the parties cannot agree to a relocation. 
    Id.
     § 609.2(f). Section 609.2(g) sets forth
    the standards the trial court is to use in determining the child’s best interests in a relocation
    request:
    “The court shall modify the parenting plan or allocation judgment in accordance
    with the child’s best interests. The court shall consider the following factors:
    (1) the circumstances and reasons for the intended relocation;
    (2) the reasons, if any, why a parent is objecting to the intended relocation;
    (3) the history and quality of each parent’s relationship with the child and
    specifically whether a parent has substantially failed or refused to exercise the
    parental responsibilities allocated to him or her under the parenting plan or
    allocation judgment;
    (4) the educational opportunities for the child at the existing location and at the
    proposed new location;
    (5) the presence or absence of extended family at the existing location and at
    the proposed new location;
    (6) the anticipated impact of the relocation on the child;
    (7) whether the court will be able to fashion a reasonable allocation of parental
    responsibilities between all parents if the relocation occurs;
    - 18 -
    (8) the wishes of the child, taking into account the child’s maturity and ability
    to express reasoned and independent preferences as to relocation;
    (9) possible arrangements for the exercise of parental responsibilities
    appropriate to the parents’ resources and circumstances and the developmental
    level of the child;
    (10) minimization of the impairment to a parent-child relationship caused by a
    parent’s relocation; and
    (11) any other relevant factors bearing on the child’s best interests.” Id.
    § 609.2(g).
    ¶ 69        Our supreme court recently issued Fatkin, 
    2019 IL 123602
    , an emphatic decision regarding
    the standard of review in relocation cases and how to employ that standard. The court explained
    that a trial court’s determination of the child’s best interests should not be disturbed unless it
    is “ ‘clearly against the manifest weight of the evidence and it appears that a manifest injustice
    has occurred.’ ” Id. ¶ 32 (quoting Eckert, 
    119 Ill. 2d at 328
    ). The supreme court further
    explained that the deferential standard of review was appropriate due to the trial court’s
    opportunity to observe the parents and children, giving it the ability to assess and evaluate their
    temperaments, personalities, and capabilities. 
    Id.
     The supreme court concluded that the
    presumption in favor of the trial court’s determination was always strong and compelling in a
    best-interests-determination type of case. 
    Id.
    ¶ 70        The supreme court then provided an illustration of the principles of review, in two brutally
    concise paragraphs. In the first paragraph, the supreme court briefly discussed the trial court’s
    order on the father’s relocation petition, discussing the bases the trial court provided for its
    decision. Id. ¶ 33. The supreme court then held that “that there is absolutely no basis for
    concluding that the trial court’s decision to grant Todd’s relocation petition is so ‘clearly
    against the manifest weight of the evidence’ that ‘it appears that a manifest injustice has
    occurred.’ ” Id. (quoting Fatkin, 
    2018 IL App (3d) 170779
    , ¶ 34). In particular, the supreme
    court castigated the appellate court’s lip service to the manifest-weight standard while its
    decision actually subverted the standard:
    “[T]he appellate court below made no attempt to apply the applicable standard of
    review. On the contrary, after setting out the applicable language from Eckert, the
    appellate court proceeded simply to reweigh the evidence for itself and decide that the
    scales favored denial of the petition. At no point did the appellate court identify what
    evidence the trial court’s decision was ‘clearly’ and ‘manifestly’ against, what
    ‘manifest injustice’ it was seeking to avert, or why suspension of the ‘strong and
    compelling’ presumption in favor of the trial court’s decision was warranted.” 
    Id.
     ¶ 34
    n.2.
    ¶ 71        With these principles in mind, we make one further observation regarding our review of
    the trial court’s determination. In relocation cases, courts have consistently cautioned that a
    best-interests determination cannot be reduced to a simple bright-line test and instead must be
    made on a case-by-case basis. Id. ¶ 32; Eckert, 
    119 Ill. 2d at 326
    ; Kavchak, 
    2018 IL App (2d) 170853
    , ¶ 65. This suggests that other relocation cases are of limited value for purposes of
    comparison because the result in each case depends on the unique facts and circumstances of
    the case. In re Marriage of Berk, 
    215 Ill. App. 3d 459
    , 465-66 (1991). Because of the case-by-
    case nature of our review, the result cannot be reduced to a simple tally of which party “won”
    a majority of the enumerated factors; instead, because some factors in a particular case may
    - 19 -
    weigh more heavily than others, the trial court must consider all factors and evidence touching
    on the issue and must arrive at a reasonable result. P.D., 
    2017 IL App (2d) 170355
    , ¶ 49. With
    all aspects of the preceding discussion in mind, we turn to the trial court’s decision here.
    ¶ 72        The trial court presided over an extremely bitter and contested divorce, spanning nearly 3½
    years. Regarding the relocation issue, the court held a multiday hearing during which the
    parties were given a full and fair opportunity to present their evidence. Notably absent from
    the hearing were respondent’s sister and mother, both of whom respondent testified that she
    would rely upon if she were allowed to relocate: the sister, by providing a dwelling and links
    to possible employment opportunities in California, and the mother, by assisting respondent
    with taking care of S.L.
    ¶ 73        Initially in its remarks, the trial court focused on the best-interests factors developed
    through the case law and, specifically, the factors set forth in Eckert. The court first noted that
    both parties had credibility issues. The court deemed incredible petitioner’s account of his lack
    of involvement in the May 29, 2017, attack on respondent. Likewise, the court deemed
    incredible respondent’s multiple complaints of petitioner’s violence and danger to S.L. The
    court concluded that neither party could work cooperatively with the other, both had used S.L.
    to further their aims in the divorce proceedings, and it would be better for all concerned if the
    parties did not have to deal with each other insofar as was possible. This conclusion was drawn
    from ample evidence in the record as well as from the trial court’s superior position in
    observing the parties testify.
    ¶ 74        While the trial court deemed petitioner’s account of his lack of involvement in the 2017
    attack on plaintiff incredible, it could not conclude that petitioner participated in the planning
    or execution of the attack or that petitioner knew in advance when the attack would occur. The
    court stated that, from its review of the evidence, and particularly in view of the parties’ failure
    to call Voronin to testify to whether and how petitioner was involved, it was impossible to
    determine whether petitioner went beyond a vague approval of the attack, shown in his posting
    bond for Marozau and thus allowing him to continue to pose a threat to respondent. Again, this
    conclusion, that petitioner was tangentially involved but not directly involved, is supported by
    ample evidence in the record.
    ¶ 75        The court then considered the Eckert factors specifically, and it stated that Marozau’s
    violent attack was the primary factor supporting respondent’s petition for relocation. While the
    attack was extremely concerning, the court noted that no other instances of physical violence
    had occurred during the pendency of the case, and this is borne out in the record. The court
    also observed that respondent had no job lined up in California. Further, it doubted that her job
    prospects would be very good and especially doubted respondent’s claim that she had a lead
    on a paralegal job, because respondent had consistently used a language interpreter in all
    important hearings, which suggested that her English language skills were marginal and might
    hamper her ability to find English-language-intensive positions, like that of a paralegal at a law
    firm. This conclusion appears to be based on the court’s observations and to be a rational
    inference for which the court had a reasonable explanation. The court then expressed concern
    that the level of planning present in other relocation cases was lacking here. It noted that
    respondent had not investigated the schools in California (and this was confirmed by
    Lewinthal), respondent and S.L. would have to share a bedroom in the proposed living
    arrangements, and respondent had demonstrated no means by which she could support herself.
    - 20 -
    ¶ 76        The court balanced the foregoing against the likelihood, given the parties’ limited means,
    that relocation would effectively sever petitioner’s parental bond with S.L. altogether. The
    court noted that it was extremely unlikely that the parties could cooperate, especially regarding
    the strain of frequent travel between California and Chicago. The court discussed that
    petitioner had fully and consistently exercised his parental time throughout the case, and it
    noted that respondent had frequently attempted to limit and interfere with petitioner’s parenting
    time. In that regard, the court again highlighted respondent’s baseless reports of abuse and her
    videotaping of visitation exchanges, and it juxtaposed this against respondent’s admission
    during her testimony that she did not believe that petitioner posed a danger to S.L. or would
    harm the child.
    ¶ 77        The trial court considered whether each party could foster a good relationship between S.L.
    and the other parent. The court concluded that, based on the manifest rancor between the
    parties, there was simply no way the parties could be expected to do this. Indeed, the court
    found that each party was responsible for undercutting the other, from the derogatory songs
    that S.L. would sing after spending time with petitioner, to respondent’s unfounded reports of
    petitioner abusing S.L. Again, there is ample evidence in the record supporting the trial court’s
    conclusion.
    ¶ 78        The trial court also considered the effect the proposed relocation would have on parenting
    time. It noted that respondent had no means of support lined up in California and that the
    parties’ economic resources, in general, were not abundant. Specifically, the court noted that
    respondent would lack the economic ability to participate in the cost of the travel that would
    be required and would lack inclination to do so even if she had the resources. Again, there was
    evidence in the record to support the trial court’s conclusion.
    ¶ 79        Other factors the trial court considered in this phase of its remarks included petitioner’s
    strong interest in S.L., and this was supported by his consistent record of exercising all of his
    parenting time. The court also considered whether respondent wanted to relocate to preserve a
    committed relationship, and it concluded that the proposed relocation was solely to physically
    distance herself from petitioner. While the court termed this factor “compelling,” the court
    noted that it was due to the previous physical harm caused by a third party and that it did not
    change the court’s calculus overall, regarding the factors under consideration. Finally, the court
    considered whether respondent had established by a preponderance of evidence that the
    proposed relocation would be in S.L.’s best interests, and it found that the evidence did not
    satisfy that threshold.
    ¶ 80        We have carefully reviewed the record and, as noted, have found evidence supporting the
    trial court’s factual determinations. We cannot say, therefore, that the trial court’s conclusions
    discussed in the first phase of its remarks, where it was considering S.L.’s best interests in light
    of Eckert and its progeny, were against the manifest weight of the evidence. We will comment
    that, considering the repeated recognition that these sorts of best-interests determinations must
    be considered on a case-by-case basis, the trial court’s analysis distinguishing various cases
    presented by respondent was mildly misplaced. See Berk, 
    215 Ill. App. 3d at 465-66
    (recognizing that the case-by-case nature of the consideration of a child’s best interests renders
    the comparison of cases a fruitless endeavor due to the unique circumstances presented in each
    case).
    ¶ 81        The trial court then turned to its review of the statutory factors set forth in section 609.2.
    Many of the court’s comments echo or repeat those given in the first, Eckert-factor phase of
    - 21 -
    the court’s remarks. Starting with the first factor, the court concluded that respondent had
    “good reason to be fearful” of petitioner. This conclusion is obviously based on the Marozau
    attack and the trial court’s belief that, while it could not say that petitioner commissioned,
    planned, or participated before the fact in the attack, petitioner’s actions after the attack
    suggested that he at least approved of the attack. Moreover, the fact that petitioner posted bail
    for Marozau allowed Marozau to remain unincarcerated and represented an implicit threat by
    petitioner (acting through others) to respondent’s safety. However, in the court’s eyes, the
    circumstances and reasonableness of respondent’s motives for relocating were not decisive on
    the central question of whether the move would be in S.L.’s best interests. Under the second
    factor, the court considered petitioner’s motives for resisting the proposed relocation and
    determined that, because of petitioner’s interest in S.L. and the likelihood that the rancorous
    relationship between the parties would mean that such a move would sever petitioner’s parental
    bonds with S.L., his opposition was sincerely motivated toward maintaining his role in S.L.’s
    life. Our review of the record shows that there was evidence supporting these conclusions.
    ¶ 82        The third factor concerns the history and quality each parent’s relationship with S.L. and
    whether a parent takes advantage of his or her parenting time. The trial court noted that
    petitioner consistently exercised his parenting time. The court also noted that, in multiple text
    messages or e-mails, respondent resisted accommodating minor changes to pick-up times and
    locations or otherwise cooperating with petitioner “in seeking that the child had time with her
    father.” We have reviewed the record, and it contains text messages supporting the trial court’s
    observations and conclusions.
    ¶ 83        The trial court noted that respondent had not carefully developed evidence on the fourth
    factor, dealing with S.L.’s educational opportunities in both locations. The court was made
    aware that the California schools had a generally good reputation but that the schools near
    respondent’s residence in Chicago also were well regarded. We note that Lewinthal had
    indicated that respondent had not done any research into the educational opportunities in
    California. The court appears to have viewed this factor as neutral, both because of the paucity
    of respondent’s investigation and because the information that was presented indicated that the
    existing and proposed educational opportunities were reasonably equivalent.
    ¶ 84        The trial court commented that the record showed that the fifth factor, dealing with the
    presence of extended family in both the current and proposed locations, was not very well
    developed. The trial court observed that respondent’s sister, who did not testify, lived in the
    California location, which would be an improvement for respondent, who did not appear to
    have any family in the Chicago area. The court also noted that, on the other hand, there were
    half-siblings from petitioner’s previous marriages present in the Chicago area. We note that
    there was no testimony about the frequency of S.L.’s visits with petitioner’s other children or
    the quality of S.L.’s relationships with them and other members of his family.
    ¶ 85        On the sixth factor, the anticipated impact the relocation would have on S.L., the court
    observed that neither party presented any testimony or information regarding this. According
    to the court, there was no “evidence that the child would be negatively or positively impacted
    by this [proposed] relocation.”
    ¶ 86        The trial court considered the seventh factor, whether it could reasonably allocate the
    parental responsibilities if the relocation were allowed. It concluded that, given the hostility
    between the parties, there would be no way that it could expect them to cooperate and it worried
    that respondent would initiate further actions in California, despite anything the court might
    - 22 -
    write in an order about retaining jurisdiction. While not express, the court was referring not
    just to the relocation but also to other complaints respondent raised, such as the sexual abuse
    accusations that repeatedly were determined to be unfounded in this jurisdiction. Again, our
    review shows that the court based its conclusion on evidence present in the record.
    ¶ 87       Regarding the eighth factor, S.L.’s wishes, the court determined that, because S.L. was too
    young at this point, it was to be expected that there was no evidence adduced on this topic.
    ¶ 88       Looking at the ninth factor, whether it could fashion an appropriate allocation of the
    exercise of parental responsibilities given the constraints of the parties’ resources and
    circumstances, the court doubted that it could. It recognized that the parties had expended
    tremendous economic resources in litigating their extremely rancorous divorce and that, as a
    result, their means had become limited. The court also determined that S.L. likely could not
    travel independently to and from California and that the travel required to reproduce the current
    allocation of parental responsibility would be prohibitively expensive. There is evidence in the
    record to support the trial court’s determination.
    ¶ 89       The trial court considered the tenth factor, the impairment of the parent-child relationship
    that would occur if relocation were allowed. The court concluded that relocation would likely
    effectively terminate petitioner’s involvement with S.L. The court based the conclusion on the
    parties’ lack of cooperation and the likelihood that respondent would not be inclined to foster
    that involvement.
    ¶ 90       As to the catch-all consideration of any other factors, the trial court discussed that the
    parties had not presented much evidence about S.L. and that it had no feel for how S.L. would
    react to the relocation. The court generalized that children like stability and that the current
    arrangements had been in place for several years and had continued with little to no judicial
    involvement for at least a year.
    ¶ 91       Based on its consideration of the factors, the trial court concluded that relocation would
    not be in S.L.’s best interests. Looking at that decision through the lens of Fatkin, we cannot
    say that the court’s factual determinations were against the manifest weight of the evidence.
    We have commented throughout that they were based on evidence appearing in the record.
    Moreover, many determinations involved weighing the evidence, and the conclusions appear
    reasonable in light of the court’s stated bases for each determination. Likewise, we do not
    believe that a manifest injustice would occur as a result of the trial court’s decision. The court
    emphasized the speculative nature of respondent’s request to relocate. There was no
    particularly detailed level of planning. Respondent did not have a job offer in hand, although
    she attempted to explain that by noting the uncertainty of the timing of the move. Nevertheless,
    she did not present a job offer or objective evidence from any potential employers. Likewise,
    respondent did not research the educational opportunities for S.L., leaving that to Lewinthal to
    do on her behalf. While both Lewinthal and Pacheco opined that relocation should be allowed,
    their opinions were based on statements petitioner made that he explained to the court’s
    satisfaction as misunderstandings. Specifically, petitioner explained that he felt that, if
    relocation occurred, he would have to withdraw his contact with S.L. because of respondent’s
    history of making accusations of abuse. The court accepted this explanation, and it noted that,
    during the hearing, respondent expressly conceded that she did not believe that petitioner
    would harm S.L. We credit the court’s determination because the court was in a far superior
    position to determine petitioner’s credibility and sincerity than are we in reviewing a cold
    - 23 -
    record. The court provided a thorough, supported, and well-reasoned explanation of its
    decision. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
    ¶ 92        We now turn to respondent’s specific critiques of the trial court’s decision. Respondent,
    understandably, gives paramount importance to the Marozau attack and argues that this entirely
    justifies her decision to move. Respondent points to several acts of violence about which she
    testified at the trial. She also highlights threats that petitioner made to her and the 2017 order
    of protection to demonstrate that the trial court’s conclusion that there had been only a single
    act of violence was against the manifest weight of the evidence. The trial court was entirely
    aware of the parties’ conduct throughout the case. Indeed, the trial court maintained that it
    would include provisions minimizing the parties’ interactions in the final orders to relieve some
    of the friction and tension. The trial court indicated that it had issues with respondent’s
    testimony during the hearing, including her testimony about the threats.
    ¶ 93        On the other hand, the trial court did not simply accept petitioner’s testimony as gospel. It
    discounted petitioner’s claims that he was totally uninvolved in the Marozau attack, although
    it could not conclude whether petitioner was involved in the attack before the fact or anything
    more than approval of it after it had occurred. Likewise, the court rejected petitioner’s denials
    that he taught S.L. to make derogatory comments and sing songs about respondent.
    ¶ 94        In other words, the record shows that the trial court carefully and critically considered the
    parties’ testimony. We cannot reject the trial court’s superior position and consideration of the
    live evidence in favor of our own evaluation of the cold record. Fatkin, 
    2019 IL 123602
    , ¶ 34
    n.2 (it is improper for the appellate court to reweigh the evidence and substitute its judgment
    for that of the trial court). We cannot say that the trial court’s judgment was against the manifest
    weight of the evidence.
    ¶ 95        Respondent specifically argues that the trial court’s conclusion that only a single act of
    violence occurred, from the case’s inception until the court’s judgment, was against the
    manifest weight of the evidence. In support, respondent highlights her testimony about several
    incidents in 2015 and 2017. In addition, respondent contends that she was often threatened by
    petitioner, and she counts this as part of the violence against her. As noted, the trial court
    considered all of the testimony and determined that respondent’s testimony about the violence
    and abuse was not entirely credible. Our review of the record demonstrates that many of the
    exchanges occurred in a police department, and respondent testified that petitioner would often
    threaten her during exchanges. The record, however, is barren of any witnesses to these threats
    occurring within feet of on-duty police officers. Thus, we conclude that the trial court’s
    conclusion regarding the single act of violence is not unfounded and is based on reasonable
    interpretations of the evidence in the record. With that said, the trial court was clearly
    extremely concerned because of the Marozau attack and petitioner’s involvement in it, and it
    emphasized that any additional violence against respondent would not be tolerated and would
    immediately result in a reconsideration of its decision. Again, based on our review of the
    record, we cannot say that the trial court’s remarks were unfounded or not based on the
    evidence and the reasonable inferences arising from it.
    ¶ 96        Respondent also asks us to jettison the trial court’s conclusion that petitioner was not
    forewarned about the Marozau attack and did not participate in it before-the-fact. Respondent
    emphasizes the evidence that there were substantial financial payments from petitioner to
    Marozau shortly before the attack, petitioner’s prevarications with Lewinthal, and the
    evolution of petitioner’s explanations to Lewinthal and Pacheco and even in his testimony
    - 24 -
    during the trial. However, the trial court received this evidence and clearly considered it. The
    trial court was in a superior position to observe the witnesses and to determine their credibility.
    Respondent is asking us to substitute our judgment for that of the trial court without
    acknowledging any of the weaknesses in her position. For example, respondent does not
    mention that the issue was not developed with testimony from Voronin or that the police
    investigation failed to turn up sufficient evidence to demonstrate petitioner’s involvement (and
    we do not detect that respondent is arguing that the trial court applied an erroneous standard to
    its consideration of the effect of the police investigation or the inferences it drew from the lack
    of Voronin’s testimony). In effect, respondent is requesting that we reconsider the evidence in
    the light most favorable to her, rather than under the appropriate manifest-weight standard. Id.
    ¶ 32. That we cannot do. We reject respondent’s contention.
    ¶ 97         Next, respondent challenges the trial court’s conclusion that respondent interfered in
    petitioner’s parenting time and with the parent-child relationship between petitioner and S.L.
    She challenges the trial court’s evaluation of the evidence regarding her allegations of sexual
    abuse. This is another request to substitute our judgment for that of the trial court, and we reject
    the contention. Id.
    ¶ 98         Respondent contends the court erred as a matter of law in considering that she had placed
    even slight roadblocks in the way of the parent-child relationship between petitioner and S.L.
    In order to make this argument, respondent presumes that we accept her previous argument
    regarding petitioner’s violence toward her during both the marriage and the pendency of the
    case. As we have rejected that earlier contention, it cannot be used to form the basis of this
    contention. Accordingly, we must reject it.
    ¶ 99         Next, respondent challenges the trial court’s determination that petitioner was sincerely
    trying to protect his relationship with S.L. by opposing relocation. We have carefully reviewed
    the record and conclude that the trial court’s determination was not against the manifest weight
    of the evidence. Respondent argues that petitioner’s statements to Pacheco and Lewinthal
    about withdrawing from contact with S.L. illustrate his lack of commitment to the relationship
    and reveal an improper motivation for opposing relocation. Respondent also points to the
    minimal relationships petitioner has with his other children, suggesting that, as with them, so
    with S.L. We disagree.
    ¶ 100        Respondent presents petitioner’s statements to Pacheco and Lewinthal isolated from his
    trial explanation. As petitioner explained, given the history of respondent’s allegations that he
    sexually abused S.L., he was fearful that the allegations would continue and that he would be
    jailed even though the allegations were unfounded. Respondent does not mention this
    testimony, relating only that petitioner denied that he made the statements (and respondent
    does not support this reference with a citation to the record). Further, while it is lamentable
    that petitioner has little to no relationship with his other children, throughout the course of this
    case, petitioner has consistently and fully availed himself of his parenting time and has forged
    a relationship with S.L. The trial court also observed the testimony and was aware of these
    facts in rendering its determination on this point. We cannot say that the court’s determination
    was against the manifest weight of the evidence. Id.
    ¶ 101        Respondent argues that the trial court erred by considering only whether petitioner fully
    exercised his parenting time and that it should have also considered the history and quality of
    his relationship with S.L. Section 609.2(g)(3) states that the court is to consider “the history
    and quality of each parent’s relationship with the child and specifically whether a parent has
    - 25 -
    substantially failed or refused to exercise the parental responsibilities allocated to him or her
    under the parenting plan or allocation judgment.” 750 ILCS 5/609.2(g)(3) (West 2018). The
    court’s focus was in line with the factor as stated in the Act. Moreover, as we have observed
    above, the hearing was unusual because the parties presented S.L. not on her own terms but
    only as a vehicle to demonstrate one or the other party’s failures. The trial court commented
    that neither party had presented it with the opportunity to get a feel for S.L.’s personality and
    how she might react to changes in the parenting allocation. Indeed, the trial court criticized
    both parents for using S.L. to further their own goals in this case. Finally, we observe that
    respondent’s argument is actually a request that we reject how the trial court evaluated this
    factor. She would have us emphasize the “history and quality” of petitioner’s relationship with
    S.L. and rebalance the calculus in her favor, rather than apply the manifest-weight review to
    the issue. Because the trial court’s determination regarding this factor is amply supported in
    the record, we cannot conclude that it was against the manifest weight of the evidence. Fatkin,
    
    2019 IL 123602
    , ¶ 32. To the extent that respondent alleges that the trial court misapplied the
    law, we note that she would simply prefer the court to have concentrated on a different aspect
    of the factor than the court did, which pinpoints not an error applying the law but a
    disagreement with how the law was (in our view, correctly) applied. For these reasons, we
    reject respondent’s contention.
    ¶ 102        Next, respondent contends that the educational opportunities in California are superior to
    those in Illinois. This contention is not so much a claim that the trial court misapprehended the
    evidence or considered improper evidence or aspects pertaining to the factor; it is rather a plea
    that we reweigh the evidence and substitute our judgment for that of the trial court. We decline
    the invitation. 
    Id.
     ¶ 34 n.2.
    ¶ 103        Respondent next contends that the factor dealing with extended family at the proposed
    location and the current location favors relocation. Respondent reiterated that she has a good
    and close relationship with her sister, with whom she and S.L. would live. In its comments, the
    trial court made this point. Respondent then complains that the court mentioned cousins and
    siblings in the Chicago area, and she purports to understand the comment to be directed at her.
    This is a clear misapprehension of the trial court’s comments. In making the statement about
    siblings and cousins, the trial court was clearly addressing S.L.’s cousins and siblings, not
    respondent’s. With that said, the court’s analysis said little regarding S.L.’s siblings and
    cousins on her father’s side, which might be because the evidence demonstrated that petitioner
    had poor relationships with his children and his own family. The court simply noted that it
    appeared that petitioner had family in the area. This is because the evidence demonstrated that
    petitioner had poor relationships with his children and his own family, but it appeared that
    petitioner had family in the area. We believe that this factor does favor relocation, although the
    trial court’s comments are not clear on the point. However, as noted, this is not simply an
    exercise of totting up who “won” each factor, with the greater number of “wins” determining
    the outcome. P.D., 
    2017 IL App (2d) 170355
    , ¶ 49. While the extended-family factor favors
    relocation, the trial court appears to have placed appropriate weight on it and, under any
    measure, it would not likely be outcome-determinative on its own.
    ¶ 104        Respondent next argues that the trial court’s determination that there was no evidence about
    the relocation’s impact on S.L. was against the manifest weight of the evidence. Respondent
    illustrates her argument with her own testimony about petitioner’s violent and threatening
    behavior. While it is true that respondent testified about petitioner’s violent actions, controlling
    - 26 -
    behavior, and threats, the trial court, who observed the testimony and presided over the entirety
    of this case, discounted the credibility of the testimony. Given the trial court’s superior
    position, we are not in a position to gainsay its credibility determination or the weight that it
    placed on the testimony. Fatkin, 
    2019 IL 123602
    , ¶ 34 n.2. Moreover, there was no testimony
    directly on the impact on S.L. The parties did not significantly explore S.L.’s bonds with
    friends or family or whether she had friends in each parent’s neighborhood. The closest thing
    to impact evidence was petitioner’s testimony that S.L. was taken to worship with his family
    and that the temple had special classes for children. Even that testimony, however, did not
    really touch on whether S.L. had forged bonds with the congregants and their children.
    Respondent’s reliance on her testimony about petitioner’s violence to substitute for any direct
    testimony regarding S.L.’s attachments and socialization fully indicates respondent’s
    awareness that such testimony was not produced during the hearing. We add that we do not
    dispute respondent’s point: that removing S.L. from a violence-filled environment would have
    a beneficial impact on S.L. However, the trial court explained why it discounted the testimony
    regarding petitioner’s violence, and we have determined that it was a reasoned decision
    supported by evidence in the record and reasonable inferences from that evidence.
    Accordingly, we reject respondent’s contention.
    ¶ 105        Next, respondent challenges the trial court’s determination that it could not fashion a
    reasonable allocation of parental responsibilities if relocation were allowed. Respondent
    deconstructs the court’s comments to attempt to rebut each individual comment while ignoring
    the thrust of the court’s analysis. The court noted that the parties would not cooperate,
    considered the arduous and expensive travel requirements for a child of tender years, and
    opined that, if relocation occurred, it would, de facto, result in the severance of the parent-child
    bonds between petitioner and S.L. We have carefully reviewed the record and believe that the
    trial court’s decision was reasoned, reasonable, and based on the evidence before it. We cannot
    say that this determination was against the manifest weight of the evidence.
    ¶ 106        Respondent focuses on the travel, noting that travel alone cannot be a barrier to relocation,
    or relocation would never be allowed. See In re Marriage of Tedrick, 
    2015 IL App (4th) 140773
    , ¶¶ 59-60. The focus, however, is misplaced, because the trial court was balancing the
    requirement of lengthy, and perhaps unaccompanied, travel with the parties’ resources and
    their track record of failing to foster S.L.’s relationship with the other parent. We cannot say
    that the focus on the parties’ undermining of each other was improper. As such, the other
    comments are relatively tangential, and respondent’s dispute of each in minute detail does not
    disturb the fact that, in the trial court’s reckoning, the parties amply demonstrated their inability
    to cooperate and to foster each other’s relationship with S.L. and that this renders the
    fashioning of a parental allocation a futile exercise. We reject respondent’s contention.
    ¶ 107        Respondent next contends that the trial court’s determination of the infeasibility of
    allocating parental responsibilities appropriate to the parties’ resources was against the
    manifest weight of the evidence. Respondent argues that there was evidence that petitioner did
    not lack resources, because there was “ample evidence of [petitioner’s] financial resources.”
    While true, the court also noted that the three years of highly contentious divorce proceedings
    had diminished those resources, and respondent’s argument does not take that into account.
    Further, respondent points to nothing concrete beyond the facts that, at the beginning of these
    proceedings, petitioner was able to post a $100,000 bond and had transferred around $150,000
    in cash and assets to Marozau shortly before. For example, respondent does not indicate
    - 27 -
    petitioner’s annual earnings, his assets on hand at the time of the proposed relocation, or his
    investments. Indeed, the contention is made in a factual vacuum with no assistance to this court
    concerning where in the record the information can be found, if it exists. See Obert v. Saville,
    
    253 Ill. App. 3d 677
    , 682 (1993) (it is not the appellate court’s obligation to comb the record
    for contentions of error). We cannot say that the trial court’s determination was against the
    manifest weight of the evidence.
    ¶ 108        Respondent last argues that the trial court’s determination that it could not minimize the
    disruption to the parent-child relationship between petitioner and S.L. was against the manifest
    weight of the evidence. This contention combines a request to reweigh the evidence with a
    substantial amount of “but what about petitioner’s conduct.” Respondent’s contention is
    topped off by highlighting the parties’ agreements to settle outstanding issues in the ongoing
    litigation as examples of their ability to cooperate. We have discussed the trial court’s
    conclusion that each party continually undermined the other and attempted to interfere with
    his or her parent-child relationship, and we see no reason to repeat that discussion or to disturb
    our determination that the trial court’s conclusion was not against the manifest weight of the
    evidence. We further cannot say that settlement in litigation matters exemplifies an ability to
    cooperate. Given the apparent animus between the parties, we, like the trial court, do not
    believe that the parties had a sudden change of heart as they wrapped up the remaining
    outstanding issues. To our mind, it is just as likely that the resources consumed in this litigation
    were beginning to run dry, requiring some measure of give and take to attain a final judgment.
    Thus, because the contention boils down to a request to reweigh the evidence, we reject
    respondent’s contention. Fatkin, 
    2019 IL 123602
    , ¶ 34 n.2.
    ¶ 109        Finally, we note that the consideration of which way each factor of a best-interests
    determination leans is a good analytical tool. However, parties must not lose sight of the
    necessity that the trial court, and consequently the court on review, consider, case by case, all
    circumstances touching on the child’s best interests. Kavchak, 
    2018 IL App (2d) 170853
    , ¶ 65.
    Further, reliance on only a factor-by-factor analysis may lead the party to a simple evaluation
    of how many factors he or she should have “won,” and this reduces the best-interests
    determination to the bright-line rule cautioned against in the case law. P.D., 
    2017 IL App (2d) 170355
    , ¶ 49. The paramount consideration is the child’s best interests, and our review of a
    trial court’s best-interests determination attempts to understand not only how the factors fell
    or should have fallen but the weight accorded each and the reasons why.
    ¶ 110        Accordingly, we will not add up which party “won” the greater number of factors. It is
    sufficient that our comments above clearly indicated that we cannot say that the trial court’s
    judgment denying respondent’s amended petition for relocation was clearly against the
    manifest weight of the evidence or that its decision worked a manifest injustice.
    ¶ 111        Finally, pursuant to Illinois Supreme Court Rule 311(a)(5) (July 1, 2018), our decision in
    this case was to be filed on or before February 22, 2021. There were no filing delays in the
    record or the brief in this case, although some time was lost due to petitioner’s silence about
    his decision not to file a brief. The issues of jurisdiction and the interpretation and analysis of
    the relocation statute required additional time. We propose that good cause exists for issuing
    our decision after February 22, 2021.
    - 28 -
    ¶ 112                                   III. CONCLUSION
    ¶ 113   For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the circuit court of Lake County is affirmed.
    ¶ 114   Affirmed.
    - 29 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2-20-0552

Filed Date: 3/3/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/30/2024