Allan Keith Paille, Jr. v. Beatriz Trinidad Acosta Newell and James Keith Newell, Jr. ( 2020 )


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  •                           NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION
    f                                   STATE OF LOUISIANA
    COURT OF APPEAL
    FIRST CIRCUIT
    2019 CU 1694
    ALLAN KEITH PAILLE, JR.
    VERSUS
    BEATRIZ TRINIDAD ACOSTA NEWELL AND JAMES KEITH NEWELL, JR.
    Judgment Rendered:            FJUL 0 8 2020
    On Appeal from the Twenty -First Judicial District Court
    In and for the Parish of Livingston
    State of Louisiana
    Docket No. 146300
    Honorable Jeffrey C. Cashe, Judge Presiding
    Wyman E. Bankston                                        Counsel for Plaintiff/ Appellant,
    Livingston, Louisiana                                    Allan Keith Paille, Jr.
    Nicole R. Dillon                                         Defendant/ Appellee,
    April F. Jackson                                         Beatriz Trinidad Acosta Newell
    Hammond, Louisiana
    BEFORE:     WHIPPLE, C. J.,     GUIDRY, AND BURRIS1,1 JJ
    1
    Judge William J. Burris, retired, serving pro tempore by special appointment of the
    Louisiana Supreme Court.
    BURRIS, J.
    In this custody dispute, the plaintiff, the child' s father, asks this court to
    reverse the trial court's July 3, 2019 judgment denying his rule to modify custody.
    For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    Allan Paille, Jr. and Beatriz Acosta ( formerly, Beatriz Acosta Newel 12) were
    never married but are the biological parents of J. K. A. P. (" Kash',                3 a minor child
    born on July 22, 2014. The parties initially entered a consent judgment in January
    2015,   agreeing to share custody of Kash.                For reasons not relevant here, the
    consent judgment was vacated in April 2015, an interim custody order was put in
    place, and the matter was set for a trial to determine custody.
    Following trial on July 23, 2015, a considered decree was entered wherein
    the parties were awarded joint custody of Kash.                    Allan was awarded physical
    custody on the 1st, 2nd, and 4th weekends of each month and during the months
    of June and July, with Beatriz enjoying physical custody on alternating weekends
    during those months.          Allan was also awarded physical custody of Kash on 60%
    of major holidays and all one -day holidays. No domiciliary parent was named.                          A
    judgment was signed on October 22, 2015.
    In June 2016, Beatriz filed a motion to modify the October 2015 considered
    decree, requesting to be named domiciliary parent because the judgment failed to
    designate one as required by La. R. S. 9: 335 and Hodges v. Hodges, 2015- 0585,
    
    181 So. 3d 700
     ( La. 11/ 23/ 2015).            She further averred that the October 2015
    considered decree failed to allocate the time periods each party shall have physical
    custody during annual holidays. Because the judgment simply stated the holiday
    I
    A judgment of divorce was rendered on April 6, 2016, terminating the marriage between
    Beatriz and her first husband, James Keith Newell, Jr., and returning Beatriz to the use of her
    maiden name, Acosta.
    3
    The child' s name, which was J. K. A. N., was changed to J. K. A. P. after paternity was established,
    confirming Allan as the child' s biological father.
    2
    schedule    as   a   percentage,   Beatriz asserted that it failed to comply with the
    requirements of La. R. S. 9: 335. Finally, Beatriz sought modification of the summer
    custody schedule ""to better reflect the parties' employment schedules."
    In lieu of having the court decide these issues, the parties reached an
    agreement,       memorialized in a consent judgment signed on October 6, 2016.
    Beatriz was designated as domiciliary parent of Kash,              and   a   specific   physical
    custody schedule for major holidays was established.              Allan' s weekend physical
    custody schedule established by the October 2015 considered decree remained
    unchanged.        Although the considered decree provided that Beatriz shall enjoy
    physical custody on alternating weekends during June and July, the October 2016
    consent judgment specifically awarded physical custody of Kash to Beatriz on the
    2nd and 4th weekends during these months.            Beatriz was also awarded one week
    of vacation in either June or July and was specifically granted custody from July
    22- 30, 2016.
    Allan filed the instant rule to modify custody on January 31,                      2018,
    purportedly seeking to modify the October 2016 consent judgment due to a
    change in circumstances.       Allan alleged that, since October 2016, Beatriz moved
    in and out of her ex -boyfriend' s home in Hammond, Louisiana,                with whom she
    allegedly had an extramarital affair, and was currently living in another man' s
    home in Springfield, Louisiana with two other women and another child.                     Allan
    further alleged that Beatriz has been employed at " numerous bars" since October
    2016, spends minimal time with Kash, leaves him for extended periods with Allan,
    his family, and Beatriz' s parents, and often fails to timely pick up the child when
    expected.    To provide Kash with a " stable home environment," Allan sought to be
    named domiciliary parent, subject to periods of physical custody by Beatriz, such
    that Kash would primarily reside with Allan, his girlfriend of five years, and their
    4
    Beatriz also sought to hold Allan in contempt of court for failing to adhere to the judgment
    concerning custody and child support. These issues are not relevant here.
    3
    young daughter.        Allan maintained that the proposed change was in the best
    interest of child.
    Testimony and evidence on Allan' s rule to modify custody were presented
    to the trial court on January 17, 2019 and March 29, 2019. It was established that
    Beatriz planned to move to Pearl River, Louisiana with Kash to live with her
    boyfriend of five months, with whom she was expecting a child.              Allan expressed
    concern that the move would further add to the instability in Kash' s life, taking the
    child away from his immediate and extended family, his community, and                     his
    school.   Allan also maintained that Beatriz allowed Kash to miss an excessive
    amount of school and failed to abide by the custody judgment.                     For these
    additional   reasons    not   raised   in   his   rule to   modify, Allan   asserted   that a
    modification of custody was warranted.
    In addition to disputing custody, the parties also disagreed concerning the
    applicable burden of proof. Allan argued that the October 2016 consent judgment,
    rather than the October 2015 considered decree, was before the court for
    modification since a domiciliary parent was not named until the second judgment.
    Therefore,   according to Allan, the burden of proof applicable to considered
    decrees, set forth in Bergeron v. Bergeron, 
    492 So. 2d 1193
    , 1196 ( La. 1986),
    does not apply. Conversely, Beatriz maintained that the October 2015 considered
    decree controlled and that, to modify custody, the trial court must find that Allan
    satisfied the heightened Bergeron standard.
    At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court held that the Bergeron
    standard applied in light of the October 2015 considered decree and denied Allan' s
    rule to modify custody. In its oral reasons for ruling, the trial court cited testimony
    from several witnesses that established that Allan maintains a rigorous work
    schedule, working long days, every day, for months at a time. As a result, Allan' s
    mother and his girlfriend are often responsible for caring for Kash during Allan' s
    custodial periods.
    rd
    The trial court concluded that Allan is " not there" and must rely on " a bunch
    of other people to take on the parental responsibilities...."                       Thus, the court
    reasoned that, if a modification was ordered, custody would, as a practical matter,
    be granted to Allan' s girlfriend and his mother, not Allan. The court indicated that,
    but for Allan' s absence, custody would likely have been modified.                  However, faced
    with the option of granting physical custody to the child' s mother or "other people,"
    the trial court concluded, " I' m going to pick Mom."           A judgment in conformity with
    this ruling was signed on July 3, 2019. 5
    The trial court's application of the Bergeron standard and denial of Allan' s
    rule to modify custody are the subject of Allan' s appeal.
    LAW AND DISCUSSION
    Standard of Review
    The primary consideration in a determination of child custody is the best
    interest of the child.     This applies not only in actions setting custody initially, but
    also in actions to change custody. La. Civ. Code art. 131; Mu/key v, Mu/key,
    2012- 2709 ( La. 5/ 7/ 13), 
    118 So. 3d 357
    , 364.           In determining the best interest of
    the child, the court shall consider all relevant factors, including those enumerated
    in La. Civ. Code art. 134.       Bents v. Bents, 2015- 1305 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 9/ 9/ 16)
    
    2016 WL 4718136
    , * 6 (           unpublished).       The trial court is vested with broad
    discretion in deciding child custody cases; its determination is entitled to great
    weight and will not be disturbed on appeal absent a clear abuse of discretion.
    Harang v. Ponder, 2009- 2182 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 3/ 26/ 10), 
    36 So. 3d 954
    , 960,
    writ denied, 2010- 0926 ( La. 5/ 19/ 10), 
    36 So. 3d 219
    .
    5
    On Allan' s motions for contempt, the trial court found that Beatriz did not fail to inform Allan
    of Kash' s school events in October and December 2018. However, the trial court found that Beatriz
    was in contempt for failing or refusing to return Kash to Allan on four occasions from June 2018
    through January 2019. Beatriz was ordered to pay Allan' s attorney's fees and costs in the amount
    of $5, 118. 60. The trial court's contempt ruling is not at issue in this appeal.
    The trial court is in a superior position to ascertain the best interest of the
    child.   It has a better opportunity to evaluate the credibility of witnesses, and its
    determination of a child' s best interest is usually based heavily on factual findings,
    which may not be set aside on appeal absent manifest error or unless the findings
    are clearly wrong. Id.; Rosell v. ESCO, 
    549 So. 2d 840
    , 844 ( La.                    1989).   To
    reverse a fact finder's determination of fact, an appellate court must review the
    record in its entirety and ( 1) find that a reasonable factual basis does not exist for
    the finding and ( 2) further determine that the record clearly establishes that the
    fact finder is clearly wrong or manifestly erroneous. Stobart v. State, DOTD,
    
    617 So. 2d 880
    , 882 ( La. 1993).     However, where one or more legal errors interdict
    the fact-finding process, such as when the trial court applies an incorrect burden
    of proof, the appellate court must perform a de novo review of the record. Burns
    v. Burns, 2017- 0343 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 11/ 3/ 17), 
    236 So. 3d 571
    , 573- 574.
    Applicable Burden of Proof
    Allan argues on appeal that the trial court legally erred by applying the
    Bergeron       standard    rather   than   the       more   relaxed   burden    applicable    to
    modifications of consent judgments.
    Custody awards are commonly made in two types of decisions. The first is
    through a stipulated or consent judgment, entered when the parties agree to a
    custodial    arrangement.      A party seeking to modify custody established by a
    consent judgment        must    prove   that there      has   been    a   material   change   in
    circumstances since the original decree and that the proposed modification is in
    the best interest of the child.     D' Aquilla v. D' Aquilla, 2003- 2212 ( La.          App. 1st
    Cir. 4/ 2/ 04), 
    879 So. 2d 145
    , 148, writ denied, 2004- 1083 ( La. 6/ 25/ 04), 
    876 So. 2d 838
    ; Evans v. Lungrin, 97- 0541 ( La. 2/ 6/ 98), 
    708 So. 2d 731
    , 738.
    The second type of custody determination is a considered decree, rendered
    after the trial court receives evidence of parental fitness to exercise care, custody,
    and control of a child.        When a trial court has made a considered decree of
    3
    permanent custody, the party seeking a change bears the heavy burden of proving
    that continuation of the present custody is " so deleterious to the child as to justify
    a modification of the custody decree," or of proving by ' clear and convincing
    evidence that the harm likely to be caused by the change of environment is
    substantially outweighed by its advantages to the child."                Howze v. Howze,
    2017- 0358 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 9/ 28/ 17), 
    232 So. 3d 606
    , 609; Bergeron, 492 So. 2d
    at 1200.
    According to Allan, the October 2016 consent judgment superseded the
    October 2015 considered decree and was, therefore, the judgment he sought to
    modify.      As Allan points out, the October 2016 consent judgment named a
    domiciliary parent for the first time and established additional periods of physical
    custody and a designated physical custody schedule for holidays.               It also set forth
    extensive guidelines relating to the implementation of the custody judgment.
    In response, Beatriz argues that the October 2016 consent judgment simply
    clarified the October 2015 considered decree and was intended to comply with
    new case law, particularly Hodges, 
    181 So. 3d 700
    , to appoint a domiciliary parent
    as required by La. R. S. 9: 335.          She disputes that the October 2016 consent
    judgment superseded the October 2015 considered decree or changed                              its
    substance.       Most significantly, Beatriz correctly asserts that the nature of the
    original custody award dictates the burden of proof a party must satisfy when
    seeking to modify a prior permanent custody award.                Harang, 
    36 So. 3d at 960
    .
    Emphasis added.)      It is undisputed that the original custody award establishing
    permanent custody of Kash was a considered decree. 6
    6
    Both parties dedicate much of their appeal briefs to argument concerning whether the October
    2016 consent judgment simply "tweaked" the October 2015 considered decree. Courts have noted
    that, as a practical matter, courts may " tweak" visitation schedules even when the evidence will
    not support modifying a prior considered decree. Howze, 232 So. 3d at 610. This discussion is
    misplaced and would have more appropriately applied to consideration of the applicable burden
    of proof on Beatriz' s June 2016 motion to modify, which led to the October 2016 consent
    judgment. We need not address this argument, having concluded that the nature of the original
    permanent custody determination controls the applicable burden of proof on Allan' s present rule
    to modify custody.
    7
    In D' Aquilla, this court rejected the argument now being made by Allan.
    There, custody was originally established in May 2001 by a considered decree that
    awarded the parties joint custody and named the mother as domiciliary parent.
    D' Aquilla, 879 So. 2d at 147.   In March 2002, a consent judgment was entered
    wherein the parties agreed to a holiday and summer custody schedule and a new
    schedule for the exercise of physical custody, giving the father an extra day per
    week.     The father subsequently filed a motion to modify custody.    In response,
    the mother filed exceptions of no cause of action and no right of action. The trial
    court granted the mother's exception of no right of action and gave the father
    fifteen days to amend, which he did not do. Instead, he filed an appeal. Id. Like
    Allan, the father argued on appeal that, because he sought to modify the more
    recent March 2002 consent judgment, not the May 2001 considered decree, the
    trial court erred in holding him to the standard set forth in Bergeron.         With
    minimal discussion,   other than noting that a considered decree was originally
    rendered on the issue of custody, this court found this argument lacked merit. Id.
    at 148.
    We, too, find Allan' s argument and assignment of error concerning the
    applicable burden of proof lacks merit.      The October 2015 considered decree
    established permanent custody of Kash; thus, the trial court correctly applied the
    Bergeron burden of proof.
    Modification of Custody
    To modify custody, Allan was required to prove that the continuation of the
    present custody arrangement is so deleterious to Kash as to justify a modification
    of the October 2015 considered decree or of proving by clear and convincing
    evidence that the harm likely to be caused by the change of environment is
    substantially outweighed by its advantages to Kash.     Howze, 232 So. 3d at 609.
    Allan' s rule to modify custody was premised on the alleged lack of stability
    in Kash' s life since the rendition of the October 2016 consent judgment, primarily
    caused by Beatriz' s decisions to move to and from various residences and the
    nature of her employment. We further note that, without objection, both parties
    expanded the pleadings by presenting evidence concerning issues outside the
    scope of Allan' s rule to modify, particularly Beatriz' s anticipated relocation to Pearl
    River, her alleged repeated failure to abide by the custody schedule, and Kash' s
    school absences.      See Ramirez v. Hite, 2015- 1179 ( La. App.              1st Cir. 12/ 23/ 15)
    
    2015 WL 9466920
    , * 2, n. 3 ( unpublished), citing La. Code Civ. P. art. 1154 ( finding
    no error in the trial court' s expansion of the pleadings, over an objection, to include
    events subsequent to the date of filing of the motion to modify custody but
    relevant to the best interest of the child.)
    Beatriz testified that she plans to move to Pearl River with Kash at the end
    of the academic school year.            They will live with Jonathan Broom, Beatriz' s
    boyfriend and the father of her unborn child whom she began dating in October
    2018.   Kash will have his own room in Jonathan' s home, which Beatriz testified is
    located sixty-two miles from the child' s current principal residence.' According to
    Beatriz, Jonathan puts the child first and Kash " looks up" to Jonathan.                 Similarly,
    Jonathan, a police officer with the New Orleans Police Department, testified that
    he and Kash are " friends"' and their relationship gets better and better day- by-day.
    Although Beatriz does not have family in Pearl River, she testified that Jonathan' s
    family lives in the area and will provide a stable support system. Consequently,
    Beatriz believes moving to Pearl River is in the child' s best interest and that Kash
    would "   absolutely"   suffer if custody were modified so that Allan became the
    primary custodian.
    Allan did not dispute any of the evidence offered by Beatriz concerning her
    anticipated move, her relationship with Jonathan, or Jonathan' s relationship with
    Since Kash' s proposed new principal residence is less than seventy-five miles from his principal
    residence at the time the most recent custody decree was rendered, Louisiana' s relocation
    provisions do not apply. See La. R. S. 9: 355. 1, etseq.
    Kash. 8 Instead, he asserted that it was in Kash' s best interest to live with him,
    because Kash would live with his younger sister, with whom he shares a close
    bond, and would be near his paternal grandmother, who is active in Kash' s life.
    Kash would have his own room in Allan' s home and would attend kindergarten in
    the same school where he attended                pre -k for the 2018- 2019 school year.
    However, according to Beatriz, Kash' s current school is a'" C" rated school, whereas
    his anticipated school in Pearl River received a grade of " B."
    Regarding Allan' s assertion that Beatriz failed to provide stability for Kash
    due to the nature of her employment, testimony established that Beatriz is no
    longer working in bars and,          instead,   is enrolled in LSU' s paralegal program.
    Further, both Beatriz and her father denied that she moved out of her parents'
    home in 2017 to live with her boyfriend in Hammond, and Allan presented no
    evidence to the contrary.
    The evidence likewise did not support Allan' s assertion that Beatriz spends
    minimal time with Kash, leaves him for extended periods, and often fails to timely
    pick up the child when expected.          To the contrary, Beatriz's father testified that
    mother and son have a "" very loving" relationship.           They hold hands, " talk a lot,"
    watch movies, do homework, go to the park, plan vacations, and eat together.
    Beatriz testified that Kash has been with her since he was born and is very
    attached" to her. She attends Kash' s school events and extracurricular activities
    and transports him to and from school.           The evidence minimally established that
    Kash was tardy to school on several occasions and that Beatriz was late picking
    him up once.
    Further,   although Beatriz has asked Allan' s mother to watch Kash on
    occasion,     for Beatriz's convenience, the evidence as a whole establishes that
    8
    Further, as Beatriz points out, the Bergeron standard requires proof that a continuation of
    the presentcustody arrangement is so deleterious to the child as to justify a modification of the
    custody decree, not an anticipated situation.
    10
    Beatriz does not rely on Allan' s family for help with Kash out of fear that it will be
    used against her to support an argument that she's '"trying to get rid of the child."
    Beatriz testified that her concern over the consequences of asking for help is also
    why she often took Kash with her to doctor's appointments, resulting in thirteen
    excused     and    ten      unexcused    absences        during    the   2018- 2019       school    year.
    Otherwise, Beatriz allows Allan' s mother and girlfriend to have additional time with
    Kash,    at their request, to provide Kash an opportunity to spend time with his
    father's family, including Allan' s young daughter. Finally, even Allan admitted that
    Beatriz is not a bad mother and is active in Kash' s life.
    Conversely, the testimony established that Allan is not as involved in Kash' s
    life due to his work schedule. Allan testified that he works ten to twelve hours a
    day, seven days a week, for approximately eight to nine months out of the year.
    For instance,      Allan worked every day from August 2018 through March 2019,
    except for a two- week vacation between Christmas and New Year in 2018.
    Because of his demanding work schedule, Allan has been unable to attended any
    of Kash' s school functions, has missed vacations with Kash, and is not typically
    present when physical custody is exchanged.                     Instead, Allan' s girlfriend or his
    mother fulfill these tasks and care for Kash in Allan' s absence. Thus, we find no
    manifest error in the trial court's factual conclusion that Allan is consistently absent
    during    his     custodial    periods   and    relies     on     others   to   fulfill    his   parental
    responsibilities to Kash.
    As the     trial   court   noted,   both   parents       have '" issues."        The    evidence
    established that Beatriz failed to abide by the custody schedule on four occasions
    between June 2018 and January 2019.                      On two occasions, Beatriz refused to
    exchange physical custody of Kash at the designated time because she wanted
    Kash to attend events with her family.                   In December 2018, Beatriz incorrectly
    believed that she and Allan informally agreed to deviate from the holiday schedule,
    as they had in the past, and did not deliver Kash to Allan at the designated time.
    11
    Finally, she deprived Allan of physical custody of Kash on Martin Luther King Day
    in 2019,     because she believed the parties had changed the one -day holiday
    schedule.    As the trial court pointed out, Beatriz erred by relying on her memory
    of a conversation,     rather than the terms of the written judgment.               However, we
    note that Beatriz texted Allan to confirm her understanding of the custody
    schedule, and Allan did not advise her that she was wrong, believing she would
    not listen to him.
    Louisiana Civil Code art. 136. 1 recognizes that a child has a right to time
    with both parents; thus, "[ n] either parent shall interfere with the visitation,
    custody or time rights of the other unless good cause is shown."              Louisiana Revised
    Statute 9: 346 governs actions for the failure to allow visitation, custody, or time
    rights of a parent pursuant to a court-ordered schedule, judgment, or award.
    Subsection ( H)    provides, "[ a]    pattern of willful and intentional violation of this
    Section, without good cause,         maybe grounds for a modification of a custody or
    visitation   decree." ( Emphasis       added.)     Whether     a   parent's actions justify a
    modification of custody for violation of a custody schedule is left to the discretion
    of the trial court.
    At the conclusion of the hearing on Allan' s rule to modify, the trial court
    reprimanded Beatriz for violating its orders, cautioned her against continuing to
    deviate from the custody schedule, and found her in contempt.                    The trial court,
    who was familiar with the parties and the history of the case, was in the best
    position to evaluate Beatriz's credibility, including the sincerity of her interest and
    willingness to co -parent with Allan and the veracity of her denial that she kept
    Kash from Allan "but of spite." 9 We find no abuse of discretion in the trial court' s
    9
    The history of the case includes Allan' s prior efforts to hold Beatriz in contempt for allegedly
    violating the terms of the custody judgment.
    12
    refusal to modify custody due to Beatriz' s failure to abide by the custody
    judgment.lo
    The trial court also noted that Beatriz has made some every bad decisions,"
    presumably referring to her romantic relationships and two failed marriages by the
    age of twenty-six. However, Allan acknowledged, and the trial court found, that
    Kash is not in danger while in Beatriz' s care. Allan offered no evidence to establish
    how Beatriz' s decisions or lifestyle negatively affected Kash. See Burns, 
    236 So. 3d at 576
     ( modification of consent judgment was not warranted where the father
    disapproved of the mother's boyfriend, with whom she and the children resided,
    and lifestyle but offered no evidence that her actions had any effect on the
    children.   The father did not establish that the children were neglected, were not
    cared for when in the mother's custody, were being negatively influenced, or were
    in any danger.)       Beatriz testified that she never lived with her second husband,
    who is in the military and was stationed out-of-state then overseas, and Kash
    believed another romantic interest was " mommy' s friend."                 Further, Allan does not
    assert that Jonathan is a bad influence on Kash or that he is an otherwise
    undesirable presence in Kash' s life. In fact, due to Allan' s work schedule, he has
    not met Jonathan.
    Allan offered no evidence to prove that a continuation of the present custody
    arrangement would be deleterious in any way to Kash or to show that the harm
    likely to be caused if Allan was named primary custodial parent is substantially
    outweighed by its advantages to Kash. The evidence established nothing more
    than Allan' s preference for Kash' s living arrangements and fell woefully short of
    io Compare Jaligam v. Pochampally, 2016- 0249 ( La. App. 4th Cir. 12/ 7/ 16), 
    206 So. 3d 298
    ,
    304- 305, writ denied, 2017- 0255 ( La. 3/ 13/ 17), 
    216 So. 3d 804
    , wherein the trial court modified
    custody pursuant to La. R. S. 9: 346( H) and upon finding modification was in the best interest of
    the child. The mother deprived the father of 206 days of physical custody over two years. The
    mother's reasons were generally that the children had extracurricular activities, that her sciatica
    pain prevented her from driving, or that the father did not reimburse her for mileage. The Fourth
    Circuit found no error in the trial court's decision to modify custody pursuant to La. R. S. 9: 346( H),
    considering the "overwhelming evidence" of contempt on the part of the mother.
    13
    the requisite Bergeron burden of proof.          Thus, we find the trial court did not
    abuse its broad discretion by denying Allan' s rule to modify custody.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the trial court's July 3, 2019 judgment denying
    the plaintiff/ appellant's rule to modify custody is affirmed. Costs of this appeal are
    assessed against the plaintiff/ appellant, Allan Paille, Jr.
    AFFIRMED.
    14
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2019CU1694

Filed Date: 7/8/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/22/2024