Andrew Fairbanks Versus Brooke Beninate ( 2020 )


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  • ANDREW FAIRBANKS                                       NO. 20-CA-206
    VERSUS                                                 FIFTH CIRCUIT
    BROOKE BENINATE                                        COURT OF APPEAL
    STATE OF LOUISIANA
    ON APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT
    PARISH OF JEFFERSON, STATE OF LOUISIANA
    NO. 763-069, DIVISION "L"
    HONORABLE DONALD A. ROWAN, JR., JUDGE PRESIDING
    December 23, 2020
    STEPHEN J. WINDHORST
    JUDGE
    Panel composed of Judges Jude G. Gravois,
    Stephen J. Windhorst, and Hans J. Liljeberg
    AFFIRMED IN PART; VACATED IN PART; REMANDED
    SJW
    JGG
    HJL
    COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLEE,
    ANDREW FAIRBANKS
    Terri M. Miles
    Rebecca Huskey
    COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLANT,
    BROOKE BENINATE
    Richard L. Ducote
    Victora McIntyre
    COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE,
    STATE OF LOUISIANA, DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
    Jeffrey M. Landry
    Alicia Edmond Wheeler
    David J. Smith, Jr.
    WINDHORST, J.
    In this custody dispute, defendant/appellant, Brooke Beninate, appeals the
    trial court’s judgment denying her motion to declare La. R.S. 46:236.5 C
    unconstitutional, awarding plaintiff/appellee, Andrew Fairbanks, sole custody of
    their child, and restricting Ms. Beninate to supervised visitation. Ms. Beninate also
    appeals the awards of child support, attorney’s fees and costs to Mr. Fairbanks. For
    the following reasons, we affirm the trial court’s judgment, except as to the child
    support award.     We vacate the child support award and remand for further
    proceedings.
    FACTS and PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    This case has a protracted history of conflict between the parents of C.B., who
    is four years old, related primarily to Mr. Fairbanks’ efforts to obtain visitation and
    eventually custody. The parents, Ms. Beninate and Mr. Fairbanks, have never been
    married or lived together. Mr. Fairbanks has been identified as the child’s biological
    father by scientific testing and has acknowledged the child since birth.
    Mr. Fairbanks’ efforts to obtain visitation of the child began on July 21, 2016,
    when he filed a petition to establish custody seeking visitation every other weekend
    and every other holiday. In that petition, Mr. Fairbanks asserted that Ms. Beninate
    had prevented him from seeing the child, even though he had been paying her child
    support.
    During the course of these proceedings, Ms. Beninate has filed multiple
    petitions for protection from abuse, although none have been proven to have merit.
    She filed the first petition for protection from abuse on August 16, 2018, not long
    after Mr. Fairbanks filed his first petition seeking visitation. Ms. Beninate alleged
    that she suspected that her child had been physically and sexually abused by Mr.
    Fairbanks because he came home covered in bruises, had a busted lip, a purple
    toenail, was traumatized and was not the same after that. She asserted that Mr.
    20-CA-206                                  1
    Fairbanks had exhibited physical violence in the past and alleged that he slapped
    their child in the face, backhanded and shoved him, and told him to “shut up.” On
    August 16, 2018, the court issued an order of protection effective through September
    5, 2018, in which Mr. Fairbanks was ordered to not go within 300 feet of their child.
    On August 30, 2018, approximately two weeks after filing the petition for protection
    from abuse, it was dismissed on Ms. Beninate’s motion.
    On August 28, 2018, Mr. Fairbanks filed a petition to set child custody,
    seeking formal recognition as C.B.’s biological father and joint custody with a
    specific custody and visitation plan. In response, Ms. Beninate asserted that it would
    be in the child’s best interest to award her sole custody and Mr. Fairbanks supervised
    visitation. She again alleged that Mr. Fairbanks physically and sexually abused their
    child. After a hearing officer conference on November 20, 2018 relative to the issues
    raised in these pleadings, the hearing officer recommended that Mr. Fairbanks have
    visitation with his child twice a week for two hours; that the parties’ counsel arrange
    a visitation schedule; and that Mr. Fairbanks pay child support and explore obtaining
    health insurance. These recommendations were adopted as an interim judgment of
    the court, and Ms. Beninate timely objected to them.
    Soon after the interim judgment granting Mr. Fairbanks visitation was signed,
    on December 4, 2018, Ms. Beninate filed a second petition for protection from abuse
    based on the same previously-asserted allegations that Mr. Fairbanks emotionally,
    physically, and sexually abused their child. After a hearing, at which testimony was
    presented, the Commissioner found the petition unwarranted and dismissed it due to
    Ms. Beninate’s failure to prove the allegations.
    Pursuant to a stipulation by the parties, Dr. Karen Van Beyer conducted a
    custody evaluation on April 9, 2019.           Mr. Fairbanks subsequently moved to
    implement Dr. Van Beyer’s recommendations regarding custody, domicile,
    activities, vacations, holidays, and therapy.
    20-CA-206                                  2
    On May 10, 2019, Mr. Fairbanks filed a first rule for contempt, stating that
    despite the interim judgment granting him visitation, Ms. Beninate had refused to
    allow him to see his child since August 2018 without her present. He asserted that
    he had only been permitted to see his child ten times in her presence, and that after
    these short visits with her and their child, she repeatedly texted and harassed him.
    In addition, he alleged that after he filed a motion to implement the custody
    evaluation, Ms. Beninate threatened to kill herself and their child if Mr. Fairbanks
    did not forego his pursuit of custody and visitation. Although Mr. Fairbanks stated
    that he did not believe Ms. Beninate would actually harm herself or their child, he
    requested that the court address her behavior and threats. The hearing officer
    considered this first rule for contempt at a May 28, 2019 hearing officer conference.
    After the May 28, 2019 conference, the hearing officer recommended that Dr.
    Van Beyer’s recommendations be made the judgment of the court and implemented.
    These recommendations were made an interim judgment of the court. The interim
    judgment provided that beginning on May 29, 2019, Mr. Fairbanks was entitled to
    visitation with his child twice a week for four hours, and after four weeks, an
    overnight visit. Ms. Beninate objected to Dr. Van Beyer’s recommendations and the
    hearing officer’s recommendations.
    After the May 28, 2019 interim judgment, on June 6, 2019, Mr. Fairbanks
    filed a second rule for contempt, stating that Ms. Beninate continued to refuse to
    allow him visitation. He stated that she met him at the designated meeting place for
    visitation on May 29, 2019, but refused to allow him to take their child. He also
    alleged that while he was holding their child, Ms. Beninate physically pried him out
    of his arms causing their child distress. To document this incident, Mr. Fairbanks
    called the police and a complaint report was issued. In this rule for contempt, Mr.
    Fairbanks further asserted that Ms. Beninate did not allow him visitation on June 3,
    2019, and that she continued to falsely accuse him of sexual abuse in the presence
    20-CA-206                                3
    of their child. At a July 11, 2019 hearing officer conference on the second rule for
    contempt, the hearing officer recommended that Mr. Fairbanks receive
    compensatory visitation with his child and that Ms. Beninate be found in contempt
    for violating the previous visitation order of the court and be ordered to pay Mr.
    Fairbanks $500.00 for attorney’s fees and $270.00 in court costs.                These
    recommendations were made an interim judgment of the court, and Ms. Beninate
    objected to them.
    Ms. Beninate continued to refuse to comply with the interim court orders. As
    a result, on August 15, 2019, Mr. Fairbanks filed an emergency rule for sole custody,
    asserting the following: (1) since November 20, 2018, the hearing officer and
    custody evaluator have repeatedly recommended that Mr. Fairbanks be permitted to
    exercise visitation with the child but Ms. Beninate has prevented visitation from
    occurring; (2) Mr. Fairbanks believes the child is in danger with Ms. Beninate
    because she has threatened to kill the child and herself before following any court-
    ordered visitation; (3) Ms. Beninate has made disturbing allegations against Mr.
    Fairbanks, including that he is in a cult, a devil-worshipper, satanic demon, craves
    the blood of the child as human sacrifice, and performs black magic spells and
    curses; (4) Ms. Beninate abuses prescription narcotics; and (5) Ms. Beninate refuses
    to answer the door when he arrives at her house and that law enforcement can no
    longer assist him in attempting to facilitate the court-ordered visitation because there
    is a problem for every visit. Based on Ms. Beninate’s refusal to abide by the court-
    ordered visitation and his belief that their child is in imminent danger of bodily harm,
    Mr. Fairbanks sought sole custody of their child.
    After a hearing before the trial court on August 15, 2019, the trial court
    “denied” all of Ms. Beninate’s objections to hearing officer recommendations and
    interim orders including those dated November 20, 2018, December 27, 2018, May
    28, 2019 and July 11, 2019.        The trial court referred the matter to the duty
    20-CA-206                                  4
    commissioner and ordered Ms. Beninate to undergo a psychological evaluation with
    a court-appointed mental health professional to address why custody should not be
    updated.
    On August 22, 2019, Mr. Fairbanks filed his third rule for contempt because
    Ms. Beninate had continued to deny him any visitation. Mr. Fairbanks outlined
    several dates for scheduled visitation with which Ms. Beninate refused to comply
    and asserted that she sends him a barrage of text messages bordering on harassment
    and making false allegations. Mr. Fairbanks further alleged that Ms. Beninate is in
    contempt of court for failing to pay him the attorney’s fees and court costs awarded
    to him in the August 15, 2019 judgment. Mr. Fairbanks sought a judgment holding
    Ms. Beninate in contempt of court for refusing to comply with the July 11, 2019
    judgment, refusing to allow court-ordered visitation, refusing to co-parent, and
    failing to pay him the previously court-awarded attorney’s fees and court costs. He
    also sought additional attorney’s fees and court costs for this rule for contempt.
    After a hearing officer conference on September 11, 2019, the hearing officer
    recommended that (a) Mr. Fairbanks have sole custody of the parties’ child; (b) Ms.
    Beninate have supervised visitation for two hours every Saturday, at her expense, at
    Council NOLA; (c) Dr. Van Beyer conduct an updated evaluation; (d) Dr. Raphael
    Salcedo conduct a mental health evaluation of Ms. Beninate; and (e) Ms. Beninate
    be found in contempt and pay court costs and attorney’s fees to Mr. Fairbanks. These
    recommendations were made an interim order of the court, and Ms. Beninate
    objected timely. On this same day, Ms. Beninate filed a third petition for protection
    from abuse based on the same allegations as those asserted in her previous two
    petitions for protection from abuse. A judgment of dismissal of this petition was
    signed on September 30, 3019, again on Ms. Beninate’s motion.
    Once Mr. Fairbanks obtained custody of the child, he filed a motion to modify
    child support and sought child support from Ms. Beninate. After a hearing officer
    20-CA-206                                 5
    conference on November 20, 2019 on this motion, the hearing officer recommended
    that Ms. Beninate pay $469.41 in child support based on imputed income. She
    objected timely.
    Because Mr. Fairbanks temporarily obtained custody based on the interim
    judgment, Ms. Beninate filed a motion to declare La. R.S. 46:236.5 C
    unconstitutional, asserting that this statute establishes arbitrary procedures whereby
    a parent can lose custody of their child without the due process right to a meaningful
    hearing. In light of this, she argued that La. R.S. 46:236.5 C was unconstitutional,
    and that, as result, the interim judgment granting Mr. Fairbanks sole custody was
    void.
    The trial court heard this matter on January 30, 2020 to address Ms. Beninate’s
    motion to declare La. R.S. 46:236.5 C unconstitutional and her objections to the
    hearing officer’s recommendations. After hearing argument from the parties, the
    trial court denied the motion to declare La. R.S. 46:236.5 C unconstitutional, stating
    that “none of what the hearing officer does is a final judgment.” The trial court also
    indicated that the hearing officer makes recommendations, and as the trial judge, “I
    either adopt the recommendation of the hearing officer or I reject it and I institute
    my own judgment.”
    With regard to the custody and visitation issues, the following individuals
    testified at the trial court hearing: Dr. Allan Klein; Brandi Beninate; Shonell Dillon;
    Karen Campos; Zack Campos; Ms. Beninate; Dr. Rafael Salcedo; and Mr.
    Fairbanks.
    Dr. Klein, a clinical psychologist, testified as an expert in the field of clinical
    psychology. He met with Ms. Beninate at her attorney’s request to generate a report
    regarding her concerns about her child. In evaluating the situation, he met with Ms.
    Beninate for two sessions and reviewed a number of documents, including medical
    records, reports from Ms. Dillon, a clinical social worker, and a video of the child
    20-CA-206                                    6
    sucking the trunk of an elephant. Dr. Klein testified that he found Ms. Beninate to
    be intact and noted nothing in her mental status that was concerning. He testified
    that she was very upset over how her child was removed from her home, that it was
    reasonable for her to be concerned about her child possibly being sexually abused,
    and noted that it was probably the most traumatic separation that he has ever
    observed. Dr. Klein did not meet with Mr. Fairbanks, the child or anyone other than
    Ms. Beninate regarding this matter.
    Brandi Beninate, Ms. Beninate’s sister, testified that she lived with Ms.
    Beninate and the child at their parents’ home. She stated that Mr. Fairbanks was
    involved in an incident four years ago with her boyfriend, which she considered
    violent. She testified that Mr. Fairbanks “out of nowhere” pulled her boyfriend, Mr.
    Campo, off the couch and began wrestling with him and that she believed it was
    because he was jealous. She also testified that after the child visited with Mr.
    Fairbanks, she thought the manner in which he played with his superhero toys as a
    two year old was suspect because he would put them on top of each other in
    straddling positions. Brandi testified that after returning from a visit with Mr.
    Fairbanks, the child was distraught, that he had a burn mark under his toe one time,
    and that on one occasion he randomly started sticking a stuffed elephant down his
    throat, gagging himself so much that tears were coming out of his eyes, which Ms.
    Beninate videoed. Brandi further testified that the child never slept away from Ms.
    Beninate until he was removed from her custody.
    Ms. Dillon, a clinical therapist, testified as an expert in the field of clinical
    social work. Ms. Dillon treated both Ms. Beninate and her child, but never met with
    Mr. Fairbanks. She met with the child weekly from approximately February 2019
    until September 2019 for an hour with Ms. Beninate present to treat him for post-
    traumatic stress disorder. Ms. Dillon testified that the child spoke very little, and
    that she used play therapy to encourage him to express his feelings. On a couple of
    20-CA-206                                 7
    occasions, the child took a child-like doll and hid it under the bed or dresser or in the
    closet; he would place the face of a doll at the groin of another doll; and he would
    also dismember, fight and/or throw certain dolls. Ms. Dillon testified that Ms.
    Beninate was very loving and encouraging towards her child, that she appeared to
    want the best for her child, and that the child was very attached to her. Ms. Beninate
    did not inform Ms. Dillon of her allegations that Mr. Fairbanks or his family was
    involved in a cult; that Mr. Fairbanks’ eyes turn orange because of demonic
    possession; or that he puts the child in a cage and/or forces him to eat dog food or
    feces or places him in the middle of a circle with family members dressed in black.
    Ms. Campos, the mother of Brandi’s boyfriend, testified that she knew Ms.
    Beninate and her child and that they occasionally attended gatherings at her house
    over the years for holidays and other events. On one visit, Ms. Campos testified that
    when someone was singing “Jesus Loves You,” the child screamed “No. Hate him.”
    repeatedly. Mr. Campos, Brandi’s boyfriend, testified that he knew Ms. Beninate,
    Mr. Fairbanks (from dating Ms. Beninate), and their child. He testified regarding
    the incident four years ago where Mr. Fairbanks pulled him off the couch and tackled
    him because he was jealous.
    Ms. Beninate testified the child lived with her, her parents, and her sister
    Brandi until September 11, 2019 when he was placed in Mr. Fairbanks’ custody.
    After their child’s birth, Mr. Fairbanks would spend time with Ms. Beninate and
    their child at her house. In 2017, when Ms. Beninate started working, the child
    would spend time with Mr. Fairbanks at his house, but never spent the night. Ms.
    Beninate alleged that after the child began spending time at Mr. Fairbanks’ house,
    his demeanor changed, that he no longer wanted to play outside, and that he was
    scared of baths and diaper changes. She also asserts that on July 25, 2018, upon
    return from a visit with Mr. Fairbanks, the child came home with physical injuries,
    and that soon after that, his behavior became sexual because he would position his
    20-CA-206                                  8
    superheroes in sexual positions, he randomly asked to see her butt, and would stick
    his face in her butt. Ms. Beninate took the video of the child stuffing the elephant
    truck in and out of his mouth and testified that she did not prompt him to do that.
    The child also began to become visibly upset when it was time to go to Mr.
    Fairbanks’ house for a visit. Because of the child’s alleged behaviors and upon
    doctors’ recommendation, Ms. Beninate took the child to a therapist, Ms. Dillon.
    Ms. Beninate further alleges that two or three times, Mr. Fairbanks allegedly told the
    child to shut up when he was babbling, backhanded him in the stomach on one
    occasion, and slapped the child in the face after the child had slapped him.
    Mr. Fairbanks’ counsel questioned Ms. Beninate regarding her previous
    allegations that Mr. Fairbanks’ eyes turned orange because of demonic possession;
    that he has exercised MK-Ultra mind control over their child; that he and his family
    are members of a cult; that he drinks blood and participates in human sacrifice; and
    that he has held the child upside down and near drowned him. She attempted to
    explain these allegations by stating she was speaking figuratively and/or repeating
    things her child told her and things she found from her research on MK-Ultra mind
    control. Ms. Beninate admitted that she told Mr. Fairbanks he was going to have to
    kill her and her family before she would give their child to him, and that her goal is
    to keep Mr. Fairbanks from their child.
    Mr. Fairbanks testified at trial that when the child was born and he went to the
    hospital to see him, Ms. Beninate and her mother asked him to leave and he was not
    allowed to see the child. Three months after the child’s birth, he was asked to take
    a paternity test, which showed that he was the father, and then he was allowed to see
    the child. In December 2015, Mr. Fairbanks was allowed to visit the child at Ms.
    Beninate’s house a few times a week. They started dating again and the visits
    increased, but when they broke up, he was allowed to see the child less often. Mr.
    Fairbanks testified that he was allowed to have his child outside of Ms. Beninate’s
    20-CA-206                                 9
    presence fewer than ten times. Even after interim orders were entered granting Mr.
    Fairbanks unsupervised visitation, Ms. Beninate continued to refuse to allow Mr.
    Fairbanks visitation with his child. As a result, Mr. Fairbanks eventually filed rules
    for contempt in an effort to have his visitation. Mr. Fairbanks testified that because
    of his efforts to see the child, Ms. Beninate sent him threatening text messages, such
    as “I will hit you in the head with a baseball bat. I will kill you.”
    Mr. Fairbanks testified that after the September 11, 2019 hearing at which the
    Commissioner awarded him temporary sole custody, he was told to go straight to
    Ms. Beninate’s house to pick up the child and that officers would meet him there to
    assist. He testified that when he picked the child up from Ms. Beninate, the child
    was crying and told him he was crying because he did not have his shoes. Once Mr.
    Fairbanks told him they would go get some new shoes, he stopped crying
    immediately and did not have any problems with him once they got home.
    Dr. Salcedo, a clinical psychologist, testified as an expert in the fields of
    clinical and forensic psychology. In 2019, the court appointed Dr. Salcedo to
    conduct a mental health evaluation of Ms. Beninate. In September, 2019, he
    conducted a clinical interview with Ms. Beninate, including the Minnesota
    Multiphasic Personality Inventory, met with her three times, and reviewed
    documents provided to him by Ms. Beninate and Mr. Fairbanks. Dr. Salcedo
    concluded that Ms. Beninate did not suffer from any major psychiatric disorder. Ms.
    Beninate informed him that she suffers from attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
    and receives Adderall for treatment of that disorder. Dr. Salcedo stated that this is
    common and does not result in any impairment relative to reality testing. He found
    Ms. Beninate to be in touch with reality and found nothing that would prevent her
    from functioning as a custodial parent or to support finding her delusional.
    20-CA-206                                  10
    ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    Ms. Beninate asserts that the trial court erred in (1) denying her motion to
    declare La. R.S. 46.236.5 C unconstitutional; (2) adopting the hearing officer’s
    September 11, 2019 recommendations as the court’s judgment, instead of
    conducting a de novo trial and, thereafter, independently applying the C.C. art.
    134(A) child custody “best interest” factors to the evidence; (3) retaining sole
    custody of the parties’ child with his father Mr. Fairbanks; (4) retaining Ms. Beninate
    on supervised visitation at her expense; (5) adopting the hearing officer’s
    recommendations that Ms. Beninate pay attorney’s fees and court costs; and (6) in
    adopting the hearing officer’s recommendations that Ms. Beninate pay child support.
    Law and Analysis: The Constitutionality of La. R.S. 46:236.5 C
    Ms. Beninate challenges the constitutionality of La. R.S. 46:236.5 C, which
    provides that:
    C. An expedited process for the establishment of paternity and
    the establishment and enforcement of support and other related family
    and domestic matters in district courts using hearing officers may be
    implemented as follows:
    (1) The judge or judges of the appropriate court or courts for the
    establishment of paternity or the establishment and enforcement of
    support and other domestic and family matters may appoint one or more
    hearing officers to hear paternity, support, and other domestic and
    family related matters. Domestic and family matters shall include
    divorce and all issues ancillary to a divorce proceeding; all child-related
    issues such as paternity, filiation, custody, visitation, and support in
    non-marital cases; all protective orders filed in accordance with R.S.
    46:2131 et seq., R.S. 46:2151 et seq., and the Children's Code and all
    injunctions filed in accordance with R.S. 9:361, 371, and 372 and Code
    of Civil Procedure Articles 3601 et seq., which involve personal abuse,
    terrorizing, stalking, or harassment; and enforcement of orders in any
    of these matters, including contempt of court.
    (2) The hearing officer shall be a full-time or part-time employee
    of the court and shall be an attorney who has been in good standing with
    any state bar association for not less than five years and has prior
    experience in cases involving child support services.
    (3) The hearing officer shall act as a finder of fact and shall make
    written recommendations to the court concerning any domestic and
    20-CA-206                                 11
    family matters as set forth by local court rule, including but not limited
    to the following matters….
    Ms. Beninate argues that this provision is unconstitutional because it
    establishes an arbitrary procedure that allows the hearing officer to make “findings
    of fact” without administering oaths, taking testimony, or making a record of the
    hearing. Ms. Beninate asserts that the provisions allowing the trial judge to “accept,
    reject, or modify in whole or in part the findings of the hearing officer” and to receive
    additional information if needed or remand to the hearing officer, result in an
    arbitrary proceeding for a judge to decide a custody and a contempt of court case
    without a meaningful opportunity to be heard, confront witnesses and/or rebut
    evidence. Ms. Beninate also asserts that while the law provides for a de novo hearing
    before the trial court, these provisions do not coincide with the constitutional right
    to a de novo hearing. In light of this, Ms. Beninate asserts that this procedure
    deprives a parent of his or her due process rights to have a meaningful opportunity
    to be heard. She further argues that the trial judge’s decision to adopt the hearing
    officer’s recommendations indicates that he did not engage in his own best interest
    of the child analysis under C.C. art. 134 and that she was deprived of a de novo
    hearing.
    Statutes are presumed to be constitutional, and any doubt as to the legislation’s
    constitutionality must be resolved in favor of constitutionality. Moore v. RLCC
    Techs., Inc., 95-2621 (La. 2/28/96), 
    668 So.2d 1135
    , 1140; Polk v. Edwards, 
    626 So.2d 1128
    , 1132 (La. 1993). The party challenging the constitutionality of a statute
    bears the burden of proving clearly that the legislation is unconstitutional. In re
    American Waste & Pollution Control Co., 
    588 So.2d 367
    , 373 (La. 1001). The party
    must establish that the legislation is barred by a constitutional provision which
    restricts the power of the legislature to enact the particular legislation at issue. 
    Id.
    20-CA-206                                  12
    The Facial Constitutional Challenge to La. R.S. 46:236.5 C
    We first address Ms. Beninate’s challenge that La. R.S. 46:236.5 C is
    unconstitutional on its face. A facial constitutional challenge seeks more drastic
    relief than an as-applied challenge; therefore, the movant in a facial challenge bears
    an especially heavy burden. U.S. v. Salerno, 
    481 U.S. 739
    , 745, 
    107 S.Ct. 2095
    ,
    2100, 
    95 L.Ed.2d 697
     (1987); LaPointe v. Vermilion Par. Sch. Bd., 15-432 (La.
    6/30/15), 
    173 So.3d 1152
    , 1159-60. To meet this burden, Ms. Beninate must prove
    that no set of circumstances exists under which the statute would be valid, that
    is, that the law is unconstitutional in all its applications. Washington State
    Grange v. Washington State Republican Party, 
    552 U.S. 442
    , 449, 
    128 S.Ct. 1184
    ,
    1190, 
    170 L.Ed.2d 151
     (2008); LaPointe, 173 So.3d at 1159-60. In determining
    whether a law is facially invalid, the court “must be careful not to go beyond the
    statute’s facial requirements and speculate about hypothetical or imaginary cases.”
    Id. at 160.
    Ms. Beninate generally asserts that this procedure at issue deprives a parent
    of his or her due process rights to have a meaningful opportunity to be heard. Due
    process generally requires some kind of hearing and notice of that hearing. Paschal
    v. Hazlinsky, 35,513 (La. App. 2 Cir. 12/19/01), 
    803 So.2d 413
    , 417. But, no one
    has a vested right in any given mode of procedure. Lott v. State, through Department
    of Public Safety and Corrections, 98-1920 (La. 5/18/99), 
    734 So.2d 617
    , 621. States
    may determine the process by which legal rights are asserted and enforced so long
    as a party receives due notice and an opportunity to be heard. Id. at 621-622. It is
    well established that due process is not a technical conception with a fixed content
    unrelated to time, place and circumstances. Fields v. State, through Department of
    Public Safety and Corrections, 98-611 (La. 7/8/98), 
    714 So.2d 1244
    , 1251. Due
    process is flexible and calls for procedural protections demanded by the particular
    situation. Morrissey v. Brewer, 
    408 U.S. 471
    , 489, 
    92 S.Ct. 2593
    , 
    33 L.Ed.2d 484
    20-CA-206                                13
    (1972). The determination of what procedural safeguards are required in order to
    meet due process standards depends on the nature of the proceeding and the nature
    of the right or interest affected by the proceeding. State ex rel R.C. v. Clarke, 33,023
    (La. App. 2 Cir. 10/27/99), 
    743 So.2d 843
    , 849.
    The resolution of whether the administrative procedures are constitutionally
    sufficient to satisfy due process requires an analysis of the governmental and private
    interests that are affected. Mathews v. Eldridge, 
    424 U.S. 319
    , 334, 
    96 S. Ct. 893
    ,
    902, 
    47 L. Ed. 2d 18
     (1976). The United States Supreme Court has set forth three
    factors to consider in determining whether due process rights are sufficiently
    protected: first, the private interest that will be affected by the official action; second,
    the risk of an erroneous deprivation of such interest through the procedures used,
    and the probable value, if any, of additional or substitute procedural safeguards; and
    finally, the Government's interest, including the function involved and the fiscal and
    administrative burdens that the additional or substitute procedural requirement
    would entail. 
    Id. at 335
    .
    With respect to the first factor, we recognize that the United States Supreme
    Court has declared that a biological parent’s right to “the companionship, care,
    custody, and management” of his or her children is a liberty interest far more
    important than any property right. Santosky v. Kramer, 
    455 U.S. 745
    , 758-59, 
    102 S.Ct. 1388
    , 1397, 
    71 L.Ed.2d 599
     (1982); In re A.J.F., 00-948 (La. 6/30/00), 
    764 So.2d 47
    , 55. The rights to conceive and to raise one’s children have been deemed
    essential basic civil rights of man. Stanley v. Illinois, 
    405 U.S. 645
    , 651, 
    92 S.Ct. 1208
    , 1212, 
    31 L.Ed. 2d 551
     (1972). A parent’s interest in having a relationship
    with his or her children is without a doubt a liberty interest protected by the
    Fourteenth Amendment’s due process guarantee. Ferrand v. Ferrand, 16-7 (La. App.
    5 Cir. 8/31/16), 
    221 So.3d 909
    , 919, writ denied, 16-1903 (La. 12/16/16), 
    211 So.3d 20
    -CA-206                                   14
    1164, citing Troxel v. Granville, 
    530 U.S. 57
    , 84, 
    120 S.Ct. 2054
    , 2070, 
    147 L.Ed.2d 49
     (2000).
    As to the second factor, we find that the procedure afforded parents under La.
    R.S. 46:236.5C with both a hearing officer and the trial court makes the risk of
    erroneous deprivation of that interest slight. This Court has recognized that the
    purpose of La. R.S. 46:236.5 and the local rules pertaining thereto is to expedite the
    handling of domestic matters. Ackel v. Ackel, 06-646 (La. 5 Cir. 1/16/07), 
    951 So.2d 403
     (2007). The practice of providing the parties an initial hearing with a
    hearing officer in custody cases facilitates resolution of these sensitive matters in a
    more expedient manner and provides a temporary resolution to, often times, a very
    volatile situation. With this practice, the parties, upon request, have the opportunity
    to be heard twice before two different individuals, including the hearing officer and,
    when an objection is timely filed, the trial judge. All parties receive notice of the
    initial hearing before the hearing officer and, if requested, the hearing before the trial
    judge.
    In addition, both hearings follow well-established procedures.         La. R.S.
    46:236.5 authorizes the court-appointed hearing officers to act as finders of fact and
    provide written recommendations to the court concerning support, paternity,
    domestic violence protective orders, and other matters. The statute mandates that the
    hearing officer’s written recommendations include a statement of the pleadings,
    findings of fact and law, including the hearing officer’s conclusions thereon, and a
    proposed judgment.        Yet, while the hearing officer makes findings of fact,
    conclusions, and interim recommendations based on the evidence presented before
    him, “findings of fact” and “conclusions” by the domestic hearing officer are only
    recommendations, and as elaborated hereafter, certainly do not constitute final
    judgments.
    20-CA-206                                  15
    This Court has held that where a party timely objected to the hearing officer’s
    recommendations, those recommendations did not become a final judgment, and the
    objecting party was clearly entitled to a de novo review of the hearing officer’s
    findings by the trial court. Dugué v. Dugué, 17-525 (La. App. 5 Cir. 6/27/18), 
    250 So.3d 1174
    , 1178. The interim judgment is not a final judgment and has been found
    to be consistent with statutory directive of the hearing officer process. Ackel, 951
    So.2d at 407.
    Once a timely written objection is filed, the party objecting is entitled to a de
    novo contradictory hearing in the district court before the trial judge to whom the
    case is assigned, and the de novo hearing is promptly scheduled upon the filing of
    the objection. The trial judge then signs the interim judgment, which also sets the
    date for the de novo hearing.
    The de novo hearing is of record, and rules of evidence apply. The parties
    may present evidence, sworn testimony, and argument before the trial judge, as in
    any other trial or contradictory evidentiary hearing.
    The trial court must hear the evidence and review the hearing officer’s
    recommendations de novo, and it “shall accept, reject, or modify in whole or in part
    the findings of the hearing officer.” Dugué, 
    250 So.3d at 1178
    . Significantly, the
    burden of proof does not shift to the objecting spouse. In keeping with the intent of
    a de novo hearing, the burden of proof remains on the moving spouse who originally
    had the burden of proof. If after de novo consideration of the evidence presented,
    the trial court makes the same findings of fact and law as did the hearing officer, the
    court may adopt the hearing officer’s recommendations in whole or in part. If it
    does not agree, the trial court may adopt part or none of the hearing officer’s
    recommendations, and may fashion its own remedies and judgment. Thus, the trial
    court may rule as it deems appropriate on the remaining issues based on the relevant
    evidence admitted at the de novo hearing.
    20-CA-206                                 16
    In Ackel, supra, this Court found this statutory scheme to be constitutional
    under both the Louisiana and United States Constitutions. This Court also held that
    La. R.S. 46:236.5 clearly contemplates that the Louisiana District Court Rules
    (hereafter LDCR) and local rules will provide the particulars regarding hearing
    officer procedures. Neither the LDCR nor the local rules of the Twenty-Fourth
    Judicial District Court exceed or improperly expand the statutory authority of the
    hearing officers. LDCR 35.8 and Local Rule Appendix 35.8-I provide that the
    hearing officer’s recommendations shall be signed by the District Court Judge or
    Commissioner, and shall be deemed an interim order or judgment of the court. We
    find this procedure to be consistent with the statute, and, especially considering the
    temporary nature of the interim order or judgment, that it is not a violation of due
    process.
    As noted in Dugué, supra, LDCR Rule 35.7 provides that the trial judge “may
    review the hearing officer’s conference report, and shall accept, reject, or modify in
    whole or in part the findings of the hearing officer and give them such weight as
    deemed appropriate based on the evidence adduced at the hearing.” [Emphasis
    added.]1
    The basis of our decision in Dugué, supra, was that the trial court committed
    reversible error when it required proof of a material change in circumstances before
    modification of the interim judgment would be considered. In doing so, the trial
    court effectively deemed the interim judgment to be a final judgment, which was a
    misapplication of La. R.S. 46:236.5 C and the applicable rules. Due process in
    Dugué required adherence to the procedure set by La. R.S. 46:236.5 C and the
    applicable rules, which have been properly applied in the case before us. Those
    1 LDCR Rules 35.0–35.9 non-domestic violence hearing officer conferences. The Twenty-Fourth Judicial
    District Court Local Rules can be found in the LDCR Appendices, App. 35.0–35.8 under “24th JDC.”
    20-CA-206                                         17
    statutory provisions and rules clearly make the interim judgment a temporary one
    which the trial court may accept or discard in whole or in part at the de novo hearing.
    We recognize the possibility that in infrequent cases, an interim order may
    impose a temporary obligation, deprivation, or hardship on a spouse which might
    later be determined by the trial court to be unnecessary or inappropriate. However,
    we believe that there is an equal or greater possibility that an intolerable or
    undesirable condition might be unnecessarily prolonged while awaiting discovery
    and trial in the absence of an impartial, albeit informal, hearing officer conference.
    Further, hearing officer conferences often resolve differences between spouses
    permanently, and result in judgments avoiding lengthy, stressful, and very costly
    litigation.
    With the foregoing procedures in place, all parties have the opportunity to
    present their positions, arguments, and evidence, and the hearing officer and the trial
    court consider the merits of each case based on a full record as presented by the
    parties. Taking this into consideration, as to the third factor, we find that this process
    sufficiently balances the governmental interest in expeditiously and efficiently
    handling domestic matters and protecting individuals’ right to a fundamentally fair
    and meaningful opportunity to be heard.
    Considering the foregoing, we find the procedures set forth in La. R.S.
    46:236.5 satisfy the due process requirements of the Louisiana and United States
    Constitutions, and are facially constitutional. Ms. Beninate’s argument that these
    procedures deprived her of due process is without merit.
    The Constitutional Challenge As Applied to Ms. Beninate
    We also find no support for Ms. Beninate’s argument that she was not afforded
    due process in this custody dispute with Mr. Fairbanks. This Court has held that the
    local system implemented by the Twenty-Fourth Judicial District Court in Jefferson
    Parish under La. R.S. 46:236.5 is in accord with the authority granted by that statute.
    20-CA-206                                  18
    Ackel, 951 So.2d at 407. As required by the statute, Ms. Beninate received notice
    of all proceedings, which informed her of the time and place of the hearing and the
    issues to be addressed.
    Ms. Beninate has been represented by various attorneys throughout most of
    these proceedings, and new counsel enrolled to represent her on September 10, 2019
    before the September 11, 2019 hearing officer conference. In addition, as asserted
    by Ms. Beninate, the hearing officer conference was informal, but all parties were
    allowed to state their positions and present evidence to the hearing officer. She
    participated fully in the hearing officer conference, and after the hearing officer
    made recommendations that she disliked, she exercised her right to object, indicating
    that she was seeking a de novo hearing by the district court. Upon her objection to
    the September 11, 2019 hearing officer recommendations, the de novo hearing was
    promptly set for October 24, 2019. That date was later continued to January 30,
    2020 on Ms. Beninate’s motion.
    Ms. Beninate was present and represented at the de novo hearing before the
    district court.   She presented multiple witnesses, including expert testimony,
    evidence, and had the opportunity to cross-examine Mr. Fairbanks’ witnesses, all of
    which the trial court heard and considered in reaching its conclusions. The mere fact
    that the trial court adopted the hearing officer’s recommendations does not indicate
    that Ms. Beninate’s due process rights were violated, or that the hearing was not
    genuinely de novo. In addressing her motion to declare La. R.S. 46:236.5 C
    unconstitutional, the trial court stated that nothing the hearing officer does is a final
    judgment, and that the court can adopt the recommendations or reject them and
    institute its own judgment.
    The purpose of the hearing officer procedures is to expedite the handling of
    domestic cases, as set forth in La. R.S. 46:236.5 C: “An expedited process for the
    establishment of paternity and the establishment and enforcement of support and
    20-CA-206                                  19
    other related family and domestic matters in district courts using hearing officers
    may be implemented as follows….” This purpose would be defeated if Ms. Beninate
    were allowed to achieve her stated intended purpose, which was to prevent visitation
    by the child’s father indefinitely, contrary to the recommendation of the hearing
    officer and later, the testimony of experts. As previously stated, allowing this
    behavior on her part to continue posed a greater injustice than implementing the
    temporary interim order after a hearing officer conference.
    Additionally, we note that Ms. Beninate’s refusal to comply with the court
    orders, which were intended to facilitate Mr. Fairbanks’ right to visitation with his
    child, is ultimately an important part of the catalyst that made it necessary for
    immediate enforcement of the interim judgment. Thus, Ms. Beninate’s own actions
    in depriving Mr. Fairbanks of his rights caused what she now claims is a violation
    of her rights. The hearing officer procedures consequently allowed the court to
    ensure that the constitutional rights of all the parties were recognized and enforced
    and that the fundamental needs of the child were met.
    In light of the foregoing, we do not find this statute unconstitutional as applied
    to Ms. Beninate.
    Custody and Visitation
    In her second, third and fourth assignments of error, Ms. Beninate asserts that
    the trial court erred in adopting the hearing officer’s recommendations as the court’s
    judgment, instead of conducting a de novo trial and independently applying La. C.C.
    art. 134(A) child custody “best interest” factors to the evidence; awarding sole
    custody of C.B. to Mr. Fairbanks; and restricting Ms. Beninate to supervised
    visitation.
    Ms. Beninate asserts that the trial court did not conduct a true de novo hearing
    on her objections to the hearing officer’s recommendations. The basis for this
    argument is primarily that the trial court came to the same conclusions and rendered
    20-CA-206                                  20
    the same decision as the hearing officer. Contrary to her assertion, the record clearly
    indicates that the trial judge conducted a full trial de novo, as required by La. R.S.
    46:236.5 C. On January 30, 2020, the trial court conducted a hearing and addressed
    Ms. Beninate’s motion to declare La. R.S. 46.236.5 C unconstitutional, as well as
    issues regarding custody and visitation. Several witnesses, including multiple
    experts, testified, and the parties formally introduced evidence. Ms. Beninate had
    the opportunity to question and cross-examine the witnesses, to present evidence,
    and to present arguments to the court supporting why she should have custody, more
    visitation and/or unsupervised visitation. The record shows the trial court conducted
    a full hearing and ultimately agreed with the hearing officer’s recommendations.
    Thus, this assignment of error lacks merit.
    Ms. Beninate next challenges the trial court’s custody and visitation rulings.
    In resolving custody issues, the primary consideration is whether the custody
    arrangement is in the best interest of the child. La. C.C. art. 131, 134. La. C.C. art.
    134 sets out fourteen non-exclusive factors for the court to consider in awarding
    custody.2 The trial court is not bound to make a mechanical evaluation of all the
    factors in La. C.C. art. 134, but should decide each case on its own facts in light of
    those factors. Robertson v. Robertson, 10-926 (La. App. 5 Cir. 4/26/11), 
    64 So.3d 354
    , 363. These factors are not exclusive, but are provided as a guide to the court,
    2 The relevant factors included: (1) The potential for the child to be abused, as defined by Children’s Code
    Article 603, which shall be the primary consideration; (2) The love, affection, and other emotional ties
    between each party and the child; (3) The capacity and disposition of each party to give the child love,
    affection, and spiritual guidance and to continue the education and rearing of the child; (4) The capacity
    and disposition of each party to provide the child with food, clothing, medical care, and other material needs;
    (5) The length of time the child has lived in a stable, adequate environment, and the desirability of
    maintaining continuity of that environment; (6) The permanence, as a family unit, of the existing or proposed
    custodial home or homes; (7) The moral fitness of each party, insofar as it affects the welfare of the child;
    (8) The history of substance abuse, violence, or criminal activity of any party; (9) The mental and physical
    health of each party. Evidence that an abused parent suffers from the effects of past abuse by the other
    parent shall not be grounds for denying that parent custody; (10) The home, school, and community history
    of the child; (11) The reasonable preference of the child, if the court deems the child to be of sufficient age
    to express a preference; (12) The willingness and ability of each party to facilitate and encourage a close
    and continuing relationship between the child and the other party, except when objectively substantial
    evidence of specific abusive, reckless, or illegal conduct has caused one party to have reasonable concerns
    for the child's safety or well-being while in the care of the other party; (13) The distance between the
    respective residences of the parties; (14) The responsibility for the care and rearing of the child previously
    exercised by each party. La. C.C. art. 134.
    20-CA-206                                             21
    and the relative weight given to each factor is left to the discretion of the trial court.
    
    Id.
     Each child custody case must be viewed in light of its own particular set of facts
    and circumstances with the paramount goal of reaching a decision that is in the best
    interest of the children. Id.; Harvey v. Harvey, 13-81 (La. App. 3 Cir. 6/5/13), 
    133 So.3d 1
    , 3, writ denied, 13-1600 (La. 7/22/13), 
    119 So.3d 596
    . On appellate review,
    the trial court’s custody determination is entitled to great weight and will not be
    disturbed absent a clear showing of an abuse of discretion. Johnson v. Clofer, 18-
    119 (La. App. 5 Cir. 6/27/18), 
    251 So.3d 597
    , 600; Bridges v. Bridges, 09-742 (La.
    App. 5 Cir. 2/9/10), 
    33 So.3d 914
    , 918.
    One of the most relevant factors to this case is the willingness of each party
    to facilitate and encourage a close and continuing relationship between the child and
    the other party. The record clearly indicates that Ms. Beninate has refused to
    facilitate or encourage a relationship between the child and Mr. Fairbanks. A
    biological parent’s right to “the companionship, care, custody, and management” of
    his or her child is not limited to one parent but instead applies fully to both biological
    parents. Mr. Fairbanks has exhibited great patience in attempting to forge a true
    relationship with his child while he was in Ms. Beninate’s custody. When Ms.
    Beninate and Mr. Fairbanks were involved in a relationship, Mr. Fairbanks was
    allowed to spend time with the child on an informal basis. When this relationship
    ended, however, Ms. Beninate’s willingness to allow Mr. Fairbanks time with his
    child deteriorated to the point where she testified that her intent is prevent him from
    ever seeing his child.
    On multiple occasions, Mr. Fairbanks, by court order, has been granted
    visitation with his child only to have Ms. Beninate take extreme measures to frustrate
    all his attempts at visitation. Ms. Beninate resorted to nefarious allegations against
    Mr. Fairbanks as means to avoid allowing him visitation with his child. These
    allegations have proven baseless throughout this litigation as reflected by not only
    20-CA-206                                  22
    her own dismissal of multiple petitions for protection from alleged abuse, but also
    the complete lack of support for her allegations, and by the increasing
    outrageousness of the unsupported allegations. In addition, the record indicates that
    Ms. Beninate filed the petitions for protection from abuse either after Mr. Fairbanks
    sought or was awarded visitation and/or custody of the child. Because of Ms.
    Beninate’s refusal to comply with court orders, Mr. Fairbanks had to resort to filing
    three contempt of court proceedings in an effort to enforce his right to visitation.
    Ms. Beninate’s actions resulted in Mr. Fairbanks not seeing his child for over a year.
    Given the course of these proceedings, we do not find any abuse of discretion
    or manifest error on the part of the trial court. In fact, we see no other option but to
    award sole custody to Mr. Fairbanks. While this removed the child from his current
    environment, consideration of that factor does not outweigh other factors, and is not
    a sufficient basis to deprive one parent of any contact with his or her child.
    The record shows that Mr. Fairbanks can provide the child with love, affection
    and other emotional support, as well as education, food, clothing, medical care and
    other material needs. He is employed, paid child support regularly when Ms.
    Beninate had custody, and lives in stable home environment with his parents. It is
    also clear that Mr. Fairbanks loves and cares for the child. Mr. Fairbanks has also
    exhibited a healthy moral fitness, and is mentally and physically capable of caring
    for the child. Further, the record indicates that other members of Mr. Fairbanks’
    family want to develop a relationship with the child and can assist him with caring
    for the child. Thus, considering the record in its entirety and for the reasons stated
    above, we find no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s award of sole custody to
    Mr. Fairbanks.
    Ms. Beninate also challenges the judgment’s restriction of only granting her
    supervised visitation with the child. The trial court has vast discretion in custody
    determinations. When considering the safety and best interest of the child, ordering
    20-CA-206                                 23
    supervised visitation is within the trial court’s vast discretion. Guidry v. Guidry, 18-
    639 (La. App. 5 Cir. 5/22/19), 
    274 So.3d 709
    , 715.
    “Frequent and continuing contact” with each parent is important. La. R.S.
    9:335.      Ms. Beninate, however, testified that she only exercised her right to
    supervised visitation twice, explaining that it was expensive, emotional for both of
    them to be together in a strange place, and the child had no reaction to her at the
    visits.     Although we recognize the distressing nature of supervised visitation
    particularly after having sole custody of a child, Ms. Beninate’s failure to exercise
    that visitation while also seeking custody and/or unsupervised visitation does not
    present well for her case. Instead of continuing her relationship and contact with her
    child through supervised visitation and exhibiting to the court a willingness to
    cooperate with court orders and a genuine commitment to maintaining her
    relationship with her child regardless of the strain some measures may impose on
    her, Ms. Beninate forewent any contact with her child for whom the change was
    clearly disconcerting and perplexing. In light of this and the unsettling nature of Ms.
    Beninate’s behavior relative to Mr. Fairbanks, we do not find the trial court abused
    its discretion in ordering supervised visitation for two hours every Saturday at her
    expense to Ms. Beninate. There is nothing to prevent Ms. Beninate from seeking to
    lift the supervision restriction as she exhibits an ability to cooperate with court orders
    and Mr. Fairbanks and restores her relationship with the child through supervised
    visitation.
    Imposition of Court Costs and Attorney’s Fees for Contempt
    Ms. Beninate asserts that the trial court erred in ordering her to comply with
    the hearing officer’s recommendation that she pay attorney’s fees and court costs
    due to her contempt finding.          After the September 11, 2019 hearing officer
    conference, the hearing officer found Ms. Beninate in contempt because she
    20-CA-206                                   24
    repeatedly failed to comply with court orders granting Mr. Fairbanks visitation with
    his child.
    La. R.S. 13:4611 provides that courts may punish a person adjudged guilty of
    contempt of court for disobeying an order for the right of custody or visitation and
    award attorney fees to the prevailing party in a contempt of court proceeding. The
    plain reading of this provision indicates that the Legislature has chosen to authorize
    awards of attorney fees under this statute to a party who successfully prosecutes a
    motion for contempt. Luv N’ Care, Ltd. v. Jackel Int’l Ltd., 19-749 (La. 1/29/20),
    — So.3d —, 
    2020 WL 499164
    .
    The record is clear that (1) Ms. Beninate had not allowed Mr. Fairbanks to see
    the parties’ child since the hearing officer first recommended Mr. Fairbanks have
    visitation on November 20, 2018; (2) Ms. Beninate refused to allow Mr. Fairbanks
    visitation with the child out of her presence; (3) Ms. Beninate did not deny these
    facts and told the hearing officer Mr. Fairbanks was not allowed to see their child;
    (4) Mr. Fairbanks verified to the hearing officer that he was denied visitation and
    access to his child on each of the dates identified in his third rule for contempt and
    that on each of the occasions listed in his third rule for contempt he personally went
    to Ms. Beninate’s residence and knocked on the door with no successful result as no
    one answered. It was undisputed that Mr. Fairbanks had not been allowed by Ms.
    Beninate to exercise his court-ordered visitation when he attempted to retrieve the
    child from Ms. Beninate for that purpose.
    In similar circumstances, another appellate court affirmed the trial court’s
    judgment finding the mother in contempt of court and ordering her to pay the father’s
    attorney’s fees due to her failure to enforce the minimum visitation requirement to
    which father was entitled under the parties’ consent judgment. The father in this
    case was also prevented from having visitation with child for months despite active
    20-CA-206                                 25
    efforts for visitation. LeBlanc v. LeBlanc, 06-1307 (La. App. 3 Cir. 3/7/07), 
    953 So.2d 115
    , 123.
    Considering the foregoing, we find no abuse of the trial court’s discretion in
    ordering Ms. Beninate to pay Mr. Fairbanks’ attorney’s fees and court costs for the
    contempt proceedings.
    Child Support
    On November 20, 2019, the hearing officer recommended that Ms. Beninate
    pay $469.41 in child support based on imputed income, and she timely objected.
    After the January 30, 2020 hearing, the trial court adopted this recommendation. On
    appeal, Ms. Beninate argues that the trial court erred in adopting the hearing officer’s
    recommendations regarding child support because no evidence pertinent to child
    support was introduced at the hearing, and thus the trial court was unable to conduct
    a de novo review of the child support recommendation.
    Upon review, we find the record before us does not contain sufficient evidence
    to support the judgment regarding child support.          A child support award is
    determined pursuant to La. R.S. 9:315.2. La. R.S. 9:315.2(A) provides that “Each
    party shall provide to the court a verified income statement showing gross income
    and adjusted gross income, together with documentation of current and past
    earnings.” None of these required documents were introduced at the January 30,
    2020 hearing before the trial court judge.        Furthermore, La. R.S. 9:315.2(D)
    provides: “The court shall determine the basic child support obligation amount from
    the schedule in R.S. 9:315.19 by using the combined adjusted gross income of the
    parties and the number of children involved in the proceeding, but in no event shall
    the amount of child support be less than the amount provided in R.S. 9:315.14.”
    Without the required documentation, this Court cannot determine whether the trial
    judge erred in calculating the child support award. See, State, Dep’t of Children &
    Family Servs. ex rel. L.R. v. Haines, 11-84 (La. App. 5 Cir. 5/6/11), 
    67 So.3d 515
    ,
    20-CA-206                                 26
    516; State of Louisiana, Department of Social Services and Jessica Rareshide v.
    Lehman, 06-922 (La. App. 5 Cir. 4/11/07), 
    955 So.2d 738
    .
    Appellate courts are courts of record and may not review evidence that is not
    in the appellate record. La. C.C.P. art. 2164; Denoux v. Vessel Mgmt. Servs., Inc.,
    07-2143 (La. 5/21/08), 
    983 So.2d 84
    , 88. Because the parties did not introduce
    evidence regarding child support for this Court to review, we vacate the trial court’s
    judgment to the extent Ms. Beninate is ordered to pay child support. On remand,
    child support should be awarded based on the guidelines in La. R.S. 9:315.2 et seq.
    after the parties have submitted the requisite documentation.
    DECREE
    Considering the foregoing, we affirm the trial court’s judgment except as to
    the child support award. We vacate the judgment to the extent Ms. Beninate is
    ordered to pay child support, and remand this matter to the trial court to determine
    child support pursuant to La. R.S. 9:315.2 et seq., after the parties have submitted
    the requisite documentation.
    AFFIRMED IN PART; VACATED IN PART; REMANDED
    20-CA-206                                27
    SUSAN M. CHEHARDY                                                             CURTIS B. PURSELL
    CHIEF JUDGE                                                                   CLERK OF COURT
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    FREDERICKA H. WICKER
    CHIEF DEPUTY CLERK
    JUDE G. GRAVOIS
    MARC E. JOHNSON
    ROBERT A. CHAISSON                                                            SUSAN BUCHHOLZ
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    FIRST DEPUTY CLERK
    HANS J. LILJEBERG
    JOHN J. MOLAISON, JR.                         FIFTH CIRCUIT
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    DECEMBER 23, 2020 TO THE TRIAL JUDGE, CLERK OF COURT, COUNSEL OF RECORD AND ALL PARTIES
    NOT REPRESENTED BY COUNSEL, AS LISTED BELOW:
    20-CA-206
    E-NOTIFIED
    24TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT (CLERK)
    HONORABLE DONALD A. ROWAN, JR. (DISTRICT JUDGE)
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Document Info

Docket Number: 20-CA-206

Judges: Donald A. Rowan

Filed Date: 12/23/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/21/2024