Andrea Catherine Williams Key v. James Darren Key, II ( 2004 )


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  •                                COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Elder, Clements and Senior Judge Overton
    Argued at Chesapeake, Virginia
    ANDREA CATHERINE WILLIAMS KEY
    MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
    v.     Record No. 1079-04-1                                       JUDGE LARRY G. ELDER
    DECEMBER 14, 2004
    JAMES DARREN KEY, II
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ISLE OF WIGHT COUNTY
    Rodham T. Delk, Jr., Judge
    Mary Elizabeth Davis (Hofheimer/Ferrebee, P.C., on brief), for
    appellant.
    Archer L. Jones, II (Jones & Jones, P.C., on brief), for appellee.
    Andrea Catherine Williams Key (mother) appeals from a decision of the Circuit Court of
    Isle of Wight County holding that it had continuing jurisdiction to consider the issue of custody
    of the two children born of her marriage to James Darren Key, II, (father) and awarding father
    custody. Mother contends the court lost jurisdiction after awarding custody of the children to her
    because the court’s handwritten custody order was a final order, all parties left the state of
    Virginia, and Virginia’s Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (UCCJEA)
    did not thereafter authorize it to exercise jurisdiction. Father contends this Court cannot consider
    mother’s appeal because she has failed to present a sufficient record to permit review. He also
    opposes the appeal on the merits and seeks an award of attorney’s fees.
    We hold the trial court’s April 22, 2003 order awarding custody to mother was a final
    order and that the court lacked authority based solely on that order to exercise continuing
    *
    Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    jurisdiction over the child custody matter. We reverse and remand to the trial court to take
    evidence relevant to the issue of father’s residence and any other basis upon which subject matter
    jurisdiction may rest. Because we reverse, we deny father’s request for an award of attorney’s
    fees.
    I.
    A.
    FINALITY OF HANDWRITTEN ORDER
    Mother contends the trial court’s order of April 22, 2003, although handwritten, was a
    final order within the meaning of Rule 1:1 and that, absent a statutory basis for the renewed
    exercise of jurisdiction over custody and visitation, the court lost jurisdiction to modify the April
    22, 2003 order following expiration of 21 days from the date of its entry. We agree.
    As we noted in Vokes v. Vokes, 
    28 Va. App. 349
    , 
    504 S.E.2d 865
     (1998),
    Under Rule 1:1, a trial court is divested of jurisdiction over a
    matter twenty-one days after the entry of a final order unless
    within the twenty-one-day period it enters an order suspending or
    vacating the final order.
    “Neither the filing of post-trial or post-judgment
    motions, nor the court’s taking such motions under
    consideration, nor the pendency of such motions on
    the twenty-first day after final judgment is sufficient
    to toll or extend the running of the 21-day period
    prescribed by Rule 1:1 . . . .”
    D’Alessandro[ v. Commonwealth], 15 Va. App. [163,] 166, 423
    S.E.2d [199,] 201 [(1992)] (quoting [Sch. Bd. v.] Caudill Rowlett
    Scott, Inc., 237 Va. [550,] 556, 379 S.E.2d [319,] 323 [(1989)]).
    Once the twenty-one-day period of Rule 1:1 has expired without an
    intervening order tolling the running of the time period, every
    action taken by a court thereafter to alter or vacate the final order is
    a nullity unless one of the limited exceptions to the preclusive
    effect of Rule 1:1 applies.
    Id. at 357-38, 504 S.E.2d at 869 (citation omitted).
    -2-
    In Vokes, the trial court ruled from the bench that Mr. Vokes would receive custody of
    the parties’ two sons and later, on July 3, 1997, entered an order reflecting its ruling. Id. at 353,
    504 S.E.2d at 867. By the time the date for the hearing on the entry of the order arrived,
    Mrs. Vokes had filed a motion for reconsideration and asked the court to delay entering the order
    “‘so that [Mrs. Vokes’s] appeal time doesn’t start running.’” Id. “In an apparent attempt to
    satisfy both parties’ requests, the trial court amended the final paragraph of the order.” Id. at
    353-54, 504 S.E.2d at 867. Instead of providing that “this cause shall remain on the docket of
    this Court for monitoring the visitation,” the court changed the language to read that “this cause
    shall remain on the docket of this Court for further hearing.” Id. at 354, 504 S.E.2d at 867-68
    (emphases added). The court “emphasized that it would not rehear the case” at the hearing on
    mother’s motion for reconsideration, and following that hearing on August 8, 1997, it denied
    Mrs. Vokes’s motion for reconsideration and ordered her to pay Mr. Vokes’s attorney’s fees. Id.
    It entered an order reflecting those rulings on October 20, 1997. Id. On November 12, 1997,
    Mrs. Vokes “filed her first and only notice of appeal of any of the orders of the trial court.” Id.
    We noted that “[a] court order is final if it ‘“disposes of the whole subject, gives all the
    relief that was contemplated, provides with reasonable completeness for giving effect to the
    [ruling], and leaves nothing to be done in the cause save to superintend ministerially the
    execution of the decree.”’” Id. at 355, 504 S.E.2d at 868 (quoting Street v. Street, 
    24 Va. App. 14
    , 19, 
    480 S.E.2d 118
    , 121 (1997) (quoting Richardson v. Gardner, 
    128 Va. 676
    , 683, 
    105 S.E. 225
    , 227 (1920))). Applying these principles, we held that the trial court’s order of July 3, 1997
    granting Mr. Vokes’s motion to transfer custody “was ‘final’ because it disposed of the entire
    subject matter raised in father’s motion and granted all of the relief contemplated.” Id. at 356,
    504 S.E.2d at 868. We found the trial court’s amending of the order to attempt to prevent the
    appeal period from running was insufficient because the order “contained no language stating
    -3-
    that the trial court either modified or vacated the order or suspended its execution.” Id. at 357,
    504 S.E.2d at 869.
    Similarly here, on April 22, 2003, the trial court entered an order resolving all child
    custody, visitation, and other disputed issues between the parties. The court gave no indication
    that the order was “modified” or “vacated” or that its “execution” was “suspended.” Id. The
    trial court merely directed the clerk, via a post-it note affixed to the handwritten order, “NOT
    [TO] RECORD THIS ORDER,” indicating “A TYPEWRITTEN ORDER WILL BE
    SUBSTITUTED.”1 (Emphasis added). The trial court indicated in subsequent argument that the
    purpose for this instruction was that “nobody can read [a handwritten order] if it ever is
    [photographed]. It becomes an unreadable order in the order book.” Further, despite the court’s
    instruction to the clerk not to record the order, father and the trial court proceeded as if the
    custody and visitation provisions of the order were in full force and effect as of April 22, 2003.
    Although mother did not comply with the order’s visitation provisions, she has never taken the
    position that the handwritten order was not effective as of its entry on April 22, 2003.
    Following the court’s entry of the handwritten order on April 22, 2003 the only thing
    remaining to be done was to substitute a typewritten order so that the substance of the court’s
    ruling regarding custody and visitation could be spread in the order book in a more formal and
    readable fashion, a purely ministerial act. Thus, the April 22, 2003 order was a final order in that
    it “‘“dispose[d] of the whole subject, [gave] all the relief that was contemplated, provide[d] with
    reasonable completeness for giving effect to the [ruling], and [left] nothing to be done in the
    cause save to superintend ministerially the execution of the decree.”’” Id. at 355, 504 S.E.2d at
    1
    The factual findings the court made in its September 20, 2003 order were incorrect to
    the extent the court found it “directed that the Order not be entered by the Clerk until a
    typewritten Order could be presented.” (Emphasis added). The trial judge signed the order
    beneath the handwritten notation, “Entered 22 April 2003,” and ordered merely that the clerk
    “not record this order.” (Emphasis added).
    -4-
    868. The fact that mother still had counsel of record in these proceedings, to whom husband
    provided copies of his subsequent motions to modify custody, did nothing to provide the court
    with jurisdiction for purposes of a separate, new modification proceeding.
    B.
    JURISDICTION TO MODIFY CUSTODY ORDER
    Because the court lost jurisdiction of the initial custody and visitation determination
    following expiration of 21 days from the date of entry of the April 22, 2003 order, it lacked the
    power to revisit the issue unless it again obtained, under the UCCJEA, jurisdiction to modify the
    terms of the initial custody and visitation order.
    Under settled law, the divorce court generally has continuing jurisdiction to revise or alter
    its decree concerning the custody and maintenance of minor children. See Code § 20-108; Lutes
    v. Alexander, 
    14 Va. App. 1075
    , 1083, 
    421 S.E.2d 857
    , 862 (1992). “The court’s authority to
    alter a previous decree and enter a new decree ‘as the circumstances of the parents and the
    benefit of the children may require’ is unaffected by the court’s prior removal of the case from
    its active docket. See Code § 20-108.” Scott v. Rutherfoord, 
    30 Va. App. 176
    , 182, 
    516 S.E.2d 225
    , 228 (1999).
    However, when the children and one or both parents no longer live in the state, the
    court’s jurisdiction to modify custody and visitation orders may be affected. In order to “avoid
    jurisdictional competition and conflict with courts of other states in matters of child custody and
    to promote cooperation with courts of other states so that a custody decree [or modification
    thereof] is rendered in a state which can best decide the issue in the interest of the child,”
    Middleton v. Middleton, 
    227 Va. 82
    , 93, 
    314 S.E.2d 362
    , 367 (1984), Virginia adopted a form of
    the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Act (UCCJA). The UCCJA has now been superseded
    by the UCCJEA, a form of which has also been adopted in Virginia.
    -5-
    Virginia courts interpreted the UCCJA to provide that ‘“When the courts of more than
    one state have jurisdiction . . . , priority in time determines which court will proceed with the
    action”’ unless the court with priority determines under ‘“the inconvenient forum principle of
    [the Act]”’ that the courts of another state are better suited to resolve the dispute. Scott, 30
    Va. App. at 186, 516 S.E.2d at 230 (quoting UCCJA § 6, 9 U.L.A. 219, 220 cmt. (1988)); see
    Code § 20-146.13 off. cmt. (stating that under UCCJA, “[c]ontinuing jurisdiction was not
    specifically addressed” and that “[i]ts absence caused considerable confusion”). Thus, Virginia
    law provided that, once a Virginia court acquired jurisdiction over a custody or visitation matter,
    it retained jurisdiction to modify custody or visitation unless it expressly relinquished jurisdiction
    to another state. See id.
    The UCCJEA, as adopted in Virginia, changes this procedure. See Code § 20-146.13.
    Under the UCCJEA, a Virginia court does not retain exclusive jurisdiction to modify a custody
    or visitation order simply because it entered the original order determining custody or visitation.
    See id. Rather, pursuant to Code § 20-146.13, a court retains “exclusive, continuing jurisdiction”
    only under certain conditions:
    A. Except as otherwise provided in § 20-146.15, a court of
    this Commonwealth that has made a child custody determination
    consistent with § 20-146.12 or § 20-146.14 has exclusive,
    continuing jurisdiction as long as the child, the child’s parents, or
    any person acting as a parent continue to live in this
    Commonwealth.
    Once lost, “[e]xclusive, continuing jurisdiction is not reestablished if, after the child [and] the
    parents . . . leave the State, the non-custodial parent returns” “to live in this Commonwealth.”
    Code § 20-146.13 off. cmt. 2. If a court that has made a child custody determination does not
    have exclusive, continuing jurisdiction under Code § 20-146.13(A), it may modify that
    determination “only if it has jurisdiction to make an initial [custody or visitation] determination
    under § 20-146.12.” Code § 20-146.13(B).
    -6-
    Here, it is undisputed that the trial court had jurisdiction pursuant to Code § 20-146.12,
    “Initial child custody jurisdiction,” to enter the April 22, 2003 order awarding custody to mother
    pursuant to the parties’ agreement. At the time those proceedings were initiated both parties and
    their children lived in Virginia and had resided in the state since at least the spring of 2001. It
    remains to be determined whether Virginia’s jurisdiction was exclusive and continuing.
    Code § 20-146.15, referenced in Code § 20-146.13(A) as a potential basis for
    jurisdiction, is inapplicable. That code section deals with temporary emergency jurisdiction in
    cases in which, inter alia, “the child is present in this Commonwealth.” Code § 20-146.15(A).
    Here, it is undisputed that the parties’ children were in Maryland, and Code § 20-146.15 does not
    apply.
    Thus, the trial court has “exclusive, continuing jurisdiction” if “the child, the child’s
    parents, or any person acting as a parent continue[d] to live in this Commonwealth.” Code
    § 20-146.13(A). It is undisputed that neither the children nor their mother continued to “live” in
    the Commonwealth. The trial court expressly reserved ruling on the issue of whether father
    continued to “live” in the Commonwealth despite being stationed in North Carolina.
    Assuming for the moment, without deciding, that the trial court lacked exclusive,
    continuing jurisdiction under subsection (A), subsection (B) authorized it to modify the initial
    custody determination “only if it ha[d] jurisdiction to make an initial determination under
    § 20-146.12.” Code § 20-146.13(B).
    Code § 20-146.12 provides in relevant part as follows:
    A. Except as otherwise provided in § 20-146.15, a court of
    this Commonwealth has jurisdiction to make an initial child
    custody determination only if:
    1. This Commonwealth is the home state of the child on
    the date of the commencement of the proceeding, or was the home
    state of the child within six months before the commencement of
    the proceeding and the child is absent from this Commonwealth
    -7-
    but a parent or person acting as a parent continues to live in this
    Commonwealth;
    2. A court of another state does not have jurisdiction under
    subdivision 1, or a court of the home state of the child has declined
    to exercise jurisdiction on the ground that this Commonwealth is
    the more appropriate forum under § 20-146.18 or § 20-146.19, and
    (i) the child and the child’s parents, or the child and at least one
    parent or a person acting as a parent, have a significant connection
    with this Commonwealth other than mere physical presence and
    (ii) substantial evidence is available in this Commonwealth
    concerning the child’s care, protection, training, and personal
    relationships;
    3. All courts having jurisdiction under subdivision 1 or 2
    have declined to exercise jurisdiction on the ground that a court of
    this Commonwealth is the more appropriate forum to determine
    the custody of the child under § 20-146.18 or § 20-146.19; or
    4. No court of any other state would have jurisdiction
    under the criteria specified in subdivision 1, 2, or 3.
    B. Subsection A is the exclusive jurisdictional basis for
    making a child custody determination by a court of this
    Commonwealth.
    The UCCJEA defines “Home state” as “the state in which a child lived with a parent . . .
    for at least six consecutive months immediately before the commencement of a child custody
    proceeding. . . . A period of temporary absence of any of the mentioned persons is part of the
    period.” Code § 20-146.1. Because mother and the children moved to Maryland in January
    2003 and did not reside in Virginia, under Code § 20-146.12(A)(1), Virginia was not the
    children’s home state within six months prior to commencement of modification proceedings by
    father’s motion of July 21, 2003. Thus, the first half of Code § 20-146.12(A)(1) does not
    provide a basis for jurisdiction. The second half of § 20-146.12(A)(1) also does not provide a
    basis for the exercise of jurisdiction under the present posture of this case. Even if the facts
    supported a finding that Virginia “was the home state of the child within six months before the
    commencement of the proceeding,” Virginia would be unable to exercise jurisdiction unless it
    -8-
    found that a parent “continues to live in this Commonwealth.” This is precisely the issue the
    resolution of which is required to determine the existence of exclusive, continuing jurisdiction
    under Code § 20-146.13(A) and which the trial court has not yet addressed on the merits. Thus,
    absent additional factual findings by the trial court, Code § 20-146.12(A)(1) does not provide a
    basis for the exercise of jurisdiction. Similarly, the exercise of jurisdiction under subsection
    (A)(2) would require additional evidence and supporting factual findings. Finally, no evidence
    established that Maryland has deferred its exercise of jurisdiction to allow Virginia to decide the
    matter. Thus, absent additional factual findings, neither subsection (3) nor subsection (4) of
    Code § 20-146.12(A) provides a basis for the trial court’s exercise of jurisdiction.
    Thus, we reverse the trial court’s ruling and remand for a hearing on whether the court
    has continuing subject matter jurisdiction, exclusive or otherwise, to enforce or modify its
    custody and visitation decree of April 22, 2003. The court must also have personal jurisdiction
    over mother.2 On the facts as found and alleged in the record before us, the issue of subject
    2
    The court lost personal jurisdiction over mother 21 days after entry of its April 22, 2003
    order. It was required to obtain personal jurisdiction over mother again in order to modify that
    order. The Virginia version of the UCCJEA provides in relevant part as follows:
    Notice required for the exercise of jurisdiction when a person is
    outside this Commonwealth may be given in a manner prescribed
    by the law of this Commonwealth for service of process or by the
    law of the state in which the service is attempted or made. Notice
    may also be by certified or registered mail, return receipt
    requested, addressed to the last known address of the person to be
    served. Notice must be given in a manner reasonably calculated to
    give actual notice and an opportunity to be heard but may be by
    publication pursuant to §§ 8.01-316 and 8.01-317 if other means
    are not effective.
    Code § 20-146.7(A); see also Code § 8.01-320 (providing that, “[w]hen the court can exercise
    jurisdiction over the nonresident pursuant to § 8.01-328.1, such service shall have the same
    effect as personal service on the nonresident within Virginia”); Code § 8.01-328.1 (delineating
    circumstances under which court may acquire personal jurisdiction over non-resident defendant);
    § 8.01-329 (providing that “[w]hen personal jurisdiction is authorized by this chapter, service . . .
    -9-
    matter jurisdiction would appear to turn on the factual question of whether father “continues to
    live in this Commonwealth,” cf. Uniform Interstate Family Support Act § 205, cmt. (2001), 9 Pt.
    1B U.L.A. 67 (Supp. 2004) (“Of course, residence is a fact question for the trial court, keeping in
    mind that the question is residence, not domicile.”), despite being a member of the military
    assigned to a duty station in North Carolina, see Code § 20-146.13, off. cmt. 2 (“[T]his section
    means that the named persons no longer continue to actually live within the State. . . . [The
    statutory language] is not used in the sense of a technical domicile.” (emphasis added)); Code
    § 20-146.38(A)(3) (noting Act’s goal is to hold proceeding “in the state with which the child and
    his family have the closest connection and where significant evidence concerning his case,
    ________________________
    may be made in the same manner as provided for in . . . § 8.01-285 [to § 8.01-327.2] in any other
    case in which personal jurisdiction is exercised over such party”).
    Father filed a “PETITION FOR [R]ULE TO SHOW CAUSE AND OTHER RELIEF” on
    August 12, 2003, in which he sought to have mother held in contempt for failing to provide
    visitation in accordance with the court’s prior order, to have mother pay his attorney’s fees, to be
    awarded permanent custody of the parties’ children, and to have the court grant “other relief” as
    the court deems proper. When the trial court entered the Rule to Show Cause directing mother to
    appear on August 29, 2003, for failure to comply with the terms of the court’s order of visitation,
    it ordered father to cause to be served on mother at her “last known address,” which was listed in
    the order, a copy of the “Rule to Show Cause with Petition and Affidavit attached.” When the
    court entered an order memorializing the August 29, 2003 proceedings, it found personal service
    of the Rule, Petition and Affidavit “was attempted” but “not achieved” and that “posted service
    . . . was made upon [mother’s] last known address.”
    Mother contends the court did not acquire personal jurisdiction over her because she was
    not personally served and did not have actual notice of the custody proceedings. However,
    service by posting at one’s last known address is an acceptable method for effecting service of
    process under Virginia law. See Code § 8.01-296 (authorizing service by posting); see also Code
    § 8.01-329 (providing that “[w]hen personal jurisdiction is authorized by this chapter, service . . .
    may be made in the same manner as provided for in . . . § 8.01-285 [to § 8.01-327.2] in any other
    case in which personal jurisdiction is exercised over such party”). Thus, posted service of the
    Rule, Petition and Affidavit at the Suitland, Maryland, address, which the court found was
    mother’s last known address, was notice sufficient under Code § 20-146.7(A) to provide the trial
    court with personal jurisdiction over mother for purposes of modifying its prior custody order.
    The court did not rule on the contempt issue, and we need not decide whether the court had
    personal jurisdiction over mother for purposes of adjudicating mother in contempt of court. See
    Code § 8.01-314 (providing that “in any proceeding in which a final order has been entered,
    service on an attorney as provided herein shall not be sufficient to constitute personal jurisdiction
    over a party in any proceeding citing that party for contempt, either civil or criminal, unless
    personal service is also made on the party”).
    - 10 -
    protection, training, and personal relationships is most readily available”); Hart v. Hart, 
    327 S.E.2d 631
    , 635-37 (N.C. Ct. App. 1985) (holding expressly that military parent’s domicile does
    not control where parent “live[s]” for purposes of home state jurisdiction under North Carolina’s
    equivalent of Code § 20-146.12(A)(1) and that parent’s being stationed at camp in North
    Carolina while on active duty was “sufficient to satisfy the home state rule requirement,” and
    holding implicitly that parent’s temporary absence while stationed overseas for seven months
    before returning to North Carolina did not prevent finding that father “‘continues to live in this
    state’”); cf. Code § 20-146.1 (defining child’s “Home state” as “the state in which a child lived
    with a parent . . . for at least six consecutive months immediately before the commencement of a
    child custody proceeding” (emphasis added)); Brenner v. Cavin, 
    295 S.E.2d 135
    , 137 (Ga. Ct.
    App. 1982) (in analyzing whether jurisdiction was child’s “home state” under UCCJA, defined
    in part as the state in which the child “lived,” holding that “‘[l]iving with’ is a commonplace
    term having no technical meaning and means literally what it says” and that “[i]f the General
    Assembly had intended that jurisdiction be based upon legal residence or domicile, it would
    undoubtedly have used these technical terms”).3
    3
    It appears that a majority of state courts considering where a parent or child “lives”
    under the former UCCJA have concluded, as did the Georgia Court of Appeals in Brenner, 295
    S.E.2d at 137, that physical presence is controlling. See Fletcher v. Fletcher, 
    726 S.W.2d 684
    ,
    685-86 (Ark. Ct. App. 1987) (holding that although father claimed Arkansas as permanent
    residence while in military, Arkansas was not and never had been child’s home state because
    child had never resided there); Burr v. Burr, 
    711 So. 2d 303
    , 305-07 (La. 1998) (where father
    was member of armed services and maintained legal residence in Louisiana but child and wife
    never lived there and family was stationed in Arizona, North Carolina, and then in the United
    Kingdom for nine months before mother and child returned to mother’s original home in Arizona
    and filed for divorce, holding Louisiana court lacked jurisdiction to make initial custody
    determination); Consford v. Consford, 
    711 N.Y.S.2d 199
    , 203-05 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. App. Div.
    2000) (holding that parents’ choice of Texas domicile after returning from overseas duty did not
    determine child’s home state under UCCJA because family remained in Texas for only two
    months while awaiting new orders and was subsequently sent to Arizona for indefinite
    assignment, where they functioned as a family unit for five months before custody dispute
    arose). But see Rholfs v. Rholfs, 
    666 So. 2d 568
    , 569-71 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1996) (holding that
    “[a]bsent an intent to the contrary, a parent who is a Florida resident and who is away from [the]
    - 11 -
    II.
    For these reasons, we conclude the court’s order of April 22, 2003 did not provide the
    court with continuing jurisdiction over custody and visitation matters. We remand to the trial
    court to take evidence relevant to the issue of father’s residence and any other basis upon which
    subject matter jurisdiction may rest. Thus, we reverse the trial court’s ruling and remand for
    further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Because we reverse, we deny father’s request
    for an award of attorney’s fees.
    Reversed and remanded.
    ________________________
    state on military assignment [in Virginia for 8 months and is scheduled to be transferred to
    Japan] continues to live in [the] state within the meaning of the UCCJA for the purpose of
    determining the parent’s residence” but noting finding “that the [military parent] continues to
    reside in Florida” was “a legal fiction” and was based in part on “the great deference [the
    UCCJA] afford[s] the state exercising initial jurisdiction”); Lemley v. Miller, 
    932 S.W.2d 284
    ,
    285, 287 (Tex. Civ. App. 1996) (holding that where father resided at all times in Oklahoma,
    where child was born; mother and stepfather resided with child for 18 months in Texas and then
    spent 11 months in Germany pursuant to stepfather’s military orders before mother returned to
    Texas with child and instituted modification proceedings against father, time in Germany was
    temporary absence to be treated as time in Texas and, thus, Texas was child’s home state). See
    generally Holder v. Holder, 2002 Cal. App. Unpub. LEXIS 2898, *15-22 (Cal. Ct. App. Mar. 20,
    2002) (discussing in dicta conflict under UCCJEA over home state jurisdiction involving service
    member stationed in a foreign country); id. *42-53 (Cornell, J., dissenting).
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