Lauren Nagel v. Joshua Nagel ( 2023 )


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  • May 5, 2023
    Supreme Court
    No. 2023-66-Appeal.
    (K 19-1687)
    Lauren Nagel              :
    v.                :
    Joshua Nagel.             :
    NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision
    before publication in the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers
    are requested to notify the Opinion Analyst, Supreme
    Court of Rhode Island, 250 Benefit Street, Providence,
    Rhode Island 02903, at Telephone (401) 222-3258 or
    Email opinionanalyst@courts.ri.gov, of any typographical
    or other formal errors in order that corrections may be
    made before the opinion is published.
    Supreme Court
    No. 2023-66-Appeal.
    (K 19-1687)
    Lauren Nagel                 :
    v.                     :
    Joshua Nagel.                :
    Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Robinson, Lynch Prata, and Long, JJ.
    OPINION
    Justice Long, for the Court. The defendant father, Joshua Nagel (father or
    defendant), appeals on an expedited basis from a January 25, 2023 decree of the
    Family Court in favor of the plaintiff mother, Lauren Nagel (mother or plaintiff).
    The Family Court’s decree granted the plaintiff’s motion for relief after final
    judgment and permitted the plaintiff to vaccinate the parties’ two minor children for
    COVID-19 consistent with the recommendation of the children’s pediatrician.1 This
    case came before the Supreme Court pursuant to an order directing the parties to
    appear and show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not be summarily
    decided. After considering the parties’ written and oral submissions and reviewing
    the record, we conclude that cause has not been shown and that we may decide this
    1
    Following the Family Court’s decree, on January 25, 2023, defendant filed an
    emergency motion for a stay pending appeal, which this Court granted.
    -1-
    case without further briefing or argument. For the reasons set forth in this opinion,
    we affirm the decree of the Family Court.
    Facts and Procedural History
    This emergency appeal arises out of the parties’ divorce proceedings in
    Family Court. On September 17, 2020, the Family Court entered a final judgment
    of divorce between the parties that (1) provides for joint legal custody of their two
    preadolescent daughters, requiring the parties to share in all major decisions
    regarding their children’s health, including elective medication choices; and (2)
    grants plaintiff primary physical placement of the children. Additionally, a marital
    settlement agreement was incorporated but not merged into the final judgment of
    divorce, “except for those provisions related to children custody, visitation and
    support.”2 The final judgment sets forth several detailed provisions governing the
    children’s custody and visitation, along with provisions specifying more granular
    aspects of their parenting relationship. With respect to the children’s medical
    treatment, the final judgment provides that “[n]either party shall unreasonably
    withhold his or her consent to medical treatment for the children or the
    administration of medication recommended by the pediatrician of the children.”
    2
    The provisions related to custody, visitation, and support of the minor children
    contained in the final judgment of divorce are identical to those enumerated in the
    parties’ marital settlement agreement.
    -2-
    On March 17, 2022, plaintiff filed a motion for relief after final judgment
    seeking (1) the Family Court’s permission to vaccinate both children for COVID-
    19, consistent with the recommendation of the children’s pediatrician; and (2) an
    award of full custody of the minor children, specifically with respect to final
    decision-making authority over their medical care.3          The defendant filed an
    opposition to plaintiff’s motion and a cross-motion to prevent the children’s
    vaccination; the Family Court thereafter ordered the parties to submit pretrial
    memoranda outlining their respective positions. At trial, the parties submitted
    deposition transcripts from Colleen Powers, M.D. (Dr. Powers), the children’s
    pediatrician, and Andrew Bostom, M.D. (Dr. Bostom), a medical doctor and
    epidemiologist whom defendant retained as an expert.
    A justice of the Family Court held an expedited bench trial on December 6,
    2022, during which she admitted twenty exhibits, including the deposition testimony
    from Drs. Powers and Bostom, and heard testimony from both parties. Based on the
    absence of any identified errors in the trial justice’s findings of fact, we confine our
    factual recitation to the trial justice’s decision and include additional facts in our
    discussion of the issues.
    3
    The plaintiff’s motion also included a prayer for relief that sought to enroll their
    children in counseling, a matter that is not before this Court.
    -3-
    After the trial concluded, the trial justice issued a thorough written decision
    finding that both parties chose Dr. Powers together and that neither party had
    objected to any previous recommendations. Based on these findings, the trial justice
    ultimately permitted plaintiff to follow Dr. Powers’s recommendation and vaccinate
    the children for COVID-19. The trial justice determined that defendant’s refusal to
    follow the advice of Dr. Powers and his opposition to his children’s receipt of the
    COVID-19 vaccine was not objectively unreasonable behavior, and therefore
    declined to hold him in contempt. In balancing the evidence before her, the trial
    justice highlighted the lack of uniformity of expert opinion regarding whether
    children should receive the COVID-19 vaccine and acknowledged the expertise of
    the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), the Centers for Disease Control (CDC),
    and the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons (AAPS).
    However, the trial justice rejected defendant’s argument that his vaccination
    preference should prevail based on the language of the final judgment. Further, the
    trial justice noted that the final judgment does not contain language directing a
    particular outcome in this matter or divesting the Family Court of the decision-
    making authority to resolve this dispute. Additionally, after consulting the factors
    outlined in Pettinato v. Pettinato, 
    582 A.2d 909
     (R.I. 1990), the trial justice rejected
    plaintiff’s request for full legal custody and final decision-making authority with
    respect to the children’s medical care.
    -4-
    After reviewing the evidence presented by the parties, the trial justice
    concluded that, under the totality of circumstances, it was in the children’s best
    interests to give plaintiff the decision-making authority over their COVID-19
    vaccination status and any future boosters. The trial justice further determined that
    plaintiff must continue to follow the recommendations of Dr. Powers and to provide
    updates to defendant on the development of their vaccination status. In reaching this
    decision, the trial justice relied on several factors such as the children’s primary
    physical placement with plaintiff; the fact that Dr. Powers serves as their first and
    only pediatrician; the fact that the parties have never disputed a previous
    recommendation made by Dr. Powers; and that one of the children suffers from
    allergies and, to a certain extent, defendant has downplayed their severity.
    The trial justice also credited the fact that Dr. Powers has personal experience
    with both children, along with her knowledge of their medical history in addition to
    her general experience and expertise surrounding vaccinations. She further noted
    that Dr. Powers’s recommendations are consistent with guidance provided by the
    AAP and the CDC. Finally, the trial justice noted that neither child has an underlying
    health condition that would contradict the vaccination, one child has an increased
    risk of respiratory compromise due to her asthma, and neither child has had an
    adverse reaction to any prior vaccine.
    -5-
    With respect to Dr. Bostom, the trial justice noted that he identified two
    serious but rare adverse effects that could result from the COVID-19 vaccination
    and highlighted the fact that the AAPS recommended that the CDC refrain from
    adding this vaccine to the childhood immunization schedule. The trial justice also
    noted that Dr. Bostom possesses a limited knowledge of the children in this case;
    that he has never met or treated either child, or reviewed their medical records; and
    that he provided general expert testimony related to COVID-19. She further noted
    that he too acknowledges the authority of the CDC and the AAP and that he concedes
    that defendant’s specified concerns regarding serious side effects are extremely rare
    and unlikely to affect the children because of their age and sex. Finally, the trial
    justice noted that, in the event Dr. Powers changes her recommendation when they
    are eligible for a booster shot, plaintiff cannot unilaterally allow the children to
    receive the booster without defendant’s consent or court approval.
    On January 25, 2023, the Family Court entered a decision and judgment. The
    defendant filed a timely notice of appeal and this Court ordered an expedited briefing
    and hearing schedule.
    Standard of Review
    This Court will affirm the Family Court justice’s award concerning custody
    and the best interests of the child unless the trial justice’s factual findings overlooked
    or misconceived material evidence or were otherwise clearly wrong. Leon v.
    -6-
    Krikorian, 
    271 A.3d 985
    , 989 (R.I. 2022). “Consequently, unless it is shown that
    the trial justice either improperly exercised his or her discretion or that there was an
    abuse thereof, this Court will not disturb the trial justice’s findings.” Vieira v.
    Hussein-Vieira, 
    150 A.3d 611
    , 615 (R.I. 2016) (quoting Palin v. Palin, 
    41 A.3d 248
    ,
    253 (R.I. 2012)). When reviewing questions of law in Family Court appeals, this
    Court employs a de novo standard of review. Tsonos v. Tsonos, 
    222 A.3d 927
    , 932
    (R.I. 2019).
    Discussion
    The defendant specifies two errors contained in the Family Court’s decision
    and requests that this Court continue to stay the decision pending full briefing. 4 First,
    defendant argues that the trial justice erred in conducting a best-interests-of-the-child
    analysis after finding that he acted reasonably in accordance with the final decree.
    Second, defendant asserts that the trial justice failed to articulate and apply the
    Pettinato factors in reaching her decision, which amounted to a change in custody.
    We disagree with both assertions of error on the part of the trial justice.
    General Laws 1956 § 8-10-3 establishes the Rhode Island Family Court and
    serves as its original grant of jurisdiction. Section 8-10-3(a) grants the judicial
    4
    Based on our resolution of this matter without additional briefing, defendant’s
    request for a further stay is moot and we decline to reach defendant’s arguments
    related to this request.
    -7-
    officers of the Family Court the authority to hear and determine all motions
    concerning equitable matters arising out of the family relationship. See § 8-10-3(a).
    The defendant first argues before this Court that, because the trial justice
    determined that his opposition to the vaccine was reasonable, 5 she should have
    instantaneously ruled in his favor and that her failure to do so effectively “rewrote”
    the final judgment. The defendant is mistaken.
    The relevant terms of the final judgment mandate that both parties will share
    in all major decisions affecting the health of their children, including the decisions
    concerning elective medical choices. With respect to disagreements over their
    children’s medical care, the final judgment provides that “[n]either party shall
    unreasonably withhold his or her consent to medical treatment for the children or the
    administration of medication recommended by the pediatrician of the children.”
    Contrary to defendant’s argument that an objecting parent may “veto” a decision
    regarding their children’s medical treatment, we conclude that neither the marital
    settlement agreement nor the final judgment requires the Family Court to defer to,
    and automatically rule in favor of, an objecting party.
    Rather, both parties agreed, and the Family Court ordered, that they would
    share joint legal custody of their children, which implies that the parties and the court
    5
    We briefly wish to highlight the inaccuracy of defendant’s statement. At no point
    in the decision did the trial justice find that defendant acted reasonably. Instead, she
    characterized defendant’s behavior as not unreasonable.
    -8-
    acknowledged “the value of both parents in the physical, emotional, educational, and
    spiritual development of [the] children * * * [and] presumes that both parents will
    act and make decisions in the best interests of [the] children’s welfare.” Dupré v.
    Dupré, 
    857 A.2d 242
    , 262 (R.I. 2004). However, when both parents are at an
    impasse, including times when neither acts unreasonably, their recourse is to return
    to the Family Court, which has an obligation to decide and resolve the stalemate by
    considering the best interests of the children. See Pacheco v. Bedford, 
    787 A.2d 1210
    , 1213 (R.I. 2002) (“[T]he paramount consideration in cases involving visitation
    rights or custody disputes is the best interests of the child * * *.”) (quoting Burrows
    v. Brady, 
    605 A.2d 1312
    , 1315 (R.I. 1992)).
    Our careful examination of the record indicates that the trial justice properly
    and thoroughly considered the parties’ cross-motions in support of their respective
    positions. Most notably, the trial justice permitted each party to submit expert
    testimony that provided a deep insight into Dr. Powers’s decision to recommend that
    the children receive the COVID-19 vaccination, as well as a more empirical
    perspective from Dr. Bostom related to certain risks associated with the vaccination
    and its efficacy in children. The trial justice found, at the outset, that this is the first
    medical decision causing a disagreement between the parties and that they have
    agreed on, and followed, Dr. Powers’s recommendations regarding all other medical
    decisions until now. Additionally, the trial justice found that the parties chose Dr.
    -9-
    Powers as their children’s pediatrician together and that she has served in this role
    since their births. The trial justice further found that both children have received all
    prior recommended vaccinations and that neither child possesses an underlying
    health concern warranting abstention from the COVID-19 vaccine. Moreover, the
    trial justice found that one of the children has asthma and that this health condition
    increases her risk of respiratory illness.
    We cannot conclude that the trial justice was clearly wrong to accept that Dr.
    Powers’s recommendation is well grounded in her professional experience as well
    as the guidance provided by the AAP and the CDC. Furthermore, our review of the
    record satisfies this Court that the trial justice did not improperly exercise her
    discretion in determining that it is in the best interests of these children to give
    plaintiff the decision-making authority to follow the advice of Dr. Powers and to
    receive the COVID-19 vaccine.
    After reviewing the testimony, exhibits, and arguments presented by the
    parties, the trial justice thoroughly outlined her analysis in a well-reasoned decision.
    Specifically, she declined to find that defendant had violated the final judgment
    based on her determination that his conduct was not unreasonable. Further, she
    correctly noted that the final judgment fails to mandate an outcome for this dispute
    and properly analyzed the best interests of the children in her resolution. In her
    assessment of the children’s best interests, she noted her reliance on Dr. Powers’s
    - 10 -
    expertise and prior knowledge of the children while declining to rely on the
    conclusions reached by Dr. Bostom’s more general knowledge regarding
    vaccinations. Further, she acknowledged Dr. Bostom’s lack of experience treating
    the children involved in this proceeding.
    Nevertheless, defendant asserts that the Family Court’s decision erroneously
    modified the parties’ existing custody order. Specifically, defendant asserts that the
    trial justice failed to find the existence of changed circumstances, and that it is only
    after making such a finding that she could have considered the best interests of the
    children. However, it is clear that after reviewing the totality of the evidence, the
    trial justice determined that the evidence did not support a change in custody for all
    major decisions affecting the children’s health, education, and welfare. As a result,
    the trial justice limited her decision to allowing plaintiff to comply with the medical
    recommendations of the children’s pediatrician relative to the COVID-19
    vaccination. There was no change in custody or modification of the final decree. In
    fact, the trial justice denied plaintiff’s request for a modification and explicitly
    retained the preexisting custody arrangement. Therefore, we reject defendant’s
    argument that the trial justice changed the parties’ custody arrangement or modified
    the final decree. The parents could not agree on a medical decision for their minor
    children; therefore, the decision was made for them by the Family Court pursuant to
    the authority vested therein by § 8-10-3.
    - 11 -
    Regarding defendant’s assertion that the trial justice failed to articulate and
    apply the factors contained in our best-interests-of-the-child standard, this Court
    concludes that the Family Court engaged in a proper application of the eight-factor
    test outlined in Pettinato v. Pettinato, 
    582 A.2d 909
     (R.I. 1990). 6 See Pettinato, 
    582 A.2d at 913-14
    . At a minimum, the trial justice fairly considered the wishes of both
    parents, the interaction and interrelationship of the children and their parents with
    respect to this dispute, the children’s health, and the fitness of each parent regarding
    this medical decision.
    Specifically, the record reveals that the trial justice heavily weighed evidence
    regarding the children’s health.       The trial justice thoroughly considered the
    testimony and recommendations from both Dr. Powers and Dr. Bostom as well as
    the guidance from the AAP and the CDC recommending that the children receive
    the COVID-19 vaccination in deciding to allow plaintiff to follow Dr. Powers’s
    recommendation. The trial justice’s reliance on this factor is especially appropriate
    6
    The defendant’s statement filed pursuant to Article I, Rule 12A of the Supreme
    Court Rules of Appellate Procedure asserts that the trial justice failed to articulate
    how the “8 factors in the best interest of the child standard” warrant a change in
    custody providing plaintiff with sole decision-making authority. However,
    defendant fails to develop this argument beyond this initial statement. This Court
    will not disturb a trial justice’s factual findings absent an improper exercise of that
    justice’s discretion. Vieira v. Hussein-Vieira, 
    150 A.3d 611
    , 615 (R.I. 2016). Given
    defendant’s lack of meaningful attention to this issue, it is extremely difficult, if not
    impossible, for this Court to conclude that defendant met his burden in
    demonstrating that an abuse occurred here. See Jensen v. Phillips Screw Company,
    
    546 F.3d 59
    , 64 (1st Cir. 2008).
    - 12 -
    because the dispute before her concerned the parents’ decision-making regarding
    their children’s health and a decision to receive elective medication. Moreover, the
    record reveals that the trial justice clearly balanced the medical evidence in favor of
    and against vaccination. We note, for example, the fact that the trial justice was
    unable to conclude that defendant acted unreasonably. This clearly demonstrates
    that the trial justice afforded great weight to, and considered, the wishes and fitness
    of each parent regarding this decision. Therefore, this Court finds ample evidence
    supporting the trial justice’s consideration of the relevant factors. This is true even
    though the trial justice did not explicitly address each factor in her decision. See
    Andreozzi v. Andreozzi, 
    813 A.2d 78
    , 83 (R.I. 2003) (explaining that this Court does
    not require a trial justice to refer to the Pettinato factors when making a custody
    determination).
    Finally, the trial justice appropriately considered, yet denied, plaintiff’s
    request for full custody and final decision-making authority over the children’s
    medical care and treatment. The trial justice noted that this dispute between the
    parties is the first of its kind for these parties and also acknowledged the absence of
    evidence needed for the court to upset the existing joint legal custody arrangement.
    Based on the trial justice’s measured and comprehensive resolution of this issue, we
    conclude that the trial justice did not abuse her discretion in evaluating the evidence
    before her relative to the parties’ respective requests for relief after final judgment.
    - 13 -
    While this Court recognizes the personalized and often sensitive nature
    inherent in making medical decisions for an individual’s child, we conclude that the
    trial justice’s factual findings did not overlook or misconceive any aspect of this
    matter, nor were they otherwise clearly wrong. See Leon, 271 A.3d at 989.
    Accordingly, we affirm the Family Court justice’s decision permitting plaintiff to
    follow the advice of Dr. Powers and vaccinate the parties’ children for COVID-19.
    Conclusion
    Based on the foregoing, we affirm the decree appealed from, vacate our stay
    of the Family Court judgment, and remand the record in this matter to the Family
    Court.
    - 14 -
    STATE OF RHODE ISLAND
    SUPREME COURT – CLERK’S OFFICE
    Licht Judicial Complex
    250 Benefit Street
    Providence, RI 02903
    OPINION COVER SHEET
    Title of Case                            Lauren Nagel v. Joshua Nagel.
    No. 2023-66-Appeal.
    Case Number
    (K 19-1687)
    Date Opinion Filed                       May 5, 2023
    Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Robinson, Lynch Prata, and
    Justices
    Long, JJ.
    Written By                               Associate Justice Melissa A. Long
    Source of Appeal                         Kent County Family Court
    Judicial Officer from Lower Court        Associate Justice Sandra Lanni
    For Plaintiff:
    Jesse Nason, Esq.
    Attorney(s) on Appeal
    For Defendant:
    Gregory Piccirilli, Esq.
    SU-CMS-02A (revised November 2022)