Lead Opinion
Plаintiff Stephen Norris Alexander appeals from a decree of divorce awarding defendant Diane Jean Alexander custody of their youngest child.
Plaintiff and defеndant were married in Arizona in 1968. At the time of the marriage, defendant was sixteen years old and pregnant. The parties had two more children within the first three and a half years of their marriage, making defendant the mother of three preschoolers at the age of nineteen. After a ten and a half-year hiatus, the parties’ fourth and finаl child was born.
In July 1984, defendant took the parties’ youngest child, who was then four, to Missouri to live with defendant’s brother. Defendant and her child traveled with a male family friend. During the trip, defendant and her child slept in the same bed with the friend. Although defendant disavowed a sexual relationship with him, the trial court found that one existed.
Plaintiff was granted a divorce after a trial held in April 1985.
Child Custody
Plaintiff assigns as error the district court’s award of custody of the youngest child to defendant. Plaintiff was awarded custody of the three older children, who were then sixteen, fourteen, and thirteen years old. Plaintiff proffers three reasons why it was not proper for the district judge to award defendant custody of the youngest child: the decision was not in the сhild’s best interest; it was inappropriate to separate the children; and the decision was based on a maternal preference.
We decline to overturn the trial court. Where there is evidence to support a ruling, the task of determining the best interests of the child in a custody dispute is for the trial judge, who has the opрortunity to personally observe and evaluate the witnesses. If a trial judge exercises his discretion in accord with the standards set by this Court, the decision will not be overrulеd. See Jones v. Jones,
The trial court is afforded particularly broad discretion in the area of child custody. A determination of the “best interests of the child” turns on factors which the trial court is best able to assess, and only when the action taken by the trial court is so unjust as to constitute an abuse of discretion should this Court substitute its own judgment.
(Footnote omitted.) See Wall v. Wall,
Plaintiff asserts that the trial court abused its discretion by ignoring Utah Code Ann. § 30-2-10 (1984), which provides: “[I]f a husband or wife abandons his or her spouse, that spouse is entitled to the custody of the minor children, unless a court of competent jurisdiction shall otherwise direct.” According to plaintiff, this statute grants him custody of the youngest child. Plaintiff’s reading, however, ignores the final phrase of the statute, which allows a сourt of competent jurisdiction to grant custody to the abandoning spouse.
Plaintiff also asserts that the trial court was motivatеd by an improper preference for the mother because of the age of the youngest child. We agree with plaintiff that a maternal preferencе is impermissible. Pusey v. Pusey,
Property Division
The trial court awarded defendant, whо has only a tenth-grade education, no alimony, but gave her half of the marital estate and ordered plaintiff to pay the couple’s outstanding debts in lieu of alimоny. Neither party was awarded child support.
Plaintiff claims that it was error for the trial court to order him to pay the marital debts and argues that the trial court erred in failing to reduce the value of a stock-price-tied profit-sharing plan to account for tax liability and in including post-separation contributions to the plan in assessing its value. We find no error.
As long as a property division is made within the standards set by this Court, we will not disturb the trial judge’s decision. Jones v. Jones,
This Court endows the court’s adjustment of the financial interests of the parties with a presumption of validity and does not review their values absent a clear abuse of discretion.... We do not lightly disturb property divisions made by the trial court and uphold its decision except where to do so would work a manifest injustice or inequity.
Pusey v. Pusey,
We also decline to disturb the trial court’s valuation of the profit-sharing plan. The trial court did not reduce the present value of the plan to account for income tax liability that could be imposed in the future. Plaintiff has not argued and it does not appear that the valuation of the profit-sharing plan was itself a tаxable event; therefore, we do not think the trial court’s refusal to speculate about hypothetical future consequences was an abuse of discretiоn. See Gilbert v. Gilbert,
Affirmed. Costs to respondent.
Notes
. Plaintiff urges us to apply our usual standard of review only in cases in which the trial court "clearly applied the appropriate guidelines and rules," but to substitute our judgment for that of the trial court when it appears that the trial court "materially or substantially” deviated from the best-interests-of-the-child rule. Wе think that standard would be ill-advised and would simply confuse the issue by forcing us to determine what is in the best interests of the child and then determine if the trial court materially and substantially deviated from the decision we would have reached. Such a standard would be inappropriate and render every appeal a second chance to accomplish what should have been determined at trial.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring).
I concur, but wish to observe that the disavowance of a maternal presumption should not be intеrpreted as discounting valid factors upon which the presumption rests, such as (1) the strong bonding which develops between a mother who has given birth to a child and has attended to his or her needs around the clock for months or years, and (2) the skills and sensitivity she develops thereby.
