Sandra Costa v. Paulo A. Costa , 440 N.J. Super. 1 ( 2015 )


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  •                    NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-2078-13T4
    SANDRA COSTA,                           APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                     January 12, 2015
    v.                                        APPELLATE DIVISION
    PAULO A. COSTA,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    _________________________________
    Submitted December 15, 2014 – Decided January 12, 2015
    Before Judges Sabatino, Guadagno and Leone.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New
    Jersey, Chancery Division, Family Part,
    Hudson County, Docket No. FM-09-1139-06.
    Mignone Lazaro Law Firm, LLC, attorneys for
    appellant (Anita Mignone-Lazaro, of counsel
    and on the brief).
    Paulo André da Silva Costa, respondent pro
    se.
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    LEONE, J.A.D.
    Plaintiff Sandra Costa appeals the denial of her motion to
    terminate defendant Paulo A. Costa's joint legal custody over
    their   children.        Plaintiff   sought     termination      due   to
    difficulties in obtaining the appropriate forms to allow the
    children to visit her parents in Brazil.              We affirm.
    I.
    The parties were married in 1994.                They had two children in
    1997 and 2000.        In 2006, they received a judgment of divorce.
    In their Property Settlement Agreement (PSA), the parties agreed
    they would share joint legal custody of the children.                   Plaintiff
    received    primary    residential     custody,      and    defendant    received
    visitation rights.        The parties agreed to consult one another
    regarding    education,    health,     welfare,       and   other   matters     of
    similar importance affecting the children.
    In 2009, defendant moved to the city of Tremembé, in the
    State of São Paulo, Brazil.          Defendant maintains telephonic and
    electronic contact with the children, but he no longer exercises
    visitation with them.
    In 2013, plaintiff filed a motion for sole legal custody.
    She alleged the following.        In order to travel abroad with the
    children, she needed defendant to provide a notarized consent
    form and authorization to renew their passports.                    As the form
    was in English, defendant had to obtain notarization from a
    certified translator in Brazil, "a process which is difficult
    and costly."     Defendant told plaintiff he was unable to obtain
    notarization    because     of   the       limited    availability      of    such
    2                                 A-2078-13T4
    notaries       in       his   city.           Defendant       returned    the      paperwork
    incomplete.         In 2012, plaintiff traveled to Brazil, but was not
    able     to       obtain       the       consent       form      "due     to      procedural
    difficulties."            Plaintiff's motion sought "sole legal custody as
    the process of obtaining travel authorization from [d]efendant
    is    overly      burdensome       and    has    placed    unreasonable          limitations
    [on] the minor children's ability to travel and to renew their
    travel documentation."
    Defendant's response to the motion alleged as follows.                                He
    had    given       plaintiff       a    legal    travel        authorization       to    allow
    plaintiff to renew the children's passports before he moved to
    Brazil in 2009, and again when plaintiff traveled to Brazil in
    2012.     When she told him the 2012 authorization was not accepted
    because      it     was    improperly         filled    out,    he    agreed     to   provide
    another authorization.                 However, he was concerned that the only
    certified notary in his city would again prepare it improperly.
    Thus,     in      his     response       to    the     motion,       defendant     expressly
    "agree[d] that this [c]ourt give permanent permission to the
    [p]laintiff to renew the passports of [the children] and for
    them    to        travel      to     where      they    want      without      any      future
    authorization from me."
    3                                     A-2078-13T4
    Defendant        asked   to    retain     joint   legal      custody   of    the
    children to continue to be involved in decisions for their best
    interests.      He stated that he had regular conversations with the
    children by telephone and Facebook, and that he tried discussing
    matters with plaintiff.
    On September 18, 2013, Presiding Judge Maureen P. Sogluizzo
    considered and denied plaintiff's motion on the papers.                           The
    court ruled that plaintiff had not met her burden to show a
    change    of   circumstances,       or   to    demonstrate     that   joint    legal
    custody     was   not    in   the     best     interests     of    the   children.
    Plaintiff appeals.
    II.
    Modification of an existing child custody order is a "'two-
    step process.'"        R.K. v. F.K., 
    437 N.J. Super. 58
    , 62 (App. Div.
    2014) (quoting Crews v. Crews, 
    164 N.J. 11
    , 28 (2000)).                       First,
    a   party      must   show    "a    change     of   circumstances        warranting
    modification" of the custodial arrangements.                 
    Id. at 63
     (quoting
    Beck v. Beck, 
    86 N.J. 480
    , 496 n.8 (1981)).                  If the party makes
    that showing, the party is "'entitled to a plenary hearing as to
    disputed material facts regarding the child's best interests,
    and whether those best interests are served by modification of
    the existing custody order.'"            Id. at 62-63 (citation omitted).
    4                                 A-2078-13T4
    Here, the trial court ruled that plaintiff failed to "'meet
    the    threshold         standard       of     changed      circumstances'"           and    thus
    denied the motion without a plenary hearing.                           Id. at 62 (quoting
    J.B. v. W.B., 
    215 N.J. 305
    , 327 (2013)).                               Such a denial is
    reviewed          for    abuse    of     discretion,          with     deference       to    the
    expertise of Family Part judges.                      Hand v. Hand, 
    391 N.J. Super. 102
    , 111-12 (App. Div. 2007) (citing Cesare v. Cesare, 
    154 N.J. 394
    , 413 (1998)).           We must hew to that standard of review.
    The trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying
    plaintiff's motion without a plenary hearing.                            Plaintiff failed
    to show a change of circumstances warranting modification from
    joint       to    sole   legal     custody.           The    parties    have        encountered
    regrettable difficulties in obtaining a valid authorization to
    allow the children to renew their passports and to travel out of
    the United States.               However, defendant has now expressly agreed
    in    his    motion      response       that    the       family    court     may    issue    the
    requisite authorizations by court order.
    Such an order should be sufficient to solve the passport
    difficulties.              Normally,           both       parents      must     execute       an
    application for issuance or renewal of a passport for a minor
    under       age    sixteen.        
    22 C.F.R. § 51.28
    (a)(2),        (a)(3)(ii)(G),
    (c)(2)       (2014).        However,         "[a]     passport       application       may    be
    executed on behalf of a minor under age 16 by only one parent or
    5                                     A-2078-13T4
    legal guardian if such person provides" an order of a court of
    competent    jurisdiction        "specifically        authorizing      the    applying
    parent or legal guardian to obtain a passport for the minor,
    regardless       of     custodial        arrangements;            or    specifically
    authorizing the travel of the minor with the applying parent or
    legal guardian."        
    22 C.F.R. § 51.28
    (a)(3)(ii)(E), (c)(3); see,
    e.g., Patrawke v. Liebes, 
    285 P.3d 268
    , 271-72 n.10 (Alaska
    2012); Ansell v. Ansell, 
    759 S.E.2d 916
    , 918-19 n.3 (Ga. Ct.
    App.), cert. denied, __ S.E.2d __ (Ga. 2014).
    Such an order, based on defendant's agreement, should also
    protect   plaintiff       from   any    accusation         that    simply    traveling
    abroad    with    the   children       constitutes         an     interference    with
    custody, N.J.S.A. 2C:13-4(c)(2), child kidnapping, 
    18 U.S.C.A. § 1204
    (c)(1), or child abduction, 
    22 U.S.C.A. § 9101
    (2); see Hague
    Convention       on   the    Civil      Aspects       of     International       Child
    Abduction, Art. 3(a).            In any event, though the United States
    Customs and Border Protection website recommends that a child
    traveling with one parent have a letter, preferably notarized,
    signed by the other parent acknowledging that the other parent
    has given permission for the child to travel out of the country,
    the   United     States     "does      not       require   this     documentation."1
    1
    U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Children-Child traveling
    with one parent or someone who is not a parent or legal guardian
    (continued)
    6                                A-2078-13T4
    Similarly, Brazil does not require such documentation for minor
    citizens of the United States, although the United States State
    Department recommends it.2
    Plaintiff's motion did not request such an order.                     However,
    nothing in the trial court's order or in our decision precludes
    plaintiff from moving for and obtaining such an order.
    Plaintiff asserts a parent's relocation to another country
    itself constitutes a change of circumstances warranting a change
    of custody.     Such relocation normally constitutes a change of
    circumstances     for     physical           custody,      for    which      "[t]he
    geographical    proximity       of   the     two    [parents']     homes    is    an
    important   factor."      Beck,      
    supra,
        
    86 N.J. at 500
    .      However,
    plaintiff does not seek to change physical custody, presumably
    because she has full physical custody as a matter of fact, if
    not law.
    By    contrast,    joint    legal       custody    does     not    necessarily
    require the parents to be in close physical proximity.                        Legal
    custody is "the legal authority and responsibility for making
    (continued)
    or a group, https://help.cbp.gov/app/answers/detail/a_id/268/kw/
    travelling%20children%20of%20divorced%20parents/session/L3RpbWUv
    MTQxOTk2OTE0NC9zaWQvMmE4djNkYm0%3D/suggested/1   (last    updated
    July 7, 2014).
    2
    U.S. Dep't of State, U.S. Passports & International Travel,
    Brazil,        http://travel.state.gov/content/passports/english/
    country/brazil.html (last updated Oct. 14, 2014).
    7                                 A-2078-13T4
    'major' decisions regarding the child's welfare," not "'minor'
    day-to-day decisions."              
    Id. at 487
    .         Joint legal custody "seeks
    to maintain [the] attachments [between parents and child] by
    permitting both parents to remain decision-makers in the lives
    of their children."             
    Ibid.
            Even if physical custody is not
    possible    due    to    geographic       separation,        modern      telephonic     and
    electronic    communications             can       enable    effective       joint     legal
    custody and "preserve the decision-making role of both parents."
    
    Id. at 500
    .
    Plaintiff's appellate brief asserts that since relocating
    to Brazil, defendant has failed to communicate with plaintiff in
    any   meaningful        way    regarding       decisions      as   to    the   children's
    health,    safety,       and    education.           Plaintiff     also      asserts    that
    telephonic communications are difficult and sporadic, and that
    defendant     mostly           ignores         her     attempts         to     communicate
    electronically.         She asserts that she is largely unable to reach
    defendant to make such decisions in a reasonable period of time,
    and that she might be unable to make major decisions in an
    emergency.        Thus, she asserts joint legal custody imposes an
    unreasonable burden on her and emotional harm on the children.
    However,      none       of    those         factual   assertions        appear     in
    plaintiff's motion certification, which focused on her need to
    obtain travel authorization from defendant.                         Plaintiff cannot
    8                                  A-2078-13T4
    ask us to overturn the trial court's ruling based on factual
    assertions she never presented to that court, particularly as
    those assertions are contested by defendant.
    Affirmed.
    9                      A-2078-13T4
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A-2078-13T4

Citation Numbers: 440 N.J. Super. 1, 111 A.3d 97

Filed Date: 1/12/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021