Velasquez v. Fuentes ( 2024 )


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  • Esau Antonio Orellana Velasquez v. Cecilia Del Carmen Carranza Fuentes, No. 1547,
    Sept. Term, 2023. Opinion filed on June 26, 2024, by Wells, C.J.
    FAMILY LAW – CUSTODY – DEFAULT JUDGMENTS
    Default judgments are governed by Maryland Rule 2-613. In the child custody realm,
    default judgments require a nuanced application. Under very specific circumstances, circuit
    courts have discretion to utilize Rule 2-613(e) and (f)’s “ameliorating flexibility” to modify
    default orders before they become enrolled final judgments.
    In this case, the custody order resulted from an order of default properly entered by the
    circuit court, rendering it an enrolled final judgment. Under the circumstances, the circuit
    court did not have broad authority to sua sponte vacate that order merely because it arose
    from a judgment of default.
    FAMILY LAW – CUSTODY – REVISORY POWER
    The Maryland Code Annotated Courts and Judicial Proceedings (CJP) Article § 6-408 and
    Maryland Rule 2-535(a) provide courts with the power to revise judgments under certain
    circumstances. CJP § 6-408 provides that within thirty days after a judgment is entered, or
    thereafter pursuant to a motion filed within that period, a court has power to revise its
    judgment. Rule 2-535(a) provides that, on motion filed within thirty days after a judgment
    is entered, the court may exercise its revisory power.
    Here, the court acted improperly in vacating the custody order several months outside of
    the thirty-day window when neither party moved to revise the judgment under the statute
    or Rule. The court’s action was improper because appellate authority has determined that
    if a court acts to sua sponte revise a judgment under CJP § 6-408 or Rule 2-535(a) it must
    do so within the thirty-day time limit set forth in the statute or Rule.
    FAMILY LAW – CUSTODY – REVISORY POWER
    Under Rule 2-535(b), on motion of a party, a court may exercise its revisory power over a
    judgment but only in case of fraud, mistake, or irregularity. As interpreted by appellate
    cases, an “irregularity” is a failure to follow required process or procedure, which can
    include the failure of a court employee from performing a duty required by statute or rule.
    Proof of an irregularity provides very narrow grounds for revising final judgments,
    specifically, to prevent hardships that may result from a lack of notice and the
    corresponding lack of opportunity to interpose defenses prior to enrollment of judgment.
    We hold that in this instance, the seeming unavailability of a recording or transcript of the
    custody proceeding is not an irregularity under Rule 2-535(b). Mother did not lack notice
    of the custody hearing nor was she unable to put on a case. In short, Mother failed to
    establish hardship simply because a recording of the custody proceeding was not available
    at the time of a later hearing.
    FAMILY LAW – CUSTODY – MODIFICATION
    Modifying custody requires a court to engage in a two-step process. The first and threshold
    requirement is that the moving party prove a material change in circumstances. If the
    moving party fails to prove such a change, the court’s inquiry stops there. But if the moving
    party proves a material change in circumstances, the court may then consider which of now
    two competing custody alternatives is in the best interest of the child.
    Here, a magistrate determined Mother had not proven a material change in circumstances
    and stopped the analysis. Mother filed exceptions arguing that the magistrate should have
    engaged in a best interests analysis. The court agreed with Mother and remanded to the
    magistrate to perform a best interests analysis. We hold the circuit court erred in
    concluding that the magistrate was required to conduct a best interest analysis when
    determining if a material change in circumstances occurred.
    FAMILY LAW – CUSTODY – RES JUDICATA
    The doctrine of res judicata holds that a judgment between the same parties is a bar to
    another suit arising upon the same cause of action, including matters which could have
    been litigated in the original suit. In custody cases, the “material change” standard upholds
    the principles of res judicata by requiring that the movant prove such a change before a
    custody order may be modified. Because the custody order in this case was viable, res
    judicata prohibited Mother from litigating at the modification hearing and the subsequent
    hearing on exceptions issues that occurred before the custody order was enrolled.
    Circuit Court for Prince George’s County
    Case No. CAD21-10484
    REPORTED
    IN THE APPELLATE COURT
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 1547
    September Term, 2023
    ______________________________________
    ESAU ANTONIO ORELLANA VELASQUEZ
    v.
    CECILIA DEL CARMEN CARRANZA
    FUENTES
    ______________________________________
    Wells, C.J.,
    Beachley,
    Wright, Alexander, Jr.,
    (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),
    JJ.
    ______________________________________
    Opinion by Wells, C.J.
    ______________________________________
    Filed: June 26, 2024
    Pursuant to the Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal
    Materials Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State
    Government Article) this document is authentic.
    2024.06.26
    '00'04- 15:10:38
    Gregory Hilton, Clerk
    This appeal arises from a custody dispute between appellant, Esau Antonio Orellana
    Velasquez (“Father”), and appellee, Cecilia Del Carmen Carranza Fuentes (“Mother”),
    regarding their minor child, G.C. Father filed a complaint for custody in the Circuit Court
    for Prince George’s County, but Mother did not file an answer. At the father’s request, the
    court entered an order of default. Later, after a hearing, the court enrolled a custody order.
    Mother did not appeal that judgment, but instead moved to modify custody. A
    magistrate denied Mother’s motion, finding she had not proven a threshold material change
    in circumstances. Mother filed exceptions. After a hearing, the circuit court sustained
    Mother’s exceptions and, without notice to either party, the court sua sponte vacated the
    custody order. Weeks later, Mother moved to set aside the order of default, which the
    circuit court granted.
    Father timely appealed and presents two questions for review, which we have
    reordered and slightly rephrased: 1
    1. Did the circuit court err when it vacated the default judgment and the custody
    order?
    2. Did the circuit court err when it granted Mother’s exceptions to the magistrate’s
    recommendations?
    1
    Father’s questions, presented verbatim, are as follows:
    1. Whether the trial court erred when it granted appellee’s exceptions to the
    Magistrate’s recommendations.
    2. Whether the trial court erred when it vacated the original custody order and
    vacated the default without providing Appellant the time period to respond.
    For the reasons that we discuss, we conclude the circuit court erred as to both issues and
    reverse.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Mother and Father are the biological parents of G.C., born on November 8, 2018.
    Mother and Father were never married. Before these proceedings, the parties did not have
    a custody order from any court. Mother lived in Texas with G.C. and Father lived in
    Maryland.
    At some point, G.C. came to live with Father, and Father filed a complaint for
    custody in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County on September 21, 2021. Mother
    was properly served but did not answer. As a result, Father requested an order of default.
    Subsequently, the court entered a default against Mother on February 15, 2022.
    Thereafter, on March 21, 2022, the court held a hearing before a magistrate on
    Father’s complaint for custody. Mother did not appear at the hearing, even though she
    received notice and later admitted that she knew that the hearing was taking place. After
    the hearing, the magistrate recommended Father be awarded joint legal custody and
    primary physical custody of G.C. Mother was to be granted access with G.C. under a
    schedule outlined in a proposed order. The court ratified the magistrate’s recommendations
    and issued an order dated April 7, 2022. Mother never appealed the entry of the custody
    order.
    More than ninety days later, on July 18, 2022, Mother moved to modify custody,
    alleging, as a material change, that Mother was moving her primary residence from Texas
    2
    to Maryland. A magistrate conducted a hearing on the motion on November 1, 2022, with
    both parties present with counsel. Mother and Father testified.
    At the start of the hearing, the magistrate told the parties that Mother was required
    to show a material change in circumstances had occurred, since the custody order was
    entered before the magistrate could determine what custody arrangement was in G.C.’s
    best interests. Because the magistrate was concerned with what changes had occurred since
    the custody order was established, the magistrate prohibited Mother from presenting
    evidence regarding the circumstances surrounding the default judgment and events that
    occurred before the custody order was enrolled.
    Mother testified that she lived in Maryland with her parents, brother, two aunts, and
    her six-month old baby, G.C.’s younger brother. She testified that she and G.C. were
    always together and very happy until Father had “taken” G.C. away from her. However,
    Mother testified that Father had done well taking care of G.C. Mother said she had “the
    intention” to stay in Maryland but said she frequently returned to Texas to take her infant
    son to the pediatrician. She also mentioned having “second thoughts” about remaining in
    Maryland because she had “a stable home to go back to in Texas, where [she] can raise
    [her] children.” Mother confirmed that she resided in Texas “on and off” for two years. On
    one occasion, Mother canceled visitation with G.C. to return to Texas to take her son to his
    doctor. Mother testified that Father told her his wife takes care of G.C. while Father works,
    and that sometimes Father’s sister in-law provided care because Father’s wife began
    working again. Mother testified that she planned to watch G.C. until G.C. started school.
    3
    Father testified he lived with his wife, mother-in-law, brother-in-law, sister-in-law,
    and aunt. He works for an electrical company, and sometimes returned home by 6:00 p.m.,
    which is why his wife and his sister-in-law looked after G.C. However, his normal hours
    were 7:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. After he testified, Father moved to dismiss because Mother
    had failed to establish a material change in circumstances. Mother opposed, arguing G.C.
    and Mother’s infant child had developed a close relationship.
    The magistrate noted that Mother failed to appeal the custody order but instead filed
    the motion to modify ninety days later. The magistrate concluded that the motion to modify
    was “basically just reiterat[ing] the language from the prior order.” The magistrate
    explained that the fact that G.C. was living in Maryland was not a material change in
    circumstances. Further, the magistrate concluded that Mother’s claim about moving to
    Maryland was dubious because Mother admitted to having strong ties to Texas and
    concluded that it was unlikely, given those ties, that Mother would relocate to Maryland.
    Having found that nothing had changed since the custody order was established, the
    magistrate granted Father’s motion to dismiss.
    Mother timely filed exceptions to the recommendations on November 11, 2022,
    arguing in her papers that (1) the magistrate declined to hear evidence regarding G.C.’s life
    before the custody order, and (2) that under Rule 2-208(i)(1) testimony was required for a
    best interest of the child analysis. In his pleadings, Father argued that Mother had no
    meritorious argument, as she did not describe what evidence she wished the court to
    consider. Further, he argued Mother never asked the court to set aside the custody order by
    moving for a new trial or for the court to alter or amend the judgment. Father argued the
    4
    principles of res judicata should prevail and that it was proper for the magistrate to refuse
    evidence regarding circumstances from before the custody order.
    The court held a hearing on Mother’s exceptions almost one year later, October 6,
    2023. Both parties argued what was set forth in their written pleadings. At the hearing, the
    court asked Mother’s counsel if the magistrate did a best interests analysis using the so-
    called Taylor factors. 2 Counsel answered in the negative. The circuit court asked counsel
    what findings were made at the custody hearing and noted that the custody order used
    “boilerplate language.” The court continued, explaining that, because the custody order
    was entered by way of a default, there was “no baseline” against which to measure a
    material change in circumstances. The court also considered whether the default judgment
    was irrelevant. The circuit court ultimately determined the magistrate should have
    considered what was in G.C.’s best interest and performed a Taylor factor analysis. The
    court concluded that because the magistrate “didn’t make a determination as to what’s in
    the best interest of the child, then I’m going to send it back so the magistrate can do that.”
    The circuit court further expounded on its rationale, emphasizing the importance of the
    magistrate doing the Taylor factor analysis because determining what was in G.C.’s best
    interest was critical in considering a material change in circumstances.
    In a written order dated October 13, 2023 the circuit court sustained Mother’s
    exceptions. Even though Mother had not requested it, and without notice to either Mother
    2 Taylor v. Taylor, 
    306 Md. 290
     (1986).
    5
    or Father, the court vacated the custody order and set a hearing before a magistrate to
    redetermine custody. Five days later Father appealed.
    On January 12, 2024, Mother moved to vacate the February 15, 2022 order of
    default. Before Father could respond, six days later, on January 18, 2024, the circuit court
    granted Mother’s motion and set aside the default judgment. We will supply additional
    facts in our analysis when necessary.
    DISCUSSION
    I.     Standard of Review
    In evaluating custody determinations, this Court “utilize[es] three interrelated
    standards of review.” Gillespie v. Gillespie, 
    206 Md. App. 146
    , 170 (2012). First, “[w]hen
    reviewing a [magistrate’s] report, both a trial court and an appellate court defer to the
    [magistrate’s] first-level findings (regarding credibility and the like) unless they are clearly
    erroneous.” McAllister v. McAllister, 
    218 Md. App. 386
    , 407 (2014); see also Montgomery
    Cnty. Dep’t of Soc. Servs. v. Sanders, 
    38 Md. App. 406
    , 419 (1977). Second, “[i]f it appears
    that the [circuit court] erred as to matters of law, further proceedings in the trial court will
    ordinarily be required unless the error is determined to be harmless.” In re Yve S., 
    373 Md. 551
    , 586 (2003) (internal citations omitted).
    Finally, “when the appellate court views the ultimate conclusion of the [court]
    founded upon sound legal principles and based upon factual findings that are not clearly
    erroneous, the [court's] decision should be disturbed only if there has been a clear abuse of
    discretion.” Gillespie, 
    206 Md. App. at 170
    ; see also McAllister, 
    218 Md. App. at 407
    (“[W]hile the circuit court may be ‘guided’ by the [magistrate’s] recommendation, the
    6
    court must make its own independent decision as to the ultimate disposition, which the
    appellate court reviews for abuse of discretion.”). A court abuses its discretion when
    no reasonable person would take the view adopted by the [trial] court, or
    when the court acts without reference to any guiding rules or principles. It
    has also been said to exist when the ruling under consideration appears to
    have been made on untenable grounds, when the ruling is clearly against the
    logic and effect of facts and inferences before the court, when the ruling is
    clearly untenable, unfairly depriving a litigant of a substantial right and
    denying a just result, when the ruling is violative of fact and logic, or when
    it constitutes an untenable judicial act that defies reason and works an
    injustice.
    Das v. Das, 
    133 Md. App. 1
    , 15-16 (2000) (citing North v. North, 
    102 Md. App. 1
    , 13-14
    (1994) (internal quotations omitted)).
    II.    The Circuit Court Erred When it Vacated the Custody Order.
    A. Parties’ Contentions
    Father contends, first, that the circuit court violated his due process rights under the
    United States Constitution when it vacated the custody order. Specifically, he argues the
    circuit court stripped him of his constitutional liberty interest regarding family affairs by
    failing to provide him with notice or adequate time to respond to its decision to vacate the
    custody order. Father contends Rule 2-311 allows a party fifteen days to respond to a
    motion; however, the circuit court here granted Mother’s motion to vacate only six days
    later, without any response from Father.
    Second, Father contends the circuit court’s decision violated the Supreme Court of
    Maryland’s rule-making powers. What Father means is that the circuit court improperly
    utilized Md. Rule 2-535(b), which allows a court to exercise revisory power over a
    judgment more than 30 days after its entry “only upon a finding of fraud, mistake, or
    7
    irregularity.” The court’s action was improper because Mother did not move at all for the
    court to exercise its revisory powers, let alone within the thirty-day period set forth in the
    Rule.
    Finally, Father contends res judicata applies to the custody order. Mother was
    properly served and given notice of the custody hearing but failed to appear or answer.
    Consequently, so he asserts, the evidence that Mother wanted to present to the magistrate
    and the court concerning events that occurred before the custody order was enrolled were
    properly excluded, because those issues should have been litigated at the custody hearing.
    Mother contends the circuit court had authority to vacate the custody order on its
    own initiative. Specifically, Mother argues first, the court had discretion to sua sponte act
    because Maryland case law provides the basis to do so. Mother next contends that Maryland
    Rule 2-535(b) permitted the circuit court to vacate the custody order because it was entered
    subject to irregularity, namely the failure of a court employee to record the proceedings of
    the March 21, 2022 custody hearing which Mother did not attend. Further, she contends a
    separate irregularity existed because no best interest of the child analysis was done by the
    magistrate.
    Additionally, Mother argues Father was afforded due process because, even though
    the court did not explain that it was considering striking the custody order, Father was
    given ample opportunity to be heard at the Exceptions hearing. Mother asserts that the
    court’s failure to give Father fifteen days to respond before spontaneously vacating the
    custody order was harmless error. Lastly, Mother contends the custody order is subject to
    8
    the court’s broad revisory power, and the court exercised such discretion in the interest of
    justice.
    B. Analysis
    a. This Court’s Interpretation of Rule 2-613 in Flynn Did Not Give Circuit
    Courts Unfettered Authority to Sua Sponte Vacate Custody Orders.
    As a preliminary matter, we address default judgments generally and how they are
    to be construed in custody cases. As a starting point we look to Mother’s argument citing
    case law that states “the trial court has broad discretion to vacate an order of default at any
    point before it becomes an enrolled final judgment.” See Peay v. Barnett, 
    236 Md. App. 306
    , 317-18 (2018); Bliss v. Wiatrowski, 
    125 Md. App. 258
    , 265 (1999). Mother contends
    the custody order here, because it arose from an order of default, was within the broad
    discretion of the circuit court to vacate.
    Before analyzing default judgments in custody cases, it is helpful to say a few words
    about default judgments generally under Maryland law. Default judgments are governed
    by Maryland Rule 2-613 which states, that “a plaintiff may seek a default judgment against
    a defendant who fails to plead.” This Court explained that default judgments involve a two-
    step process. Peay, 
    236 Md. App. at 317-18
    .
    The first step is obtaining an order of default. Once the time for a defendant to
    answer has expired, a plaintiff may request in writing that the court enter an order of
    default. Md. Rule 2-613(b). After the court enters an order of default, the clerk must issue
    notice to the defendant that the order of default has been entered and that the defendant
    9
    may move to vacate the order within thirty days of its entry. Md. Rule 2-613(c). The notice
    must be mailed to the defendant (and counsel, if any) at the address on file. 
    Id.
    Rule 2-613(d) provides that “the defendant may move to vacate the order of default
    within 30 days after its entry. The motion shall state the reasons for the failure to plead and
    the legal and factual basis for the defense to the claim.” Upon reviewing the circumstances
    before it, if the court finds that there is a sufficient basis for an actual controversy and it is
    equitable to excuse the failure to plead, the court shall vacate the order. Md. Rule 2-613(e).
    The second step is obtaining a default judgment. Rule 2-613(f) provides that:
    If a motion to vacate was not filed under section (d) of this Rule or was filed
    and denied, the court, upon request, may enter a judgment by default that
    includes a determination as to the liability and all relief sought, if it is
    satisfied (1) that it has jurisdiction to enter the judgment and (2) that the
    notice required by section (c) of this Rule was mailed. If, in order to enable
    the court to enter judgment, it is necessary to take an account or to determine
    the amount of damages or to establish the truth of any averment by evidence
    or to make an investigation of any matter, the court, may rely on affidavits,
    conduct hearings, or order references as appropriate and, if requested, shall
    preserve to the plaintiff the right to trial by jury.
    Unlike a default judgment, which is a final judgment and not subject to the revisory power
    under Rule 2-535(a), an order of default is interlocutory in nature and may be revised by
    the court at any time up until it becomes a default judgment. Md. Rule 2-613(g). The
    Supreme Court of Maryland has emphasized the defaulting party’s responsiveness is
    paramount to their chances of avoiding default, stating that “[p]ermitting a defaulting party
    to lie in wait, after having failed to timely respond to a complaint and also to move to vacate
    a default order would permit the default procedure under Rule 2-613 to be nullified.”
    Franklin Credit Mgmt. Corp. v. Nefflen, 
    436 Md. 300
    , 325-26 (2013); see also Att’y
    10
    Grievance Comm’n v. Thomas, 
    440 Md. 523
    , 549 (2014) (“[A]n order of default
    determines liability conclusively, and such a determination may be set aside only if the
    defendant moves successfully to vacate the order.”).
    Default judgments have a more nuanced application in custody cases. In Flynn v.
    May, 
    157 Md. App. 389
     (2004), we considered, under the particular facts of that case,
    whether the award of a change of primary custody of a minor child by default constituted
    an abuse of discretion. There, the father filed a petition seeking primary custody of the
    parties’ six-year-old child and child support. 
    Id. at 391-92
    . The mother was served with a
    copy of the father’s petition. 
    Id. at 392
    . The mother, representing herself, filed a responsive
    pleading, but failed to include a certificate of service. 
    Id.
     The clerk of the court advised the
    mother of the need to file a certificate of service, but mother never did. Consequently, she
    did not properly answer the complaint. 
    Id.
     The father requested an order of default, which
    the court granted, and set the matter for a hearing on the merits. 
    Id. at 392-93, 394-95
    . The
    order of default notified the mother that she had thirty days in which to move to vacate the
    order. 
    Id. at 395
    .
    At the merits hearing, the mother appeared with five witnesses who were prepared
    to testify on her behalf. 
    Id.
     However, the court determined that neither the mother nor her
    witnesses could offer any testimony or evidence because the mother did not move to strike
    the order of default. 
    Id.
     Ultimately, the court awarded custody to the father and ordered the
    mother to pay child support. 
    Id. at 397-98
    . The mother subsequently obtained counsel and
    filed a motion to alter or amend the judgment, which was denied. 
    Id. at 399
    . She timely
    appealed.
    11
    We held that the circuit court abused its discretion in prohibiting mother from
    testifying, even though she had not moved to vacate the default. 
    Id. at 412
    . In reaching that
    conclusion, we examined the application of Rule 2-613(e) and (f), and their “Ameliorating
    Flexibility.” 
    Id. at 399-404
    . First, in discussing Banegura v. Taylor, 
    312 Md. 609
    , 619
    (1988), we emphasized that “the defendant’s failure [to move to vacate] does not foreclose
    the trial judge’s discretionary notice of an issue if ‘the interest of justice’ would nonetheless
    indicate that the order of default should be modified. Id. at 400. Continuing, we stated:
    That the court possessed such discretion, even under subsection (e), is the
    immediate premise that we are stating. Proceeding from that premise, the
    question will ultimately arise as to whether the court’s sua sponte obligation
    to consider the best interest of the child does not, ipso facto, create 1) “a
    substantial and sufficient basis for an actual controversy as to the merits of”
    the award of custody and 2) a concomitant duty to override any order that
    would otherwise prevent him from receiving evidence as to those
    merits. . . . [An] order of default was subject to the court’s plenary revisory
    power, so it was well within the court’s discretion to set it
    aside. Furthermore, we note that a trial judge has broad discretion to modify
    an interlocutory order where that action is in the best interests of justice.
    Id. at 401, 402. (emphasis in original).
    Then, we discussed Rule 2-613(f) in a similar light as section (e) and mentioned that
    “what is being expressed is a broad philosophical approach to default judgment, the idea
    that technicality must not triumph over justice. That philosophy is not narrowly or stingily
    caged.” Id. at 403 (referencing Royal Insurance Co. of America v. Miles and Stockbridge,
    P.C., 
    133 F.Supp.2d 747
    , 768–69 (D.Md.2001) (“Maryland Courts have repeatedly held
    that a trial court’s discretion to vacate default judgments ‘must be exercised liberally, lest
    technicality triumph over justice.”) (emphasis omitted)). Upon noting the broad discretion
    set forth in part (f), we noted that it “is a sweeping grant of discretionary authority, and
    12
    child custody is quintessentially a ground on which technicality and justice may be in stark
    collision.” Id. at 404.
    We noted that the concept of default judgment arose out of tort cases. In the context
    of custody cases, however, we concluded that where there is “a single unbifurcatable issue,
    an analogy to how default judgment is handled in the context of tort cases is
    impossible . . . . [D]efault judgment cannot substitute for a full evidentiary hearing when a
    court, in order to determine custody must first determine the best interest of the child.” Id.
    at 407.
    But significantly, we did not hold that default judgments were prohibited in custody
    cases. To the contrary, at the outset of the discussion we stated:
    As sorely tempted as we are to hold flatly that the default judgment
    procedure of Maryland Rule 2-613 is not applicable to child
    custody disputes, it is not necessary to go so far. We are content to hold
    that, at the hearing on August 1, 2003, the trial court, in the circumstances
    of this case, abused its discretion when it ordered a change in the primary
    physical custody of [the child] without permitting witnesses to testify or
    other evidence to be offered.
    Id. at 411-12 (emphasis supplied).
    In Wells v. Wells, 
    168 Md. App. 382
     (2006), we also considered a default judgment
    in the child custody context. The case was initiated when the father filed a divorce and
    child custody action. 
    Id. at 386
    . The mother failed to file an answer. 
    Id.
     The father filed a
    motion for order of default, but the mother did not file a response. 
    Id.
     The court issued a
    notice of default order that was mailed to the mother at the marital home, where, at the time
    the action began, the mother lived. 
    Id.
     The mother did not file a motion to set aside the
    default order. 
    Id.
     A hearing before a magistrate (at that time called a “master”) was
    13
    scheduled but the mother did not appear at the hearing. 
    Id.
     The father appeared with counsel
    and several witnesses. 
    Id.
     The magistrate issued findings and recommendations including
    that the father was a fit and proper person to have custody of the parties’ minor child, that
    the mother should pay child support in a specified amount, and that the father should be
    granted use and possession of the home. 
    Id. at 387-88
    . A copy of the magistrate’s findings
    and recommendations was mailed to the mother at the marital home. 
    Id. at 388
    . Thereafter,
    the court adopted the magistrate’s findings and recommendations. 
    Id.
    Eight days later, the mother filed a motion to vacate the order of default. 
    Id.
     She
    alleged that she had been served with the complaint and summons, but that the father told
    her it was a settlement agreement. 
    Id.
     The father told the mother to “tear up the papers[ ]’
    because he wanted to work on their marriage[,]” and the parties resumed their marital
    relations. 
    Id. at 388-89
    . Other than the complaint and summons, the mother said she did
    not receive any documents from the court. 
    Id. at 389
    . According to the mother, three days
    after the judgment of absolute divorce was entered, a deputy sheriff arrived at the marital
    home, told her that she and her husband were no longer married, and that she would have
    to vacate the premises. 
    Id.
    The mother maintained that the father procured the judgment of divorce fraudulently
    and that she had a meritorious defense to both the grounds for divorce and the claim for
    custody. 
    Id. at 389-90
    . Mother then filed a motion to alter or amend, where she argued that
    justice mandated opening the judgment to receive additional evidence about what was in
    the child’s best interests and other issues. Ultimately, the circuit court denied the mother’s
    motions without a hearing. 
    Id. at 391
    .
    14
    On appeal, the mother argued that the trial court abused its discretion in denying her
    motion for new trial and to vacate the default judgment. We agreed with Mother holding
    that the trial court abused its discretion in denying the mother’s “motion to vacate the
    default judgment as to all issues except the decision to grant a divorce.” 
    Id. at 396
    . In our
    conclusion, we analyzed and accepted the “ameliorating flexibility” of 2-525(e) and (f) set
    forth in Flynn, and we noted that the child “had an indefeasible right to have his best
    interests considered in a full evidentiary hearing”; therefore, a “default judgment cannot
    substitute” for such a hearing “when a court, in order to determine custody, must first
    determine the best interest of the child.” 
    Id. at 396-97
     (quoting Flynn, 
    157 Md. App. at 407
    ).
    While Flynn and Wells are still good law, both are tailored to the circumstances
    present in each case. Those circumstances are inapplicable to the facts presented here.
    First, and most importantly, Flynn concerned vacating a default order before the court had
    determined custody in the first instance. In this case we have an enrolled custody order.
    Indeed, each case we relied on in Flynn involved orders of default not final custody
    judgments. See Carter v. Harris, 
    312 Md. 371
     (1988); Banegura, 
    312 Md. at 619
    ; Bliss v.
    Wiatrowski, 
    125 Md. App. 258
    , 265 (1999); Holly Hall Publications, Inc. v. County
    Banking & Trust Co., 
    147 Md. App. 251
    , 263 (2002).
    Second, the default order in Flynn was entered against a mother who thought she
    had adequately answered the complaint for custody. Here, the record reflects that Mother
    did not attempt to answer the complaint. Third, in Flynn the mother was an active
    participant who appeared at the scheduled hearing with five witnesses prepared to testify
    15
    on her behalf. In this case, Mother knew of the hearing but did not appear. 3 Fourth, after
    the court prohibited her from presenting evidence, the mother in Flynn immediately filed
    a motion to amend or alter the judgment. Here, Mother took no such steps after the custody
    order was entered.
    Wells is similarly inapplicable factually and procedurally. Significantly, there, the
    mother did not appear for the custody hearing and a judgment of divorce was entered due
    in large part to the father’s nefarious behavior. Specifically, the father allegedly intercepted
    the mother’s mail and intentionally misled her about the nature of the proceedings. By
    contrast, here, we have nothing to indicate Mother was in some way thwarted from
    participating in the process.
    Custody orders are treated as final judgments. See Ruiz v. Kinoshita, 
    239 Md. App. 395
     (2018). As such, “[a]n order determining custody must be afforded some finality.”
    Frase v. Barnhart, 
    379 Md. 100
    , 112 (2003); see also McCready v. McCready, 
    323 Md. 476
    , 481 (1991). Thus, once a final custody order is entered it cannot be altered or amended,
    absent court action based upon a request to do so under, for example, Rule 2-535 or Courts
    and Judicial Proceeding (CJP) Article of the Maryland Code Annotated § 6-408 or at the
    3
    We are mindful about access to justice issues that arise when a parent is not a native
    English speaker, lives a considerable distance from the trial venue, and may have limited
    financial resources. But we note that Mother hired counsel in Texas, eventually traveled to
    Maryland, hired counsel, and participated in the modification hearing and all subsequent
    proceedings. Further, she did not notify the court of any difficulties involving language or
    travel and seek a postponement to try to timely address these matters if they were in fact
    barriers to her participating in the custody hearing. Additional resources available to
    Mother in Maryland (waiver of fees, a translator, referral to family services, as examples)
    could have aided her in being a more active participant in the initial custody process.
    16
    direction of an appellate court. The Maryland Supreme Court explained that “once a case
    is decided, it shall remain decided with certain very narrow exceptions.” Early v. Early,
    
    338 Md. 639
    , 651 (1995). “The rationale behind strictly limiting a court’s revisory power
    is that in today’s highly litigious society, there must be some point in time when a judgment
    becomes final.” Tandra S. v. Tyrone W., 
    336 Md. 303
    , 314 (1994) (superseded by statute
    on other grounds).
    Consequently, we hold that once a final custody order is entered by a circuit court,
    it is treated as a final judgment. To be sure, a final custody order always remains subject to
    revision, but it is not treated as an interlocutory decision, such as an order of default, as the
    circuit court treated it here. When the custody order results from an order of default, and a
    hearing on the default custody order is subsequently conducted, that decision becomes a
    default judgment. And, as such, default judgments are final judgments under Maryland
    law.
    We hold that neither Flynn nor Wells endorse a court’s broad authority to vacate
    default judgments in custody cases. We make clear that the “ameliorating flexibility” of 2-
    613(e) and (f) articulated in Flynn does not give a circuit court broad discretion to vacate
    default judgments. The timing, whether the court is dealing with an enrolled custody order,
    and other factual circumstances are important. When weighing whether to strike a default
    judgment in a custody case, the court should carefully consider these and any other relevant
    factors.
    17
    b. The Circuit Court Had No Authority to Exercise Its Revisory Powers Under
    Either Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article § 6-408 or Maryland Rule 2-
    535(a).
    In her brief, and at oral argument, Mother argued that the circuit court could sua
    sponte exercise its revisory powers over the custody order under Maryland Code
    Annotated’s Courts and Judicial Proceedings (CJP) Article § 6-408 and Maryland Rule 2-
    535(a) or (b). She is incorrect. Neither the statute nor the Rule permitted the court to strike
    the custody order under the facts presented in this case.
    A court may exercise its revisory powers either by statute or Rule. CJP § 6-408.
    provides:
    For a period of 30 days after the entry of a judgment, or thereafter
    pursuant to motion filed within that period, the court has revisory power
    and control over the judgment. After the expiration of that period the court
    has revisory power and control over the judgment only in case of fraud,
    mistake, irregularity, or failure of an employee of the court or of the clerk’s
    office to perform a duty required by statute or rule.
    (Emphasis added). See Maryland Bd. of Nursing v. Nechay, 
    347 Md. 396
    , 407 (1997).
    Similarly, Rule 2-535 states:
    (a) Generally.—On motion of any party filed within 30 days after entry of
    judgment, the court may exercise revisory power and control over the
    judgment and, if the action was tried before the court, may take any action
    that it could have taken under Rule 2-534.
    (b) Fraud, Mistake, Irregularity. On motion of any party filed at any time, the
    court may exercise revisory power and control over the judgment in case of
    fraud, mistake, or irregularity.
    (Emphasis added.)
    18
    A court may act on its own to revise a judgment. “The exercise of the court’s
    discretion is not triggered exclusively . . . by a motion filed by one of the parties. The court
    may act to revise its judgment sua sponte.” Nechay, 
    347 Md. at
    409 (citing Yarema v.
    Exxon, 
    305 Md. 219
    , 241 (1986)); see also Higginbotham v. Pub. Serv. Comm’n of Md.,
    
    171 Md. App. 254
    , 266 (2006) (“[U]nless fettered by a Rule or statute, a court ordinarily
    may take any action sua sponte that it can take in response to a motion, including dismissal
    of an action.”). But, absent fraud, irregularity or mistake, a court may not sua sponte revise
    a judgment thirty days after the judgment’s enrollment. Nechay, 
    347 Md. at 409
    .
    Here, Mother did not move to revise the custody order under either the statute or
    Rule at any time, let alone within thirty days. Further, the court did not properly exercise
    its revisory powers because it did not independently act within the same time frame.
    Nonetheless Mother argues Higginbotham and Nechay support her claim that the court
    could act outside the thirty-day window. Again, we disagree.
    In Higginbotham, one of the two defendants filed a motion to dismiss
    Higginbotham’s complaint. The court granted the defendant’s motion, but sua sponte
    dismissed as to all defendants. 
    171 Md. App. at 263
    . On direct appeal, this Court held that
    a sua sponte dismissal action was appropriate because “the court referred to the motion to
    dismiss as having been submitted by both” defendants, and the “grounds for the dismissal
    applied to all named defendants.” 
    Id. at 266
    .
    Nechay, a nurse, sought to enjoin the state nursing board from publishing a
    reprimand based her allegedly poor professional conduct. The nursing board moved to
    dismiss or for summary judgment, arguing that a public reprimand was the appropriate
    19
    legal sanction. Nechay, 
    347 Md. at 399-401
    . The circuit court denied the nursing board’s
    motion and enjoined it from publishing the reprimand. 
    Id. at 403
    . But before this hearing
    took place, Nechay filed an amended complaint for interlocutory relief. Within thirty days
    of the first order a “fast-tracked” trial on the amended complaint occurred before a different
    judge. The second judge concluded that the first order was not a final order and nothing at
    law forbade the nursing board from publishing the reprimand. 
    Id. at 404
    .
    On Nechay’s appeal to us, we reversed in an unreported opinion. But the Supreme
    Court of Maryland granted certiorari to determine whether the second judge had
    jurisdiction to revise the judgment. 
    Id.
     The Court explained that the second judge,
    was fully authorized to do what she did—she acted within 30 days of the
    entry of the [first judge’s] order. And, whether intended as a modification or
    revision, or not, when that action results in the change of a prior order, it
    supercedes that order and, therefore, it does not matter on what theory that
    change occurred, so long as jurisdiction resided in the court effecting the
    change.
    
    Id. at 412
     (emphasis added). In coming to this conclusion, the Maryland Supreme Court
    emphasized that the court’s power to revise a judgment within the time prescribed by the
    rules is “inherent.” 
    Id. at 409
    . (emphasis added).
    Mother’s reliance on these two cases is misplaced, as both are clearly
    distinguishable from the circumstances presented here. First and most importantly, neither
    Higginbotham nor Nechay, involved a final judgment, as we have in this case. Second, in
    Higginbotham the Supreme Court held that the circuit court’s spontaneous act of
    dismissing all defendants during a lawsuit was in the interests of justice. We cannot draw
    the same conclusion in this instance because the court struck a custody order entered nearly
    20
    two years prior. The court’s action deprived the parties of a viable two-year old custody
    determination when neither party asked the court to do so. Third, Nechay emphasized that
    the court’s revisory powers under Rule 2-535(a) may only be exercised within a thirty-day
    window. As discussed, that did not happen here. Further, Mother cites no authority for a
    contrary view. See Yarema, 
    305 Md. at 241
    ; Platt v. Platt, 
    302 Md. 9
    , 13 (1984). We now
    address whether the court properly struck the custody order under Rule 2-535(b), which
    permits a court to revise a judgment “at any time.”
    c. There Was No “Irregularity” Under Rule 2-535(b) that Permitted the Circuit
    Court to Sua Sponte Vacate the Custody Order More Than Thirty Days After
    Its Entry
    Under Rule 2-535(b) to revise a judgment beyond the thirty-day period, (1) a party
    must first move the court to revise the judgment and (2) there must be fraud, mistake, or
    irregularity. A court
    will only exercise its revisory powers if, in addition to a finding
    of . . . irregularity, the party moving to set aside the enrolled judgment has
    acted with ordinary diligence, in good faith, and has a meritorious defense or
    cause of action. See J.T. Masonry v. Oxford, 
    314 Md. 498
    , 506, 
    551 A.2d 869
     (1989) and cases cited therein. Moreover, it is well established that there
    must be clear and convincing evidence of . . . irregularity before a movant is
    entitled to have a judgment vacated under Rule 2-535(b).
    Tandra S., 336 Md. at 314 (superseded by statute on other grounds) (emphasis omitted).
    “The intent of these rules is to prevent hardships which may result from a lack of notice
    and the corresponding lack of an opportunity to interpose defenses prior to enrollment of a
    judgment.” Alban Tractor Co. v. Williford, 
    61 Md. App. 71
    , 77 (1984).
    We start by noting the obvious. Neither party asked the court to exercise its revisory
    power under Rule 2-535(b). Mother’s assertion, advanced at oral argument, that filing a
    21
    motion to modify custody was tantamount to filing a Rule 2-535 request, is unavailing as
    there is no appellate authority, Rule, or statute that supports that contention, and she cites
    none. She simply did not ask the court to revise the custody judgment under Rule 2-535.
    No case that we have found directly addresses Mother’s sub-contention: that Nechay
    suggests that a court may exercise its revisory powers of its own volition if it finds fraud,
    irregularity, or mistake in the judgment. See Nechay, 
    347 Md. at 409
    . Bolstering her claim,
    we note that the circuit court’s ruling strongly implies that it vacated the judgment because
    of what it perceived as an “irregularity” under Rule 2-535(b). 4 At various points during the
    exceptions hearing, the court expressed its concern that a recording of the custody hearing
    did not exist. The court wanted to know what the magistrate decided at the custody hearing
    to determine what the court called a “baseline” from which to determine what was in the
    child’s best interest. But the court did not specifically cite the lack of a recording or
    transcript of the custody hearing as an irregularity under Rule 2-535(b) as a basis on which
    it vacated the custody order.
    On the one hand, such a determination—whether not having a record of the custody
    hearing is an irregularity—is unnecessary to resolve the second alleged error. As shall be
    discussed in detail in Section III of this opinion, the magistrate was not legally obligated
    to consider the child’s best interests for a modification of custody because Mother could
    4
    Rule 16-503(a)(2) states that “proceedings before a magistrate shall be recorded
    verbatim in their entirety” unless waived.
    22
    not establish that a material change in circumstances had occurred. 5 We, however, will
    exercise our discretion under Rule 8-131(c) and address this specific issue for the first time
    and for trial court’s guidance on remand.
    The Supreme Court of Maryland stated that an “irregularity,” as used in Rule 2-
    535(b), means “the doing or not doing of that, in the conduct of a suit at law, which,
    conformable to the practice of the court, ought or ought not to be done.” Early, 
    338 Md. at 652
    . In other words, “an ‘irregularity’ is a failure to follow required process or procedure.”
    Id.; see also Maryland Lumber Co. v. Savoy Constr. Co., Inc., 
    286 Md. 98
     (1979) (holding
    an irregularity existed because the court clerk failed to send required notice of default
    judgment to the defendant); Early, 
    338 Md. at 653
     (holding an irregularity existed because
    the clerk failed to send copies of the court order to all the parties). This Court has
    additionally held that “the failure of an employee of the court or of the clerk’s office to
    perform a duty required by statute or a Rule” constitutes an irregularity. J.T. Masonry Co.,
    Inc., 74 Md. App. at 607. Additionally, this Court has emphasized that irregularity
    “provides very narrow grounds for revising a final judgment under Rule 2-535(b).” Das v.
    5
    Further, despite what the court said at the exceptions hearing, a recording of the
    custody hearing was not necessary to determine whether a material change in
    circumstances had occurred. The court noted in its October 13, 2023 order:
    WHEREAS, the Court is unable to determine whether there was a material
    change of circumstances between then-Magistrate Johnson’s hearing on
    March 21, 2022 and the filing of the motion for modification on July 18, 2022
    because there is no record of then-Magistrate Johnson’s findings.
    Both parties were present and could have testified about that issue. See Section III of this
    opinion.
    23
    Das, 
    133 Md. App. 1
    , 23 (2000); see also Tandra S., 336 Md. at 318 (superseded by statute
    on other grounds) (“As a ground[] for revising an enrolled judgment, irregularity . . . has a
    very narrow scope.”).
    We take from these cases and others that the crux of an irregularity finding is “to
    prevent hardships which may result from a lack of notice and the corresponding lack of an
    opportunity to interpose defenses prior to enrollment of a judgment.” Alban, 
    61 Md. App. at 77
    . Even if we were to determine that not having a recording of the custody proceedings
    is an irregularity, 6 Mother has not demonstrated hardship, lack of notice, or lack of
    opportunity to defend her case with regard to the custody order. Mother was properly
    served and notified about the custody hearing. She chose not to attend the hearing, appeal,
    or move to revise the custody order. More importantly, Mother has not shown how not
    having a recording of the hearing prejudiced her in any way. Her stated concern at the
    exceptions hearing and on appeal is that she was not able to tell the court about the
    circumstances that existed in Texas when she had custody of G.C. But the time to have
    presented that evidence was at the custody hearing. Even without a recording of that
    hearing, Mother has not overcome the presumption that the magistrate took testimony at
    the March 21, 2022 custody hearing, rendered findings and recommendations to the circuit
    court and, as in thousands of other custody determinations that have taken place within
    6
    According to Father’s reply brief, he has ordered the audio of the original custody
    hearing and is currently awaiting it. Father asserts the circuit court has not informed him
    that there is no audio from which a transcript can be prepared.
    24
    Maryland since then, the circuit court ratified those findings and entered a custody order.
    See Bradley v. Hazard Tech. Co., Inc., 
    340 Md. 202
     (1995).
    As our Supreme Court has stated, “[w]e do not believe, therefore, that every
    inadvertent omission in the record would call for reversal or would justify the time and
    expense incident to a new trial.” Bradley, 
    340 Md. at 208
    . The Court also emphasized that
    [i]t would wreak havoc on the administration of justice to require reversal in
    each and every case in which it is alleged by an appellant that portions of
    trial testimony have not been preserved verbatim for review. As anyone
    familiar with appellate review can attest, transcripts are seldom perfect.
    Mistakes inevitably occur . . . . Electronic recording or stenographic
    equipment will occasionally fail . . . . Understandably, therefore, it has been
    necessary for courts to proceed on a case-by-case basis.
    Smith v. State, 
    291 Md. 125
    , 133-34 (1981); see Michigan Nat. Bank v. Racine, 
    234 Md. 250
    , 253 (1964) (“[T]he mere fact that the stenographer’s notes were lost does not
    automatically call for a new trial.”). We hold that the unavailability of a recording or
    transcript of a custody proceeding is not an irregularity under Rule 2-535(b).
    For the foregoing reasons we conclude that the circuit court abused its discretion in
    sua sponte vacating the custody order. We agree with Father that the effect of the court’s
    action was to deprive him of Due Process under the Fourteenth Amendment of the United
    States Constitution and Article 24 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights. See Roberts v.
    Total Health Care, Inc., 
    349 Md. 499
    , 509 (1998) (“At the core of due process is the right
    to notice and a meaningful opportunity to be heard.”).
    25
    III.   The Circuit Court Erred When it Granted Mother’s Exceptions to the
    Magistrate’s Recommendations.
    A. Parties’ Contentions
    Father contends the circuit court erred when it granted Mother’s exceptions to the
    magistrate’s findings. Specifically, Father argues the circuit court failed to follow
    established Maryland case law, which clearly articulates a two-step process when
    considering a request to modify custody. Preliminarily the court must determine whether a
    material change in circumstances has occurred, and if none is found, the analysis stops
    there. Father contends the magistrate correctly determined no material change in
    circumstances occurred, so a best interest analysis was not required. The circuit court erred
    because its reasoning for granting Mother’s exceptions was because the magistrate failed
    to do the required best interest analysis.
    Mother contends this issue is moot because the circuit court vacated the custody
    order. However, if not moot, Mother argues the circuit court did not abuse its discretion
    because the two steps for determining a motion to modify are intertwined, and to determine
    whether a material change in circumstances existed, a best interest of the child analysis is
    required.
    B. Analysis
    a. Mootness
    As a preliminary matter, we address Mother’s assertion that this issue is moot. In
    other words, the court struck the custody order and sent the parties back to the magistrate,
    essentially, for a “do-over” to determine custody. Therefore, Mother reasons, it doesn’t
    26
    matter whether the court erred in sustaining her exceptions. The problem with this
    argument is that its viability hinges upon the circuit court properly vacating the custody
    order. As discussed, we hold the circuit court abused its discretion in vacating the custody
    order. Therefore, Father’s argument is not moot, and we address the merits.
    b. Merits
    Countless reported cases in Maryland stand for the following proposition: When
    presented with a request to modify custody, courts must engage in a two-step process.
    Gillespie, 
    206 Md. App. at 170
    . The two-step process is as follows: “First, the circuit court
    must assess whether there has been a ‘material’ change in circumstance.” 
    Id.
    (quoting Wagner v. Wagner, 
    109 Md. App. 1
    , 28 (1996)). Then, if a finding is made that
    there has been such a material change, the court proceeds to consider the best interests of
    the child as if the proceeding were one for original custody. Id.; see also Braun v.
    Headley, 
    131 Md. App. 588
    , 610 (2000); see McCready v. McCready, 
    323 Md. 476
    ,
    (1991).
    A material change of circumstances is “a change in circumstances that affects the
    welfare of the child.” 
    Id.
     at 171 (citing McMahon v. Piazze, 
    162 Md. App. 588
    , 594 (2005)).
    “The burden is then on the moving party to show that there has been a material change in
    circumstances since the entry of the final custody order and that it is now in the best
    interest of the child for custody to be changed.” Id. at 171-72 (emphasis added) (quoting
    Sigurdsson v. Nodeen, 
    180 Md. App. 326
    , 344 (2008)).
    We note that frequently the considerations that relate to a material change in
    circumstances might be applicable to determining best interests.
    27
    Certainly, the very factors that indicate that a material change in
    circumstances has occurred may also be extremely relevant at the second
    phase of the inquiry—that is, in reference to the best interest of the child. If
    not relevant to the best interest of the child, the changes would not be material
    in the first instance.
    Wagner, 
    109 Md. App. at 28
    . Because of these sometimes-overlapping considerations, we
    also noted that,
    this two-step process is sometimes considered concurrently, in one step, i.e.,
    the change in circumstances evidence also satisfies—or does not—the
    determination of what is in the best interest of the child. Even if it alone does
    not satisfy the best interest standard, it almost certainly will afford
    evidentiary support in the resolution of the second step. Thus, both steps may
    be, and often are, resolved simultaneously.
    
    Id. at 28-29
    .
    But significantly, in our reading, Wagner does not remotely hold that the two-step
    process should be combined or that a best interests analysis trumps all other considerations
    when a court confronts a request to change custody. In fact, Wagner reiterates that: “[a]
    change of custody resolution is most often a chronological two-step process. First, unless
    a material change of circumstances is found to exist, the court’s inquiry ceases.” 
    Id. at 28
    .
    If “either no change or the change itself does not relate to the child’s welfare, there can be
    no further consideration of the best interest of the child because, unless there is a
    material change, there can be no consideration given to a modification of custody.” 
    Id. at 29
    . “The threshold—but not paramount—issue is the existence of a material change,” and
    so “there can be no modification of custody unless a material change of circumstance is
    found to exist.” 
    Id.
    In her written motion for modification, at point 10, Mother stated:
    28
    [T]here has been a material change in circumstances which warrants a
    Modification to the Order:
    a. That the Minor Child is primarily residing with Plaintiff Father in
    Maryland
    b. That Defendant Mother has moved back to Maryland so that she can be
    with her Minor Child.
    At the modification hearing Mother testified that she was intent on moving to Maryland
    but had not done so. The magistrate found that Mother’s testimony revealed that she had
    not moved to Maryland and was not intent on moving because she had significant ties to
    Texas, which included her infant son.
    After taking testimony from both Mother and Father and listening to the arguments
    of their counsel, in making his oral findings, the magistrate reviewed Mother’s written
    motion to modify saying:
    In fact, there is no (indiscernible - 2:12:42) of any material change until you
    get to paragraph 10. And there are two allegations of material change that
    are listed. One was that the minor child is now living in Maryland. And the
    second is that the lady had moved back to Maryland so that she could be with
    the child.
    The first reason is not a material change. That’s just the result of me
    (indiscernible - 2:13:22) custody order. Allegation that the lady had moved
    back to Maryland is at best the only allegation of a material change. And
    before we even started, and you know, the lady acknowledged that she clearly
    intends to relocate back to Texas with the child. So it puts into question
    whether the lady really has relocated to Maryland or not. Testimony does
    indicate she’s traveled back and forth to Texas since coming to Maryland
    most recently. And in fact, based on -- it seems that her life is centered in
    Texas, and not in Maryland.
    29
    Ultimately, the magistrate determined that Mother had not shown a material change in
    circumstances and denied the motion to modify. 7
    Later, at the exceptions hearing, and before remanding the case back to the
    magistrate, the court expressed its concern that the magistrate failed to engage in a best
    interests analysis saying:
    my only concern about this magistrate’s order is that at this juncture I don’t
    understand -- if he didn’t go through the Taylor factors, then how could he
    say that there has not been a material change in circumstances since we don’t
    know what those circumstances were back in April 17 of 2022 because of the
    default? And so at the very least, that -- he should have heard testimony
    regarding what’s in the interest of the -- . . . The magistrate should have heard
    evidence regarding what’s in the best interest of the minor child.
    Based on our review of appellate authority, we conclude the court erred when it ruled that
    the magistrate was required to undertake a best interest analysis to determine if a material
    change in circumstances existed. We reiterate: When faced with a request to modify
    custody the court must make a threshold determination whether a material change in
    circumstances has occurred since the entry of the custody order. Only if the court
    determines that a material change has occurred then the court must undertake a best
    interests analysis. Gillespie, 
    206 Md. App. at 170
    ; Wagner, 
    109 Md. App. at 28
    . 8
    7
    Whether the magistrate granted Father’s motion to dismiss the modification
    petition or denied Mother’s request is immaterial to our analysis.
    8
    This means that unless somehow relevant to a determination of whether a material
    change exists, considerations such as the reasons why a party was unable to attend the
    custody hearing or what the parties’ circumstances were before the custody order are not
    at issue. This is not to say that such issues are unimportant. They are but should be raised
    at a hearing designed to address those concerns. For example, explaining why a party was
    unable to attend the custody hearing may be appropriate, for example, at a hearing on
    30
    c. Res Judicata
    Finally, one tangential issue. We also agree with Father that because the custody
    order was viable, the doctrine of res judicata prohibited Mother from litigating issues at
    the exceptions hearing concerning events that occurred before the custody order was
    enrolled. See, generally, Alvey v. Alvey, 
    225 Md. 386
    , 390 (1961) (stating that “the doctrine
    of res judicata is that a judgment between the same parties and their privies is a final bar to
    any other suit upon the same cause of action, and is conclusive, not only as to all matters
    that have been decided in the original suit, but as to all matters which with propriety could
    have been litigated in the first suit”).
    Specifically in child custody cases we have held that “[t]he ‘material change’
    standard ensures that principles of res judicata are not violated by requiring that such a
    showing must be made any time a party to a custody or visitation order wishes to make a
    contested change, even if it is to an arguably minor term.” McMahon, 
    162 Md. App. at 596
    (emphasis in original). “A litigious or disappointed parent must not be permitted to
    relitigate questions of custody endlessly upon the same facts, hoping to find a chancellor
    sympathetic to his or her claim.” McCready, 
    323 Md. at 481
    . Here, the magistrate properly
    ruled that at the modification hearing, as the moving party, Mother’s first task was to prove
    that a material change occurred after the entry of the custody order, rather than litigate
    issues that could have been resolved at the custody hearing.
    motion to alter or amend, provided the reasons fit the requirements of Rule 2-534. The
    reasons for or against one party having custody should be raised at the custody hearing.
    31
    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons that we have discussed, we hold that the circuit court had no
    authority under any of Maryland’s appellate decisions, statutes, or Rules to vacate the
    custody order in this case. The custody order was a final judgment to which Mother had
    not appealed or properly invited the court to exercise its revisory powers. Additionally, we
    hold the court erred in sustaining Mother’s exceptions to the magistrate’s findings. In a
    modification of custody hearing, the court is required to examine the best interests of the
    child only if the court first determines that a material change in circumstances has been
    proven, which was not the case here.
    THE JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT
    COURT FOR PRINCE GEORGE’S
    COUNTY IS REVERSED. APPELLEE
    TO PAY THE COSTS.
    32
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1547-23

Judges: Wells

Filed Date: 6/26/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 6/26/2024