Werner S. Hindrichs v. Diane F. Hindrichs Godorov ( 1998 )


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  •                       COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Benton, Elder and Bumgardner
    Argued at Richmond, Virginia
    WERNER SAEMMLER HINDRICHS
    MEMORANDUM OPINION * BY
    v.   Record No. 1936-97-2                JUDGE JAMES W. BENTON, JR.
    AUGUST 11, 1998
    DIANE FRANCES (HINDRICHS) GODOROV
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF FREDERICKSBURG
    John W. Scott, Jr., Judge
    Carolyn M. Grimes (Sharon K. Lieblich, P.C.,
    on briefs), for appellant.
    (V. James Ventura; V. James Ventura, P.C., on
    brief), for appellee. Appellee submitting on
    brief.
    Upon Diane (Hindrichs) Godorov's motion, the trial judge
    declined to exercise further jurisdiction over matters pertaining
    to custody and visitation of the parties' minor children and
    found that Pennsylvania is a more appropriate forum pursuant to
    Code § 20-130.     Werner Saemmler Hindrichs, the children's father,
    appeals that decision.     The father contends that because these
    matters have been extensively litigated by the parties in
    Virginia and because the mother was procedurally barred from
    making the motion, the trial judge abused his discretion in
    deferring jurisdiction to Pennsylvania as a more appropriate
    forum.     We affirm the decree.
    *
    Pursuant to Code § 17-116.010 this opinion is not
    designated for publication.
    I.
    The parties were married in Virginia in 1984 and separated
    in 1992.   In 1993, a judge entered a pendente lite order granting
    the mother physical custody of the two children and the father
    visitation rights.   A final divorce decree was entered in the
    Circuit Court of the City of Fredericksburg in 1994.   The parties
    and children resided in Fredericksburg from 1990 until 1994, when
    the mother enrolled in medical school and moved with the children
    to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.    In 1996, the father moved from
    Fredericksburg and now resides in Fairfax County.
    In April 1996, the father filed a petition to enforce
    visitation.   In May 1997, a day before the hearing on the
    father's petition was scheduled, the mother filed a petition
    requesting the court to decline to exercise further jurisdiction
    in this matter.   The mother alleged "[t]hat the Commonwealth of
    Pennsylvania is and has been the home state of the minor children
    since 1994"; that Pennsylvania is "the most convenient forum for
    the benefit of the minor children and [where] the preponderance
    of facts and circumstances governing the welfare, development and
    needs of the minor children are most prevalent"; that the
    children's counselor for the preceding seven months resides and
    practices in Pennsylvania; and that the father no longer resides
    in Fredericksburg, Virginia.
    After considering the parties' arguments concerning their
    respective motions, the judge ruled as follows:
    The children are now and have been for years
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    residents of the State of Pennsylvania. . . .
    This court, . . . pursuant to . . . [Code
    §] 20-108, . . . finds that it has provided
    the relief that the father is entitled at
    this juncture, that if there are any changes
    in custody or support [they] are better
    addressed in the forum in which the children
    reside, and that is not the City of
    Fredericksburg. . . . In fact, neither party
    resides in the City of Fredericksburg, nor do
    the children reside in the Commonwealth of
    Virginia.
    The trial judge entered two orders.    The first order set a
    definite visitation schedule and stated that "[a]ny modifications
    in visitation are to be resolved by agreement of the parties" or
    "are to be addressed in the appropriate forum where the children
    reside."   The second order stated as follows:
    [U]pon all of the evidence received in the
    collective hearings of these parties before
    this Court, it appearing unto this Court that
    the home state of the minor children of the
    parties . . . is and has been in the
    jurisdiction of their residence within the
    Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, this Court
    hereby DECLINES to further exercise
    jurisdiction pursuant to [Code §] 20-130
    . . . and finds that the Court of competent
    jurisdiction serving the residence of the
    aforesaid children is the appropriate forum,
    and all further matters regarding the minor
    children of these parties are transferred to
    said Court for enforcement and/or
    modification.
    . . . The Court declines to further hear
    in this forum matters of modification of this
    Court's prior Orders, referring same to the
    more convenient forum as hereinabove set
    forth.
    II.
    The questions presented by the father raise the issue
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    whether the trial judge improperly applied the provisions of the
    Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Act (UCCJA), Code § 20-125
    et seq., in declining to exercise further jurisdiction over
    matters of custody and visitation and in holding that a
    Pennsylvania court was a more appropriate forum.
    The father raises certain procedural matters that we will
    address first.   The father alleges the mother provided
    insufficient notice of her claims under the UCCJA and that her
    petition, filed only one day before the hearing on the father's
    petition for modification of visitation, failed to provide the
    father with reasonable notice as required by Code § 20-127 and
    Fariss v. Tsapel, 
    3 Va. App. 439
    , 
    350 S.E.2d 670
     (1986).
    The mother's motion required the trial judge to consider
    Code § 20-125 et seq. and alleged that the relocation of the
    children had constituted the establishment of a new "home state."
    The motion also alleged that the children's continued presence
    in Pennsylvania for two and one half years made Pennsylvania the
    situs of more substantial connections and evidence concerning the
    present status of the minor children.
    Code § 20-127 provides that "[b]efore making a decree under
    this chapter, reasonable notice and opportunity to be heard shall
    be given to . . . any parent whose parental rights have not been
    previously terminated."   In Fariss, where the mother made her
    motion to alter the father's visitation rights for the first time
    at trial, we held that "[a]s a parent whose parental rights have
    - 4 -
    not been terminated, [the father] was statutorily entitled to
    reasonable notice of the motion to alter his visitation rights
    with respect to his children - before the decree was entered."
    Id. at 441, 
    350 S.E.2d at 672
    .    Although the notice requirements
    of the UCCJA apply to custody and visitation proceedings, they do
    not apply, however, to a court's decision declining to exercise
    jurisdiction and deferring jurisdiction to another state.
    See Lutes v. Alexander, 
    14 Va. App. 1075
    , 1084, 
    421 S.E.2d 857
    ,
    863 (1992).   Moreover, the trial judge granted the mother's
    motion for a continuance on the date of the hearing and, thus,
    provided the father with adequate time to prepare a defense to
    the motion to decline jurisdiction.
    The father also contends that the mother did not attach to
    her initial pleading the affidavit required by Code § 20-132.    In
    pertinent part, Code § 20-132 provides as follows:
    A. Every party in a custody proceeding in
    his first pleading or in an affidavit
    attached to that pleading shall give
    information under oath as to the child's
    present address, the places where the child
    has lived within the last five years, and the
    names and present addresses of the persons
    with whom the child has lived during that
    1
    period.
    However, the mother's motion, which requested the court to
    1
    Code § 20-132 applies to the first pleading in a "custody
    proceeding." A "'[c]ustody proceeding' includes proceedings in
    which a custody determination is an issue, such as an action for
    divorce or separation." Code § 20-125(3). A "'[c]ustody
    determination' means a court decision and court orders and
    decrees providing for the custody of a child, including
    visitation rights." Code § 20-125(2).
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    decline to exercise further jurisdiction, was not the first
    pleading in this custody proceeding.     Rather, it was a petition
    in an existing and continuing custody case.    Therefore, the
    absence of an affidavit did not preclude the mother from moving
    the court to decline further jurisdiction.
    The father also argues that the trial judge erred in
    entering contemporaneous orders, one granting visitation and the
    other declining further jurisdiction.    The trial judge
    specifically indicated that he would only clarify his prior order
    of visitation by establishing specific dates for visitation so as
    to ensure visitation pending any application by the father for
    relief in the more convenient forum.     The trial judge refused to
    modify the prior order by enlarging visitation, and the trial
    judge directed that the portion of the petition filed by the
    father seeking enlargement of visitation be filed in the more
    appropriate forum.
    Moreover, by declining to exercise jurisdiction under Code
    § 20-130, the trial judge was declining "to make an initial or
    modification decree."   The trial judge did not decline to enforce
    a decree already in existence.    Such a decree continues to have a
    res judicata effect under Code § 20-135 and will be enforced by a
    court in any state including Virginia.     See Code § 20-136.   In
    the present case, the trial judge was declining to modify the
    decree, not to enforce it.
    The father contends that because the trial judge's order
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    fails to identify the alternative forum in Pennsylvania to which
    jurisdiction should be deferred, the father is left without a
    forum to enforce his visitation rights.    Citing Mubarak v.
    Mubarak, 
    14 Va. App. 616
    , 
    420 S.E.2d 225
     (1992), the father
    argues that "before the trial court should defer jurisdiction to
    another forum, it should know the identity of that forum."        Id.
    at 622, 
    420 S.E.2d at 228
    .   In Mubarak, we ruled that "the
    criteria contained in the statute and outlined in Middleton [v.
    Middleton, 
    227 Va. 82
    , 
    314 S.E.2d 362
     (1984),] required the trial
    court to defer the exercise of jurisdiction to the appropriate
    court in Great Britain" where the children resided and where
    evidence of their needs existed.     Id. at 621, 
    420 S.E.2d at 228
    .
    However, because the record did not furnish the name of the
    appropriate court and did not establish whether the alternative
    forum "is known to the father or is identifiable," we reversed
    and remanded the case for further proceedings to ascertain the
    appropriate court having jurisdiction over the children.        Id. at
    622, 
    420 S.E.2d at 228
    .
    In this case, counsel for the father told the trial judge
    that he wanted the order to refer to the specific court that
    would have jurisdiction and stated that he "would try to find out
    what that would be, so we are just not referring it to
    Pennsylvania and then struggling with who ends up with this court
    order."   Counsel for the father stated that he would identify the
    court, and the trial judge agreed.     However, counsel never
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    identified such court.    The proposed order drafted by the
    mother's counsel listed the forum as the Court of Common Pleas in
    Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.    When the father objected to the use
    of this court, the trial judge instructed counsel to "amend your
    order . . . to say . . . the appropriate Court in the
    Commonwealth of Pennsylvania . . . having proper jurisdiction."
    The final order states that "the Court of competent jurisdiction
    serving the residence of the aforesaid children[, the
    Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,] is the appropriate forum."     From
    the record, it is apparent that the appropriate forum in
    Pennsylvania is "identifiable" to the father.    The trial judge
    did not err.
    The father also argues that the trial judge had no evidence
    upon which he could base his finding of inconvenient forum
    because no testimony was presented at the hearing.    The trial
    judge specifically ruled that his finding was based upon the
    collective evidence submitted at all prior hearings.    The motion
    filed by the mother seeking the decline of jurisdiction alleged
    certain facts that were not disputed by the father's answer.
    Each counsel made proffers at the hearing, and each party made
    informal statements to the trial judge to which no objection was
    made.    Therefore, from the record as a whole it appears to us
    that the trial judge had a sufficient basis upon which to make a
    sound decision.
    III.
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    The Supreme Court has noted that the UCCJA was enacted to
    serve a number of general purposes.
    [T]he Virginia UCCJA was enacted to avoid
    jurisdictional competition and conflict with
    courts of other states in matters of child
    custody; to promote cooperation with courts
    of other states so that a custody decree is
    rendered in a state which can best decide the
    issue in the interest of the child; to assure
    that litigation over the custody of a child
    ordinarily occurs in the state that is most
    closely connected with the child and his
    family and where significant evidence
    concerning his care, protection, training and
    personal relationships is most readily
    available; to assure that the courts of this
    state decline the exercise of jurisdiction
    when the child and his family have a closer
    connection with another state; [and] to
    discourage continuing controversies over
    child custody.
    Middleton, 227 Va. at 93, 
    314 S.E.2d at 367
    .
    Under Code § 20-130(A), "[a] court which has jurisdiction
    [to modify a decree] may decline to exercise its jurisdiction
    . . . if it finds that it is an inconvenient forum . . . and that
    a court of another state is a more appropriate forum."    The court
    may decline jurisdiction for, among other reasons, the fact that
    "another state is or recently was the child's home state;"
    "another state has a closer connection with the child and his
    family"; or "substantial evidence concerning the child's present
    or future care, protection, training, and personal relationships
    2
    is more readily available in another state."   Code § 20-130(C).
    2
    Code § 20-130(C) provides as follows:
    C. In determining if it is an inconvenient forum,
    the court shall consider if it is in the interest of
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    "The paramount consideration for a trial court, even on the
    determination of the most convenient forum to decide child
    custody and visitation, is the child's welfare."     Farley v.
    Farley, 
    9 Va. App. 326
    , 329, 
    387 S.E.2d 794
    , 796 (1990).
    In matters of a child's welfare, trial courts
    are vested with broad discretion in making
    the decisions necessary to guard and to
    foster a child's best interests. A trial
    court's determination of matters within its
    discretion is reversible on appeal only for
    an abuse of that discretion, and a trial
    court's decision will not be set aside unless
    plainly wrong or without evidence to support
    it.
    Id. at 328, 
    387 S.E.2d at 795
     (citations omitted).    Thus, when "a
    trial court makes a determination which is adequately supported
    by the record, the determination must be affirmed."     Id. at 328,
    
    387 S.E.2d at 796
    .   See also Johnson v. Johnson, 
    26 Va. 135
    , 144,
    
    493 S.E.2d 668
    , 672 (1997).   Furthermore, in our review of a
    trial judge's custody decision, we view the evidence in the light
    the child that another state assume jurisdiction. For
    this purpose, it shall take into account the following
    factors, among others:
    1. If another state is or recently was
    the child's home state;
    2. If another state has a closer
    connection with the child and his family or
    with the child and one or more of the
    contestants;
    3. If substantial evidence concerning
    the child's present or future care,
    protection, training, and personal
    relationships is more readily available in
    another state; and
    4. If the parties have agreed on another
    forum which is no less appropriate.
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    most favorable to the prevailing party below.   See Lutes, 14 Va.
    App. at 1077, 
    421 S.E.2d at 859
    .
    The father contends that the trial judge relied solely on
    the physical presence of the children in Pennsylvania in making
    his decision to decline jurisdiction.   The father argues that
    "[u]nder the UCCJA, physical presence of the child as a
    jurisdictional basis in all but the most extreme cases has been
    eliminated."   Middleton, 227 Va. at 97, 
    314 S.E.2d at 369
    .
    In this case, the trial judge cited as his reason for
    declining jurisdiction that Pennsylvania was the children's "home
    state" under the UCCJA.   "Although a trial court may fail to
    specify and recite in its order all the possible reasons and
    adequate bases for its determination, where it is obvious from
    review of the record that the trial court's determination was
    made with the child's welfare as paramount, and it is clear that
    the decision is in the child's best interests, the determination
    is not without substantial, competent, and credible evidence to
    support it."   Farley, 9 Va. App. at 329, 
    387 S.E.2d at 796
    .
    Reviewing the factors set out in Code § 20-130, it is clear
    that credible evidence supports the trial judge's decision.
    First, Virginia is not the home state of the children within the
    meaning of the UCCJA.   "'Home state' means the state in which the
    child immediately preceding the time involved lived with . . . a
    parent . . . for at least six consecutive months."   Code
    § 20-125(5).   Both children and the mother, the custodial parent,
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    have resided in Pennsylvania for two and one half years.        Second,
    Pennsylvania has a "closer connection" with the children and "one
    or more of the contestants," the mother.     Id.   The children's
    "contact with Virginia is, and has been for some time, greatly
    attenuated."     Farley, 9 Va. App. at 329, 
    387 S.E.2d at 796
    .
    Third, the most recent evidence concerning the children's care,
    protection, training, and personal relationships is in
    Pennsylvania.    Pennsylvania is also the place where the evidence
    concerning the children's future care would develop.      See
    Johnson, 
    26 Va. App. at 148
    , 
    493 S.E.2d at 674
    .     Therefore,
    Pennsylvania's courts and social services departments have a far
    greater ability to investigate and provide services to the
    children.   At this point, "for a Virginia court to adjudicate
    child custody and visitation and to provide for the supervision
    would require long distance observation and fact-finding, rather
    than the intimate familiarity and interaction necessary in cases
    of this type."     Farley, 9 Va. App. at 330, 
    387 S.E.2d at 796-97
    .
    For these reasons, we hold that the trial judge did not
    abuse his discretion in finding that a Pennsylvania court would
    be a more convenient forum and in refusing to exercise further
    jurisdiction in this matter.    We therefore affirm the trial
    judge's decision to transfer jurisdiction.
    Affirmed.
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Document Info

Docket Number: 1936972

Filed Date: 8/11/1998

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021