Marriage of Schaplow ( 1996 )


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  •                         Nos. 95-219 and 96-222
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
    1996
    IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF
    PEGGY C. G. SCHAPLOW,
    n/k/a PEGGY C. GANDER,
    Petitioner and Appellant,
    TERRY SCHAPLOW,
    Respondent and Respondent.
    APPEAL FROM:   District Court of the Eighteenth Judicial District,
    In and for the County of Gallatin,
    The Honorable Dale Cox, Judge presiding.
    COUNSEL OF RECORD:
    For Appellant:
    Marcelle C. Quist, Kendra K. Anderson, Quist, Bowden
    & Anderson, Bozeman, Montana
    For Respondent:
    Edmund P. Sedivy, Sedivy, Bennett &White, Bozeman,
    Montana
    Submitted on Briefs:   September 19, 1996
    ~-d:
    ~.~
    ,id       December 19, 1996
    Justice William E. Hunt, Sr., delivered the opinion of the Court
    Pursuant to Section I, Paragraph 3(c), Montana Supreme Court
    1988 Internal Operating Rules, this decision shall not be cited as
    precedent and shall be published by its filing as a public document
    with the Clerk of the Supreme Court and by a report of its result
    to Montana Law Week, State Reporter and West Publishing Company.
    The marriage of Peggy C. G. Schaplow, n/k/a Peggy C. Gander
    (Peggy) and Terry Schaplow (Terry) was dissolved in May 1991
    pursuant to a decree issued by the Eighteenth Judicial District
    Court, Gallatin County.       Peggy appeals from the court's order
    establishing a custody and visitation schedule and removing her
    "primary residential custodian" status, and from the court's order
    finding her in contempt.
    We affirm.
    We review the following issues:
    1.   Did the District Court err in "modifying" the parties'
    existing custody and visitation arrangement?
    2.   Did the District Court err in ordering that the parties'
    two children continue their religious training?
    3.   Did the ~istrictCourt err in finding Peggy in contempt?
    INTRODUCTION
    This case is about two capable adults who have made a number
    of   failed   attempts   to   manage   on    their   own   the   custodial
    arrangements of their children.        Upon the dissolution of their
    marriage, Terry and Peggy tried what they have termed a "non-
    2
    traditional" approach to custody and visitation, where scheduling
    was subject only to their negotiations, not to the provisions of a
    court decree or order. However, since the inception of this "non-
    traditional" approach, a period of about four years, the parties
    have argued incessantly, privately and in court, about nearly every
    aspect of the daily interrelationship between each of their own
    lives and their children's lives. The record establishes a pattern
    in which the parties seek assistance, disregard the recommendations
    given, and then seek assistance again.      This dispute, at once
    impressive and   irrational   in   its detail   and   intensity, was
    presented to the District Court for an ultimate resolution. Peggy,
    who requested that the District Court solve the scheduling problem
    "once and for all," disapproves of the resolution given.
    FACTS
    Terry and Peggy were married in Bozeman, Montana in June 1977.
    The couple have two children: Jesse, born July 15, 1981; and Jay,
    born May 29, 1984.   Terry and Peggy separated in September 1989,
    and their marriage was dissolved in May 1991, pursuant to a decree
    issued by the Eighteenth Judicial District Court, Gallatin County.
    The court's decree incorporated the parties' Separation, Custody,
    and Property Settlement Agreement, which provided for joint custody
    of Jesse and Jay and designated Peggy as the primary residential
    custodian.   The Agreement also provided a detailed custody and
    visitation schedule for the period June 6, 1991 to June 15, 1992;
    this schedule was subject to mutual modification by the parties.
    In addition, the Agreement provided that upon the termination of
    the time period covered by the custody schedule, "the parties will
    evaluate future schedules with consultation with Dr. [Charles]
    Kelly [a clinical psychologist retained by the parties to make a
    custody evaluation].      If the parties are unable to resolve the
    future schedule with Dr. Kelly, then the parties agree to mediate
    any disputes in a format suggested by Dr. Kelly and agreed to by
    the parties."
    Although the parties themselves created the initial custody
    schedule,   they    had   difficulties   in   adhering   to   it   almost
    immediately after its adoption by the court. It is quite apparent
    from the record that one of the main reasons that such a detailed
    schedule was created in the first place, and why, ultimately,
    strict compliance with the schedule was difficult, was the fact
    that each parent was actively involved in a number of activities
    with the children.        Terry, a former high school and college
    basketball player, encouraged his two sons to become involved in
    all   sports, but    especially baseball and basketball.           He   at
    different times coached each of his sons, and made every effort to
    enroll the boys in various sports camps and programs. Peggy, it is
    evident from the record, has a great fondness for snow skiing, and
    encouraged the boys to undertake that sport. Peggy enrolled Jesse
    and Jay in a number of ski programs in the Bozeman area.                In
    addition, when Peggy and Terry were married, they decided together
    that the boys would attend Sunday school classes at the First
    Presbyterian Church in Bozeman, and would receive weekly Taekwondo
    instruction. Not surprisingly, the different activities' schedules
    conflicted with   each other, with       the   temporary   custody   and
    visitation schedule established in the dissolution decree, and with
    a subsequent custody and visitation schedule created by the
    parties.
    Although the parties agreed to a schedule in January 1992 that
    generally provided Terry custody of the boys three days per week
    and Peggy custody of the boys four days per week, a schedule which
    remained in effect for nearly three years, the parties were unable
    to resolve, amicably or otherwise, the inevitable problems that
    periodically arose because of the conflicting schedules of the
    boys' various activities. Each party had begun to "claim" certain
    activities, so that difficult situations were created if, for
    example, ski class conflicted with a basketball game, or if one
    parent's "claimed" activity fell on a day that the other parent had
    custody of the children. Both Terry and Peggy began seeking court
    assistance to resolve these disputes, most of which had reached a
    fevered pitch.      (With respect   to    a    dispute   regarding   the
    relationship between custody and one of the boys' participation in
    a youth baseball league, the court was presented with evidence that
    the boy's batting average while in Terry's custody was four times
    higher than it was while in Peggy's custody.)        The court issued
    orders which variously provided      for and      required   the boys'
    participation in ski programs; baseball and basketball practices,
    camps, and games; and Sunday school.
    The   court's periodic,   "stop-gap" rulings concerning the
    minutiae of the parties' daily lives and their children's daily
    lives did not fully solve the scheduling problems.     Eventually,
    Peggy filed motions for final determination of visitation rights
    and contempt, and Terry filed a counter motion for contempt, all of
    which were heard by the court on October 20 and 21, 1994.      The
    District Court issued its order on December 16, 1994, which
    provided, in pertinent part, that Terry and Peggy would remain
    joint custodians of the boys, and that neither party would be
    considered the primary residential custodian; that during the
    school year the parties would alternate custody of the children on
    a weekly basis; that each party would have custody of the children
    for one half of the summer; that custody of the children on the
    various national and school holidays was divided nearly equally
    between Terry and Peggy; and, that each parent ensure that the
    children participate in the aforementioned athletic and religious
    activities. The court found Peggy in contempt for failing to make
    the boys available for Sunday school on three occasions, but
    suspended the $500 contempt fine and declared that Peggy "may purge
    herself of the contempt charge provided there are no violations of
    the Court's order herein for one year."    The court stated in its
    order that it "considered each appropriate factor in Section 40-4-
    212, MCA and finds that it is in the best interests of the minor
    children that the following custody schedule and orders incidental
    thereto be followed[.]    Peggy alleges a number of errors in the
    court's December 16, 1994 order, and these allegations of error
    form part of the basis for her appeal here.
    Not long after the court's order was filed, each party began
    filing motions alleging that the other was in contempt for failing
    to abide by the order.       The court considered testimony in support
    of the motions during two hearings, on September 28, 1995 and
    December 28, 1995.       The court issued an order January 2 , 1996,
    which did not find either party in contempt but did require Peggy
    to ensure the boys' attendance at sports practices.                   The court
    issued a second order on January 8, 1996, holding Peggy in contempt
    for violating the original dissolution decree by failing to provide
    Terry with a 1995 IRS form relating to claiming one of the boys as
    a dependent, and for violating the December 16 order by failing to
    get the boys to various sports practices.              The court applied to
    Peggy the $500 fine which it had suspended in the December 16
    order. Peggy's allegations of error in the court's contempt order
    form the other basis for her appeal here. Although Peggy filed a
    notice of appeal to this Court from the District Court's December
    16,   1994   order   prior    to    the   institution     of    the    contempt
    proceedings, we have allowed Peggy to appeal both the December 1994
    order and the January 1996 contempt order in one action.
    ISSUE ONE
    Did the District Court err in             "modifying" the parties'
    existing custody and visitation arrangement?
    In Issue One, Peggy raises three jurisdictional challenges.
    Peggy   first   argues    that     because     there   was     no   motion   for
    modification before the court, the court was without jurisdiction
    to modify the parties' existing custody arrangement as it did in
    its December     16,    1994 order.    Peggy contends that the court
    improperly modified the custody arrangement as contained in the
    original decree by removing her "primary custodian" status. Peggy
    alleges that she requested that the court merely "clarify" matters,
    noting that her motion before the court was entitled "Motion for
    Final Determination of Visitation Rights," and that the court
    recognized the purpose of this document when it stated "The central
    issue   before    the    Court   is   Petitioner's Motion    for    Final
    Determination of Visitation Rights."
    While we are well aware of the firmly established rule that a
    district court may not rule on matters other than those presented
    by the pleadings, In re Custody of C.S.F. (1988), 
    232 Mont. 2
    0 4 ,
    209, 
    755 P.2d 578
    , 581, we cannot glean from the circumstances here
    a violation of this rule by the District Court.             The court's
    December   16, 1994 order did         indeed   remove Peggy's     "primary
    residential custodian" status, but this alone did not constitute an
    improper modification of the original custody determination, nor
    did it constitute a ruling on a matter beyond the pleadings.          The
    parties have had great difficulty creating a workable, permanent
    visitation schedule.        Neither mediation nor periodic judicial
    intervention into isolated issues has successfully solved the
    visitation problem.       Peggy finally pleaded with the court in her
    motion for final determination of visitation rights to "once and
    for all, establish a proper visitation schedule.            ...   A final
    determination of visitation rights of the parties, specifically a
    simplified visitation schedule, is in the best interests of the
    children." The parties submitted briefs and proposed visitation
    schedules.      The court heard testimony concerning the various
    alleged causes of the visitation problems, including testimony from
    Terry that Peggy had used her "primary custodian" status to derail
    previous     attempts      at   creating     or   maintaining   visitation
    arrangements. On the basis of testimony presented at the hearings,
    and the briefs and proposed visitation schedules presented by the
    parties, the court ordered that the parties follow the court's
    specific visitation schedule which provided for nearly equal time
    with the boys, and that neither party be considered the "primary
    custodian," a title which had led to visitation problems in the
    past.    The court was asked to resolve a difficult visitation
    problem, and the provisions of the court's order, including the
    removal of "primary custodian" status, manifest the court s attempt
    to do so. To the extent that Peggy has characterized the situation
    differently, we disagree. There was no District Court error here.
    With respect to her second argument, Peggy contends that the
    court   erred   by   not    applying   the   jurisdictional prerequisite
    requirements of 5 40-4-219, MCA, prior to modifying the decree.
    Peggy claims that the court's December 16, 1994 order, establishing
    a new visitation schedule and removing her "primary custodian"
    status, was a modification which, in the words of this Court's
    opinion in In re Marriage of Johnson .(l994), 
    266 Mont. 158
    , 166,
    
    879 P.2d 689
    , 694, "ha[dl the effect of substantially changing the
    primary residence of the parties' children, even though the formal
    designation of 'joint custody' [was] retained."          Peggy claims that
    under these circumstances, Johnson requires that the requirements
    of   §   40-4-219, MCA, must be met before the court may engage in a
    custody modification. 
    Johnson, 879 P.2d at 694
    . Peggy argues that
    the court erred by modifying the parties' visitation and custody
    arrangement according to       §   40-4-212, MCA   (the "best interest
    test"), before conducting a jurisdictional analysis under      §   40-4-
    219, MCA.      We cannot agree with Peggy's second argument
    Johnson states, in pertinent part:
    Motions or petitions to modify a sole custody
    provision or terminate a joint custody provision must
    satisfy the jurisdictional prerequisites set forth in §
    40-4-219,MCA. Likewise, a motion or petition to modify
    child custody provisions in a dissolution decree which
    have the effect of substantially changing the primary
    residence of the parties' children, even though the
    formal designation of "joint custody" is retained, are to
    be construed as motions or petitions to terminate joint
    custody and must satisfy the jurisdictional requirements
    set forth in § 40-4-219, MCA. Any effort to modify the
    physical custody arrangements in a decree which provided
    for joint custody, which does not seek a substantial
    change in the children's primary residence, may be
    considered by the district court according to the best
    interest standard set forth in § 40-4-212,MCA.
    
    Johnson, 879 P.2d at 694
    (emphasis added) .         The court here was
    requested to resolve a bitter, ongoing visitation scheduling
    dispute; the court's resolution did not            "have the effect of
    substantially changing the primary residence of the parties'
    children," nor, for that matter, did it have the effect of
    modifying the decree, save for the removal of Peggy's title of
    primary custodian.       At the time of the hearing on this matter,
    there existed between the parties a visitation schedule, created by
    themselves without direction from the court or the original decree,
    that provided that during the school year Peggy and Terry would
    divide weekly custody of the boys according to a four day/three day
    split.   As well, each of the parties had had custody of the boys
    for roughly half of the previous summer. The relevant portions of
    the court's order provided that the parties would alternate full
    weekly custody of the boys during the school year, and that each of
    the parties would have custody of the boys for half of the summer.
    The order also provided for a nearly equal division of custody on
    holidays.     Finally, the order provided that neither party would
    maintain "primary custodian" status. These provisions have little
    to do with, let alone substantially change, "the primary residence
    of the parties1 children.    'I   To the contrary, the court's order
    essentially maintains the number of days the boys were spending at
    each parent's home under the existing visitation schedule. Section
    40-4-219, MCA, is inapplicable here.      There was no ~istrictCourt
    error.
    Peggy's third argument under Issue One is that the court erred
    in modifying the custody and visitation arrangement because Terry
    did not first file an affidavit in support of modification, as
    required by   §   40-4-220,MCA.   The statute provides:
    (1)   A party seeking a temporary custody order or
    modification of a custody decree shall submit, together
    with his moving papers, an affidavit setting forth facts
    supporting the requested order or modification and shall
    give notice, together with a copy of his affidavit, to
    other parties to the proceeding, who may file opposing
    affidavits. The court shall deny the motion unless it
    finds that adequate cause for hearing the motion is
    established by the a££idavits, in which case it shall set
    a date for hearing on an order to show cause why the
    requested order or modification should not be granted.
    Peggy's argument is misguided, as the provisions of 5 40-4-220,
    MCA, are inapplicable here.       First, it is the moving party that
    must comply with the affidavit requirement; in this case, that was
    Peggy, not Terry.       Second, the statute contemplates a situation
    where a party requests that the court modify the custody decree;
    here, such relief was neither requested nor given.     To reiterate,
    at the time of the hearing the parties, while bound by the initial
    custody decree to the extent that it provided for joint custody and
    designated Peggy as the primary custodian, were and had been
    subject to a custody and visitation arrangement largely created by
    themselves; in any event, the parties had long since left behind
    the temporary schedule set out in the decree.      The relief sought,
    and the relief given, did not involve a modification of the
    original decree because the decree no longer controlled the
    parties1 custody and visitation scheduling arrangements.        And,
    pursuant to our discussion of the purpose and effect of the court's
    removal of Peggy's title as primary custodian, we cannot see how
    the court's action in that regard would have first required its
    perusal of a   §   40-4-220,MCA, affidavit. Contrary to Peggy's third
    argument, the court did not commit reversible error.
    ISSUE TWO
    Did the District Court err in ordering that the parties' two
    children continue their religious training?
    Peggy has two bases for her allegation of error with respect
    to Issue Two: Peggy first contends that the court's order requiring
    the boys1 weekly attendance at First Presbyterian Church in Bozeman
    ,
    violated 5 40-4-218(1) MCA, in that the court's order infringed on
    her custodial rights; Peggy also contends that in requiring the
    boys to attend "Terry's" church, the court's order violated her
    First Amendment religious rights.
    Section 40-4-218(I), MCA, provides:
    Except as otherwise agreed by the parties in writing at
    the time of the custody decree, the custodian may
    determine the child's upbringing, including his
    education, health care, and religious training, unless
    the court after hearing finds, upon motion by the
    noncustodial parent, that in the absence of a specific
    limitation of the custodian's authority, the child's
    physical health would be endangered or his emotional
    development significantly impaired. (Emphasis added.)
    Peggy contends that this statute authorizes her, not Terry or the
    court, to make decisions regarding the boys' religious training
    while they are in her custody. However, under the circumstances of
    this case, the boys' religious training is indistinct from the
    boys' basketball training, baseball training, or ski training, in
    the respect that whatever importance it may once have had to the
    parties and their children was completely overshadowed by its
    status as a fiercely contended scheduling issue.       The parties'
    difficulty in coordinating, without intermittent and consistent
    strife, their schedules and the boys' schedules had reached a peak
    by the time the District Court was requested to resolve these
    matters.   "   [Dl istrict courts have broad powers to determine all
    problems concerning custody and visitation."      In re Marriage of
    Hunt (1994), 
    264 Mont. 159
    , 164, 
    870 P.2d 720
    , 723.    Both parties
    have repeatedly sought judicial and other intervention into their
    daily lives in hopes of resolving their scheduling problems.
    Peggy's claim now that the District Court is improperly interfering
    with her parental rights to raise her child as she wishes is
    completely disingenuous. The court attempted to resolve one aspect
    of the parties' custody and visitation problem by requiring the
    boys' attendance at "Sunday School and/or Church Services each
    Sunday that the custodial parent is not out of town." We do not
    agree with Peggy's first contention. The court did not err.
    Peggy's second contention here is that the court's order
    requiring the boys1 weekly attendance at the First Presbyterian
    Church in Bozeman violated her First Amendment religious rights.
    Peggy states that while Terry prefers the First Presbyterian
    Church, and while she used to attend that church, she no longer
    feels comfortable going there.    Peggy argues that the court, in
    forcing the boys to attend "Terry's"church while they are in her
    custody, is in effect choosing between the parties' conflicting
    religious beliefs.   Peggy cites a number of cases which indicate
    that courts are reluctant to get involved in conflicts regarding
    the religious training of children.     See, e . g . ,   Munoz v. Munoz
    (1971), 79 Wash.2d 810, 
    489 P.2d 1133
    ; Angel v. Angel (Ohio C.P.
    1956), 
    140 N.E.2d 86
    ; Khalsa v. Khalsa, 
    107 N.M. 31
    , 
    751 P.2d 715
    .
    However, the. record does not reveal any conflict of religions
    between Terry and Peggy, only, again, a conflict regarding custody
    and visitation scheduling.    The District Court did not violate
    Peggy's First Amendment religious rights by ordering the boys'
    church attendance at First Presbyterian.
    ISSUE THREE
    Did the District Court err in finding Peggy in contempt?
    By order dated June 11, 1996, this Court granted Peggy's
    request to consolidate her appeal of the District Court's January
    1996 orders finding her in contempt with her previously filed
    appeal of the court's December 1994 custody and visitation order.
    Also in that June 11, 1996 order, we stated that "[olur review of
    contempt orders in family law cases is limited to whether the
    district court acted within its jurisdiction and whether the
    evidence supports the contempt" (citing In re Marriage of Boyer
    (1995), 
    274 Mont. 282
    , 289, 
    908 P.2d 665
    , 669; In re Marriage of
    Dreesbach (1994), 
    265 Mont. 216
    , 224, 
    875 P.2d 1018
    , 1023; In re
    Marriage of Sullivan (1993), 
    258 Mont. 531
    , 539-40, 
    853 P.2d 1194
    ,
    1200).   Terry and Peggy do not dispute the District Court's
    jurisdiction over the contempt matters. Therefore, the only issue
    here is whether the District Court's findings of contempt were
    supported by the evidence.
    Peggy argues that the court's January 8, 1996 order finding
    her in contempt for failing to get the boys to sports practices and
    for failing to provide Terry with an IRS dependent exemption waiver
    form was not supported by the evidence.      To the contrary, we
    conclude that the evidence supports the court's findings.        The
    court states, at finding number 11:
    The December 16, 1994 Order provides, in part:
    "When the boys are with Petitioner, she shall insure that
    the boys attend the sports activities they participate
    .
    in.. "
    At finding number 6, the courr states:
    The parties1 Separation, Custody and Property Settlement
    agreement provides in part :
    "The parties agree that for 1990 and all years
    thereafter, each will claim one (1) of the children
    as dependents (Jesse by Husband and Jay by Wife)
    unless otherwise ordered by the Court and both
    parties agree to execute appropriate IRS forms to
    accomplish this,"
    and this provision was incorporated into the original
    divorce decree.
    Peggy does not dispute that she failed on various occasions in 1 9 9 5
    to get the boys to their respective sports activities.         At the
    December 1995 hearing which preceded the court's January 8, 1996
    order, Peggy offered explanations as to why she had not gotten the
    boys to their activities; Terry, in turn, testified to the effect
    that Peggy's explanations were not valid.        With respect to this
    conflicting testimony, we note that a court may properly give more
    weight to one party's evidence than to the other party's evidence.
    See, In re the Marriage of Rolfe (1985), 
    216 Mont. 39
    , 44-45, 699
    P.2d   7.9,   82. The court concluded thar Peggy's failures to get the
    boys to their respective sports activities constituted violations
    of the December 16, 1994 order, and found Peggy in contempt. This
    finding of contempt is supported by the evidence.
    With respect to the IRS form, Peggy's argument focuses mainly
    on the court ' s finding that Terry had suffered a penalty, levied by
    the IRS, as a result of her failure to give him the form before his
    taxes were due on April 15; she contends that finding was not
    supported by the evidence. This focus is misplaced. The court did
    not need to find that Terry had suffered an adverse consequence as
    a result of Peggy's violation of the decree in order to find Peggy
    in contempt for violating the decree,
    Peggy was required to annually provide Terry with a signed I R S
    form which would allow Terry to claim one of the children as a
    dependent on his tax forms. Peggy did not provide Terry the form
    by April 15, 1995, and in fact did not provide the form until
    requested to do so by the court at the September 28, 1995 contempt
    hearing.   There was conflicting evidence presented concerning
    whether the form was available to Terry prior to April 15, 1995,
    but again, a court may properly give one party's evidence more
    weight than the other party's evidence.       The court concluded that
    Peggy violated the dissolution decree by failing to provide Terry
    the IRS form in a timely manner, and found her in contempt.           This
    finding of contempt is supported by the evidence.
    Peggy also argues that the court erred by adopting, verbatim,
    Terry's proposed findings as its own. A court's verbatim adoption
    of proposed findings does not "constitute error per se."              In re
    Marriage of Nikolaisen   (1993),   
    257 Mont. 1
    , 5, 
    847 P.2d 2
    8 7 ,    289.
    We set out the following test in Nikolaisen:
    When reviewing the adequacy of the findings of fact and
    conclusions of law, we examine whether they are
    sufficiently comprehensive and pertinent to provide a
    basis for a decision, and whether they are supported by
    substantial evidence,
    
    Nikolaisen, 847 P.2d at 289
    (citation omitted) . The court Is eleven
    pages of findings and conclusions regarding the parties1 contempt
    motions are comprehensive, pertinent to the issues raised, and, as
    17
    w e have already discussed, supported by substantial evidence.     The
    c o u r t d i d not err in adopting verbatim Terry's proposed findings.
    Affirmed.
    We.Concur :       A
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 95-219

Filed Date: 12/19/1996

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014