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Lowry v. Winenger
2017 WL 715956
Ga. Ct. App.
2017
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Background

  • Parents divorced in 2013 with roughly equal shared custody; mother was primary physical custodian and father retained final decision-making authority over the child’s religious upbringing.
  • Mother remarried soon after the divorce, converted to the Mormon faith, and began taking the child to her new church without the father’s consent.
  • Mother moved residences multiple times and ultimately relocated from Forsyth County to Hall County, increasing the father’s drive by ~50 minutes.
  • Father testified the move interfered with his chosen extracurricular, religious, and educational arrangements and that the child showed apathy toward the new school.
  • Guardian ad litem recommended modifying custody, concluding one parent should control religious upbringing; guardian and father testified the mother had misled them about the child’s residence and had at times undermined the father’s authority.
  • Trial court found multiple adverse effects from these changes, held mother in contempt for violating the decree, awarded father primary physical custody, granted mother visitation, and ordered child support; mother appealed.

Issues

Issue Plaintiff's Argument (Lowry) Defendant's Argument (Winenger) Held
Whether evidence supported finding a material change in circumstances that adversely affected the child Evidence was insufficient; changes were not materially adverse Multiple changes (moves, religious exposure, activity conflicts, school apathy, deception) together materially harmed the child Affirmed: trial court reasonably found cumulative material changes with adverse effects
Whether the trial court improperly relied on potential future harms in finding a material change Court impermissibly considered speculative future negative impacts Court may consider likely future effects and whether custodial parent will continue harmful conduct when deciding best interests Affirmed: forward-looking consideration of likely future harms is permissible in best-interest analysis

Key Cases Cited

  • Horn v. Shepherd, 292 Ga. 14 (discussing standard of review and deference to trial court findings)
  • Viskup v. Viskup, 291 Ga. 103 (explaining material change requirement for custody modification)
  • Todd v. Casciano, 256 Ga. App. 631 (trial court determines best interest after material change found)
  • Autrey v. Autrey, 288 Ga. 283 (appellate review limited; no abuse of discretion if any supporting evidence)
  • Bodne v. Bodne, 277 Ga. 445 (trial court may consider myriad factors and future harm in custody decisions)
  • Fox v. Korucu, 315 Ga. App. 851 (parental affidavit about child’s unhappiness can show adverse effect)
  • Kuehn v. Key, 325 Ga. App. 512 (guardian ad litem recommendations are relevant to best-interest analysis)
  • Scott v. Scott, 276 Ga. 372 (custody change is fact-specific inquiry)
Read the full case

Case Details

Case Name: Lowry v. Winenger
Court Name: Court of Appeals of Georgia
Date Published: Feb 23, 2017
Citation: 2017 WL 715956
Docket Number: A16A2133
Court Abbreviation: Ga. Ct. App.