Custody Paternity of J.D ( 1993 )


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  •                                 No.     92-244
    IN THE SUPREMECOURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
    1993
    IN RE THE PATERNITY AND CUSTODY
    OF J.D., a minor child
    TRACY L. GRUBB,
    Petitioner   and Respondent,
    -vs-
    TARENA L. DAPP,
    Respondent   and Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM:       District  Court of the Fifth Judicial District,
    In and for the County of Beaverhead,
    The Honorable Frank M. Davis, Judge presiding.
    COUNSELOF RECORD:
    For Appellant:
    Tarena L. Dapp, Great      Falls,     Montana,     Pro Se
    For Respondent:
    Andrew P. Suenram;     Jones,    Hoffman       and Suenram,
    Dillon, Montana
    Submitted    on Briefs:        June 17, 1993
    Decided:      August 9, 1993
    Justice           John            Conway      Harrison              delivered                the      Opinion           of     the     Court.
    Tarena             L.      Dapp         (Tarena)          appeals              pro        se    from        an order              of      the
    Fifth          Judicial              District            Court,            Beaverhead                    County,         awarding                 sole
    custody           of        J.D.,          a minor         child,             to     J.D.'s          father,           Tracy          L.         Grubb
    (Tracy).               We affirm.
    J.D.         was born              to     Tarena          and Tracy                on April            26,      1989.             Tarena
    and Tracy               were         not     then        and never                 have        been       married,             though             they
    lived          together                for         a    few         months              in       1988.                Both       signed                  an
    acknowledgement                      of paternity                 naming           Tracy         as J.D.'s             natural         father.
    Tracy          also         signed           J.D.'s         birth             certificate.                      For      almost             a year
    after        J.D.           was born,              Tracy          kept         her       during           weekends            and      on week
    nights         when Tarena                   was working.                  Both          parties           lived        in Great                 Falls
    that        year.             Tarena          was working                  part          time       as a poker                dealer              in         a
    casino,           while           Tracy       was a full              time           engineering                technician                 for      the
    Montana           Department                 of     Transportation.
    J.D.         is     Tarena's             second         child.               Her oldest            child,          Christa,               was
    approximately                     three       years         old     when J.D.                 was born.                Tracy         took         care
    of      Christa             while      Tarena           was working,                    before           J.D.      was born.                     After
    J.D.'s         birth,             Tracy       always         took        Christa             along        when he kept                J.D.              He
    testified               that         he      cared         very          much          for      Christa            and       that          he       and
    Tarena          had tried              to     keep         the      two        girls         together.
    In      March             1990,         Tarena         and Tracy               entered            a written                agreement
    concerning              J.D.'         s custody            and support.                      This        agreement           provided                  for
    joint           custody,               with            Tarena            as        the          residential                  parent,                and
    visitation                  for     Tracy         on weekends                  and for             two     weeks        in     the     summer.
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    Tracy       was         to       pay         Tarena                 $150        per         month               for      child            support                and
    maintain              medical           and hospital                          insurance                   for         Tarena.             For          several
    months          thereafter,                       Tracy             kept           J.D.         and         Christa              every               weekend,
    Friday          night         until           Monday                morning.                    At        the     time        of         the         trial           in
    March          1992,         Tracy           was          current               on        his        child             support                obligation,
    except          for      a disputed                     half        month's               payment                for     February                1991.
    In      July          1990,             Tracy             married               Christine                    whom         he        had       met          in
    November              1989.           Tracy         and Christine                         moved to                Fort        Benton             in August
    1990 with              Christine's                  daughter,                   Alisha,              then         age six.                At about               the
    same time,              Tarena          moved to Dillon                              with        J.D.           and Christa.                     Tracy           and
    Christine              kept          both     girls              for      two weeks                  during            the     summer            of          1990.
    Tarena              became              known             to         the        Montana                 Department                    of         Family
    Services               (Family              Services)                    in     Dillon               during             Labor            Day         weekend,
    1990.            Her         babysitter's                         mother               called              Family            Services                  because
    Tarena          had      not          come back                   overnight                 and there                   was      no food                   in    the
    house.           By the          time         Family              Services                responded                   to the        call,            however,
    Tarena          had returned                      home.
    About           six         weeks              later,               on       October                  14,      1990,            a     friend               or
    acquaintance                    of     Tarena's                  called              Family               Services             at        2:00          a.m.          to
    report         that       the         two children                       had been left                      alone         in Tarena's                      house.
    A Family              Services              social             worker           and two               police            officers                broke           into
    the      house,          found          the        children                   sleeping               in     an upstairs                   bedroom,               and
    removed          them         from          the     house.                 Tarena           called              Tracy        the         next         day,       and
    he and          Christine               went             to      Dillon              to     pick           up J.D.               Tracy           testified
    that        he         took            both             girls,                however,                    because             Family                 Services
    "basically                told          us         if          we      wanted             our             daughter             we        had          to        take
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    Christa."             Concerned                 about              the     financial               and legal                  consequences                 of
    keeping          Christa,            Tracy            and Christine                       consulted              a Fort          Benton           Family
    Services            social              worker,                Diann           Button,                 who       later           testified                 on
    Tracy's           behalf.               Button               arranged               for      Christa              to     be sent               back        to
    Dillon       and placed                  in      foster              care.
    After       a Youth             Court              hearing           before             Judge          Davis         on November                 5,
    1990,       J.D.      was placed                      in      foster           care         in     Dillon             with      Christa.                The
    two      children             were         returned                  to        Tarena             on      December               14,         1990,         on
    condition            that         she attend                   mental              health          counselling                  and parenting
    classes.
    Tracy           filed          a petition                      for        determination                       of      paternity               and
    modification                 of         custody               on         November                20,      1990,              seeking           primary
    physical            custody               of          J.D.                After             Tracy             requested                 a      custody
    investigation,                    the     parties                  stipulated               to home studies                           conducted            by
    Family       Services.
    The      parties               also              stipulated                that         Tarena              would           continue             as
    primary          physical            custodian,                     pending           a hearing                  on Tracy's                 petition,
    and that           J-D.      would            visit           Tracy         for      two weeks                in September                    1991 and
    two      weeks        in      November                 1991.              Tarena             and        the       two         girls          moved         to
    Butte       in     October              1991.
    On December                   11,       1991,             Tarena           gave         birth          to      her      third           child,
    Jacob.           Jacob's           father,                 Jeff,         was living               in Dillon.                   At the          hearing
    in      March        1992,           Tarena                described                her          relationship                    with         Jeff         as
    "stable"           and       "happy"              but         stated           that         she did              not         intend          to      marry
    him.        In     her       brief            on appeal                  she reported                     that         Jeff       had        formally
    acknowledged                paternity                  on December                    22,        1991,         and in           her         affidavit
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    supporting            her petition              to file        her appeal                in forma oauperis,                      she
    stated      that       he was paying              $175 a month as child                             support.
    Button       visited           Tracy,        Christine,              and Alisha                  three        times     in
    November 1991.                  She had seen J.D.                      with     Tracy's             family          in October
    1990,       during            J.D.'s          temporary           placement               with           Tracy,         and      she
    testified            that      she saw Christine                       and J.D.            together               in    November
    1991.          In     her      home study             report           she described                     their         home as a
    "modest,            well      kept       two     bedroom              mobile          home"         in      a Fort           Benton
    trailer        court         owned by Christine's                      parents.
    Button           testified           that         she       was      familiar             with           Christine's
    extended            family         and described             them as "committed                            to      [J.D.]"       and
    looking          forward        to having             her    live       with      Tracy            and Christine                on a
    full      time       basis.          She recommended that                       Tracy       have custody                    of J.D.
    Dave Evans,               a social          worker          with      Family         Services                in    Butte,
    visited          Tarena's          home three           times          in November and December 1991.
    He saw J.D.                there       only     on the third                 visit.           Evans reported                    that
    Tarena had moved to Butte                         to obtain             Section           8 housing               and that       she
    was living            in a "fairly             older"        two-bedroom                house on the upper west
    side      of     Butte.            When he visited,                    by appointment,                       the       house was
    "very       clean,          well-maintained,                had proper                utilities,                 and was well-
    furnished,"            and contained              ample food and clothing                            for         the children.
    According           to Evans'          home study             report,           Tarena was unemployed.
    She had not graduated                     from high           school          but was planning                     to complete
    a G.E.D.            Her income as of December 1991 consisted                                               of $300 a month
    child       support          from Christa's             father,          who lived            in Seattle,                   and $150
    a month child                support          from Tracy.              All     but $16 of her monthly                           rent
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    was paid        through       Section             8, and she was receiving                          food        stamps and
    Medicaid        benefits.
    Evans included            in his            report             a summary of records                    for     1989-90
    from      Family       Services             in      Great           Falls.           He characterized                    their
    contents        as a "history               of neglect,"                  summarized           as "[Tarena]              would
    leave     the     children       unsupervised,                         would      not pick       them up from the
    babysitter         until      the next day and also was involved                                        with     drinking.
    The older         child      was also             physically              cruel      to the       infant."
    Evans'       third     visit         occurred               on December 10, 1991,                       soon after
    J.D.    had returned            from a two-week                         visit      with      Tracy.        He observed
    J.D.    playing       with     Christa             and commented that                     they    "seem very             close
    to one another,              as stepsisters."                           Only one day earlier,                        however,
    Tarena       had     called       his            office           to     express          concern        about          J.D.'s
    emotional         state,     and he had referred                          her to a licensed               professional
    counsellor,          Grainger          Brown of Butte.
    Brown saw Tarena and J.D.                            for        two one-hour           visits          in December
    1991.        At Tarena's          request,                he wrote              to her       lawyer,       saying          that
    Tarena       had described              J.D.          as          "crying         easily,        being         clingy          and
    defiant/aggressive,"                   and that             these         behaviors          were "suggestive                    of
    anxiety       created        by separation"                       rather         than     by abuse or neglect.
    Brown recommended that                      J.D.          visit         her      father      more frequently                   and
    for     shorter       periods          of        time.             Brown's          letter       was submitted                   in
    evidence        at the trial,               and he also                 testified            on Tarena's             behalf.
    Based on his observations                            of Tarena and her children                              in Butte,
    Evans recommended that                  custody              of J.D.            be awarded to Tarena,                   adding
    that    Family      Services       "would provide                       temporary,           ongoing       services            and
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    follow       up intervention                if       necessary."
    On March         13,         1992,        the     District           Court        heard       testimony            by
    Tracy,         Christine,                Tarena,              Button,           Evans,          Brown,            Tarena's
    supervising             social      worker            in Dillon,           and a Dillon           police          officer.
    Tracy       and Tarena both were represented                                   by counsel.            The court           also
    took        judicial          notice            of     the         Youth        Court        abuse        and         neglect
    proceeding           before        the same judge.                       On April         7, 1992,        it     filed       its
    findings        of fact,           conclusions              of law, and order,                 awarding          exclusive
    custody        of J.D.        to Tracy.
    On appeal,         Tarena raises                  no legal          issues      but alleges            numerous
    errors       in the        District          Court's           findings            of fact.          Tracy        presents
    several         issues,            of      which            only         one     is       dispositive:                whether
    substantial              credible           evidence                supports          the      District               Court's
    modification             of a de facto                 custody           arrangement.
    Tracy       initiated          this        case by requesting                     a determination                  of
    paternity          as well          as a modification                      of custody,          but      the      District
    Court       properly        addressed                only     the        custody      issue,      as paternity                is
    not in dispute.
    Our standard            of review           for     a custody           determination               is that      the
    district        court's          decision            is presumed to be correct                       and will          not be
    disturbed          on appeal            unless         there        is    a mistake          of law or a finding
    of fact        not supported               by substantial                  credible          evidence          that      would
    amount to a clear                  abuse of discretion.                        Matter        of S.P.           (1990),       
    241 Mont. 190
    ,     194, 
    786 P.2d 642
    ,                      644;        In re Marriage           of Otto             (1990),
    
    245 Mont. 271
    ,     275,        
    800 P.2d 706
    , 708.
    Section        40-4-224(3),                MCA, provides                that      an order           for      joint
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    custody              may be modified                          pursuant               to        § 40-4-219,                     MCA, to             terminate
    the       joint           custody.                 If         the      proposed                   modification                        merely             changes
    living            arrangements                   within               a joint              custody                  situation,                it     need         not
    be justified                    by the          relatively                     stringent                    criteria            of     § 40-4-219                 but
    instead              may be justified                           by        a review                of         the       best          interest              of     the
    child          under            5 40-4-212,                   MCA.             In       re Marriage                      of      Ferguson                (1990),
    
    246 Mont. 344
    ,         347,       
    805 P.2d 1334
    ,            1336.
    Here,        no order               for         joint            custody            had ever                    been      entered.                   The
    District               Court           appropriately                        treated               the          parties'               agreement                  as a
    "de      facto            custody             arrangement,"                      which            may be modified,                            pursuant              to
    § 40-4-219(2),                         MCA,       "in          accordance                      with          the       factors           set         forth          in
    40-4-212."                      In      effect,               then,            the         District                    Court's           order             is      the
    original               custody           decree           in this               case,            and the               applicable                  statute          is
    § 40-4-224                (1)     ,    MCA, which                   provides               that             joint        custody              is     presumed
    to       be     in        the         best      interest                  of        a minor                  child,           "unless              the          court
    finds,            under          the         factors           set        forth           in      40-4-212,                   that      joint            custody
    is      not       in      the         best      interest               of       the        minor              child."
    The         District               Court              stated                in          its           findings             of         fact           and
    conclusions                     of law that               it        had considered                            the      criteria           set         forth         in
    § 40-4-212,                  MCA, and "finds                          for       Tracy            and against                    Tarena             on each of
    the       relevant                factors           itemized."                          "Ordinarily,                    'I Judge          Davis            wrote,
    he is          "partial                to the           old     presumption                       that           a child             of tender                  years
    belongs              in     the        custody            of        the        mother."                     He continued:
    Unfortunately         in this       case that       presumption         if it were
    still    applicable         (which      it isn't)      would be overcome           by
    Tarena's       past      life       style       and     indeed       her   present
    philosophy        in    regard        to    the     family      concept.        She
    discounts      . . . or at least             downplays       the importance        of
    a father's         role       in   the     family      relationship.           This
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    philosophy      is, in the court's     opinion,    wrong.   90% of the
    youths who appear in Youth Court are the product of this
    type      of     philosophy,     i.e.,      single     parents    with
    insufficient         financial  resources       and little      or no
    fatherly     involvement.
    Tarena           interprets               these         comments,              which         unfortunately                  are
    consistent             with       the judge's              frequent              interjections               from the bench
    during         the       trial,            as      evidence               that      Judge       Davis         discriminated
    against        her       based on her                   age,     beliefs            and lifestyle,                 and did           not
    take      into       consideration                  the        facts         presented           to     the    court.                Her
    concern          about         the         basis         for      the        District           Court's        decision                is
    understandable                    in     view      of     a number of                 inappropriate                 remarks            in
    Judge Davis'              findings              of fact.          For example,                he stated            that      Tarena
    has "an alarming                   and tragic             history            of family          instability.                 At age
    three     she became the victim                            of a broken                home.       In her early                 years
    she resided              in various              places        with       her natural           mother,        half         sisters
    and brothers,                 and multiple               stepfathers."
    In      fact,        the        Family         Services            home study            report           prepared           by
    Evans states              that         Tarena's         mother and stepfather                         were divorced                 when
    Tarena was five,                       not three;          that           she had only           the one stepfather;
    and that           she is              still       in     contact            with       her     natural            father           even
    though        he and her                   mother         were        never         married.               No evidence                 of
    "alarming"             or "tragic"               events        or circumstances                  appears           anywhere            in
    the record.
    Judge         Davis           assigned           considerable                weight          to     the     fact           that
    Tarena's         supervising                   social     worker           in Dillon          declined,            in response
    to his        direct       question,               to give        an opinion             as to whether                continued
    custody        with       Tarena was in J.D.'s                            best      interest.              She said         "It's          a
    9
    hard      question             to     answer          because        I        do think         Tarena           has tried."
    Earlier       in her testimony,                        however,          she told         the court              that        Tarena
    had "very          much improved"                    in her parenting                  abilities,               and that        she
    felt      comfortable                leaving          the     children           in Tarena's               care.             In his
    findings           of     fact,           Judge       Davis      rendered              this        statement             as    "She
    reportedly              made some improvement                            in     her     parenting               skills"         and
    continued,              "While            her      parenting         skills            may have            improved,            her
    morals       did        not.          She again             became pregnant.                   .    .     . The putative
    father      is reportedly                    out of the state."
    These latter                comments contradict                      Tarena's        testimony,               in which
    she stated              that        the new baby's              father          was still            living         in Dillon
    and that          her relationship                     with    him was stable                  and happy.
    Apart         from         these          inappropriate               observations,                   however,         we
    conclude           that             the         District        Court's            decision               was      based         on
    substantial             credible            evidence,          and that          the court          did not abuse its
    discretion              in awarding              sole custody            to Tracy.            We require            only that
    the court          express            "the        essential       and determining                       facts     upon which
    its    conclusions               rest."            In re Marriage               of Ulland           (1991),         
    251 Mont. 160
    , 167, 
    823 P.2d 864
    , 869.                                Judge Davis met this                        requirement            when
    he wrote,          in a concluding                     comment, that:
    The court is being asked to place the child with a 22
    year old single mother with a sad record of abuse and
    neglect,  limited   resources and job skills,   two additional
    children    to care for and support,        and little      or no
    prospects    that the living   and parenting   situation      will
    improve.    . . . Comparing this bleak prospect         with the
    stable environment      of the father  in Fort Benton leaves
    the court with no alternative.
    Even if         Judge Davis                 did     exaggerate           the        "sad record               of    abuse
    and neglect,"                  the    record          demonstrates              that      Tarena          does have very
    10
    limited          resources               and job skills:                 that     she depends for                      most         of    her
    income on child                    support            from two men              other      than Tracy,                 one of whom
    lives          in Seattle:               and that        she did not complete                       high         school             or any
    other          program            that     would         qualify          her       for     employment                 at     a level
    adequate              to        support         her     without          the      public          assistance                  she now
    receives              in the        form of food stamps and a housing                                     subsidy.
    Tracy,             on the         other        hand,        has        a long-term,                   full         time         job
    paying          approximately                   $384 a week at              the time           of the hearing.                            His
    wife      was earning                    additional          income as a babysitter,                                   which         meant
    that      she was available                       to serve           as a full            time      caretaker                 for        J.D.
    The record             contains            ample evidence                that     Tracy and Christine                          possess
    adequate,              even superior                  parenting           skills.            Even Tarena                    testified
    that      Tracy            is    an "excellent               father,"            while       conflicting                    testimony
    was offered                 concerning            Tarena's           parenting            skills.
    It     is the function                      of the district               court        to resolve                 conflicts
    in testimony                    and evidence,            and to decide                  how much weight                     should         be
    assigned          to a given               witness        I testimony             or to a particular                          piece         of
    evidence.                  
    Ulland, 823 P.2d at 870
    .              We will           not     substitute                    our
    judgment              for        that      of     the     district              court       unless         it          has     clearly
    abused its                 discretion.             
    Otto, 800 P.2d at 708
    : 
    Ulland, 823 P.2d at 870
    .       Erroneous                findings           of fact       that        are not necessary                      to support
    the trial             court's            judgment        are not grounds                  for reversal.                     
    Ferouson, 805 P.2d at 1337
    .
    Although               the      court        displayed            a deplorable                insensitivity                       to
    issues           of        gender         bias        and    alternative                  lifestyles,                  substantial
    credible              evidence           does support              its      award of exclusive                          custody             of
    11
    J.D.     to    her     father,       based        on J.D.'s        best       interest.
    AFFIRMED.
    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.
    We concur:
    Chief     Justice
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    Chief      Justice         J.   A.     Turnage          specially            concurring:
    I concur         in   the     result          reached            by the    Court       in   this     Opinion.
    However,        I    do not           agree      with         all      of    the    statements          made     in    the
    opinion        attributed              to     comments                of    the     District          Judge.          Such
    statements           are    not       necessary          to         a resolution         of    this    case.
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Document Info

Docket Number: 92-244

Filed Date: 8/9/1993

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014