This appeal concerns the custody of Zachary, five years of age at the time of trial. Appellant Catherine D., his mother, challenges the trial court’s order awarding primary physical custody to his father, respondent Dennis B. We will affirm for the reasons which we explain.
Factual and Procedural Background
As a result of a brief relationship in 1980 between Catherine, then age 23, and Dennis, then age 41, Catherine became pregnant and gave birth to Zachary on March 26, 1981. As an unwed mother, she acquired sole custody of her son as a matter of law. (Civ. Code, § 197.) Dennis did not become aware of Zachary’s birth until contacted by local authorities in the course of Catherine’s application for welfare assistance. Ultimately, Dennis stipulated to paternity in an action instituted by the district attorney for child support and reimbursement (Dennis eventually stipulated to his ability to pay any reasonable amount of support ordered by the court). The judgment also provided for Dennis’s rights of reasonable visitation on alternate weekends. During the ensuing years, the parties became embroiled in a number of adversarial proceedings relating to visitation and support issues. In 1985, an order was made providing for joint legal custody. However, the question of physical custody was never adjudicated prior to the now-challenged order.
In January 1986, Catherine filed a complaint under the Uniform Parentage Act (Civ. Code, § 7000 et seq.) and obtained an order to show cause why legal custody should not be reevaluated, she should not be awarded or retain sole physical custody, and why Dennis’s visitation rights should not be reduced. In his responsive pleadings, Dennis objected to the proposed changes asserting Catherine’s failure to comply with existing court orders. Hearing began in early May 1986 but was continued for further evidence.
On June 4, 1986, Dennis filed a motion seeking primary physical custody of Zachary. Catherine responded with a motion to refer the matter for a psychological evaluation and to suspend all existing visitation orders.
On July 16, 1986, Dennis initiated contempt proceedings against Catherine based on her alleged violations of earlier visitation orders. The parties ultimately agreed to a psychological investigation and evaluation and to consolidate all related proceedings and pending issues for hearing which resumed on December 10, 1986.
Following several days of testimony, including the testimony and report and recommendation of Elizabeth O’Neill, the expert appointed to evaluate
Catherine’s subsequent motions for reconsideration and stay of execution were thereafter heard and denied. 1 The court also made an order requiring review of the matter the following year and for payment of some of Catherine’s attorney fees. 2
Contentions
Catherine argues that a showing of changed circumstances was required and is not supported by the record. Further, she contends that the trial court erroneously applied the “best interest” standard.
Dennis counters that the correct standard of proof was used and that no abuse of discretion is manifested.
Discussion
It is settled law that in deciding between competing parental claims to custody, the court must make an award according to the best interests of
I.
Changed Circumstances Rule
We review an award of custody by considering whether the determination made was within the sound discretion of the trial court. (See
In re Marriage of Carney
(1979)
In the seminal case of
Carney, supra,
the Supreme Court announced the rule that “to justify ordering a change in custody there must generally be a persuasive showing of changed circumstances affecting the child.” (
The changed circumstances rule as expressed in
Carney
was clarified in
Burchard
v.
Garay, supra,
“The Carney decision, it is clear, did not turn on any difference in result between the changed-circumstance rule and the best-interest standard. We spoke in terms of changed circumstances simply because William Carney’s injury occurred after he had held custody for a significant time. There is not the slightest suggestion that the best interests of the children required an award to the mother, and that she lost only because she did not also prove a significant change in circumstances.
“In sum,
Carney
had nothing to say on the importance of protecting prior custody determinations by forbidding the courts from reconsidering the circumstances which led to those determinations. Instead, it spoke of the importance of protecting established modes of custody, however created, not by limiting the breadth of the evidence, but by requiring the noncustodial party to show that a change would be in the best interests of the child. Consequently, we do not read
Carney
as requiring use of a changed-circumstance test in cases where there has been no prior custody determination, but as one affirming the importance of stability in custody arrangements, placing the burden upon the person seeking to alter a long-established arrangement.”
(Burchard
v.
Garay, supra,
42 Cal.3d at pp. 535, 537; see also
In re Marriage of Lewin
(1986)
In any event, Catherine insists that four previous court orders actually served as “judicial determinations” of custody thus satisfying the predicate requirement of the changed-circumstance rule. She contends that the prior orders at least implicitly awarded her physical custody in specifying various visitation arrangements. The contention does not withstand scrutiny.
We consider the subject orders in sequence:
Order Filed May 14, 1982
This order was based on a stipulation establishing Dennis’s paternity, providing child support, a visitation schedule, and requiring reimbursement to the county for welfare payments. But, as Dennis correctly points out, Catherine was not a party to the original action brought by the county against him. Moreover, a similar claim was made and rejected in
Burchard,
the court noting that custody was not at issue in the stipulated paternity judgment, the judgment was otherwise silent on that subject, and there was no showing that the father thereby acknowledged that maternal custody was in the best interest of the child.
(Burchard
v.
Garay, supra,
Catherine’s assertion that these defects were cured when the parties stipulated to transfer the paternity judgment to the new action conveniently disregards the absence of any showing that physical custody was at issue or even considered at the time of such transfer.
Order Filed June 23, 1983
This order, based on stipulation of the parties, provided for Dennis’s expanded visitation rights coupled with increased child support and
Order Filed January 22, 1985
This order of modification prescribed detailed notice requirements in conjunction with the exercise of visitation, among other things. The order awarded joint legal custody to the parties while deferring specification of the circumstances mandated by Civil Code section 4600.5, subdivision (e) to a future time. The question of physical custody was in no way implicated, let alone decided.
Order Filed May 22, 1985
This order described areas deemed appropriate for joint decisions deferred in the previous January order (e.g., identity of medical care providers, schools, programs, religious training, discipline). The order further provided that disagreements may be submitted to the court for resolution and that Catherine, “as the party with physical custody,” shall make any necessary prehearing interim decisions.
Catherine seizes upon the quoted language as unequivocal evidence of a judicial determination of custody in her favor. However, in a declaration filed in connection with posttrial motions, the court commissioner who made the order (as well as previous orders) stated that custody had not been litigated, and that no evidence bearing upon the relative custodial merits was presented.
While it is true, as Catherine claims, that such stipulated orders have the force of law (see
Estate of Burson
(1975)
We conclude the court did not err in determining that the changed-circumstances rule was inapplicable.
Sufficiency of Evidence Supporting Findings Best Interest Served by Awarding Dennis Custody
Preliminarily, we note “we are bound by the established rules of appellate review that all factual matters will be viewed most favorably to the prevailing party [citations] and in support of the judgment [citation]. All issues of credibility are likewise within the province of the trier of fact. . . . All conflicts, therefore, must be resolved in favor of the respondent.”
(Nestle
v.
City of Santa Monica
(1972)
“ ‘The trial judge, having heard the evidence, observed the witnesses, their demeanor, attitude, candor or lack of candor, is best qualified to pass upon and determine the factual issues presented by their testimony. This is especially true where the custody of minor children is involved. An appellate tribunal is not authorized to retry the issue of custody, nor to substitute its judgment for that of the trier of facts. Only upon a clear and convincing showing of abuse of discretion will the order of the trial court in such matters be disturbed on appeal. Where minds may reasonably differ, it is the trial judge’s discretion and not that of the appellate court which must control.’ (4 Goddard, Cal. Practice (3d ed. 1981) Family Law Practice, § 218, p. 404, fns. omitted.)” (As quoted in
In re Marriage of Lewin, supra,
We highlight the salient findings together with the evidentiary underpinning. 4
In its statement of decision, the court noted a number of factual circumstances which had changed over the years. Though Catherine has been the primary physical caretaker since the birth of Zachary, with visita
The record is replete with examples of Catherine’s constant unilateral modification of established visitation schedules, necessitating frequent telephone calls, changes of time and place of pickup and return, as well as verbal harassment of Dennis’s employees involved in making necessary arrangements in Dennis’s behalf.
Catherine’s anger-fueled campaign seemingly knew no limit. In addition to attempting to instill in Zachary a negative attitude towards his father (the court finding she had actually “brainwashed” Zachary against his father), she consistently interfered with school authorities (even threatening to sue) for the singular purpose of frustrating Dennis’s planned visits and vacation trips, and to such a degree that school officials decided against Zachary’s further attendance. And there was no indication that Catherine had any intention or inclination to alter her behaviour or conduct insofar as it directly impacted Zachary’s best interests. Indeed, as previously noted, the court was moved to comment on the Jekyll-Hyde persona manifested by Catherine during cross-examination.
The court also found that Dennis was the parent more likely to expose Zachary to a wider spectrum of interests promotive of intellectual growth, social and moral development. Most importantly, the court determined that Dennis was the parent more likely to permit Zachary’s frequent and continuing contact with the noncustodial parent, Catherine. Together with Catherine’s unrelenting pattern of frustrating Dennis’s visitation rights, such factors alone provided adequate grounds for changing custody. (Civ. Code, § 4600, subd. (b)(1);
Burchard
v.
Garay, supra,
Finally, we do not share counsel’s fear expressed at oral argument that our decision upholding the findings below will effectively preclude any future custodial change. The overriding concern is and remains the best interests of the child, a matter subject to the court’s continuing jurisdiction upon a proper showing of a significant change of circumstances.
The judgment is affirmed.
Stein, J., and Holmdahl, J., * concurred.
Notes
Catherine’s petition for a writ of supersedeas filed with this court, opposed by the attorney previously appointed by the trial court to represent the minor, was summarily denied on May 28, 1987 (NO.A038535).
We decline to take additional evidence related to that review proceeding by way of augmentation as requested by respondent’s counsel. Additionally, while Catherine has properly noticed an appeal from the attorney fee order, the point is deemed waived by her failure to raise and argue the issue in her opening brief. (See
In re Marriage of Schroeder
(1987)
Dennis’s suggestion that the changed-circumstances rule be discarded, a sentiment seemingly echoed in Justice Mosk’s concurring opinion
(Burchard
v.
Garay, supra,
42 Cal.3d at pp. 550-551, fn. 1 [conc. opn. of Mosk, J.]), is, of course, beyond our province.
(Auto Equity Sales, Inc.
v.
Superior Court
(1962)
Notwithstanding well established principles governing review, Catherine’s brief recites a factual and evidentiary account that substantially disregards the evidence favorable to the order and judgment below.
Cross-examination of O’Neill revealed that her opinion was essentially based on her interviews with Catherine alone; additionally, she failed to ask Dennis about conflicting accounts of major incidents.
Retired Associate Justice of the Court of Appeal sitting under assignment by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
