¶ 2. The parties originally agreed to share parental rights and responsibilities as part of a December 2005 divorce order. In 2009, the family court grаnted, in part, father’s motion to modify the original divorce order by awarding him sole legal parental rights and responsibilities. We affirmed in a three-justice entry order. See Chickanosky v. Chickanosky, Nos. 2009-094 & 2009-444,
¶ 3. In July 2010, the family court granted father’s second motion to modify based on his planned move to Missouri. The court awarded him legal and physical parental rights and responsibilities, with mother having summertime and vacation parent-child contact. Specifically, the court provided that mother was entitled to “[e]ach summer vacation except for the first and last week of summer vacation,” and was “enсouraged to visit [daughter] in Missouri to help with the transition and familiarize herself with [daughter’s] new house and school,” in addition to “Reasonable contact if she is in Missouri or if [father] brings [daughter] to Vermont.” We affirmed in a full-court decision. See Chickanosky v. Chickanosky,
¶ 4. The parties then got into a dispute over mother’s unplanned or short-notice visits to Missоuri. Three days after daughter left Vermont, and before a school was selected in Missouri, mother notified father that she planned to travel to Missouri beginning August 15 and she wanted daughter to stay with her in a hotel that week. Because the parties were unable to work out a contact schedule, due in part to their “historically bad communication,” father filed an emergency motion to clarify contact on August 12,2010. The court denied the motion the next day, noting that “[mother] is entitled to reasonable parent-child contact while she is in MO.
¶ 5. Also in early August, father informed mother that his family had made plans for weekends away from Missouri from October 2-3 and October 28-31. He offered mother other October weekends for visits, but she could not arrange for a trip to Missouri during those weekends. When October arrived, mother filed another emergency motion to allow her tо spend October 25-31 with daughter in Missouri. She also moved on a nonemergency basis to clarify “the parent-child contact schedule for this school year and for the future.” The court denied the emergency motion, and noted it would set a hearing date for the nonemergency motion. Around October 21, mother agаin asked father for time with daughter from October 28-November 1, but father reiterated that he had plans to be out of town that weekend, and offered her time from October 23-24, though mother declined this offer. The court found that daughter somehow became aware that mother was planning a visit in October, and that daughter was “again caught in the middle of strife created solely by her mother’s last minute, unplanned and inconsiderate demand for contact.”
¶ 6. Parent-child contact continued, apparently without significant problems, through February.
¶ 7. In March, mother traveled to Missouri despite the fact that daughter did not have school vacation. Around this time, mother found a house to rent during her visit; it was located between daughter’s home and her school. The court found that mother did not tell father she had rented the house. Daughter stayed at the house during mother’s time in Missouri in March. Although there was some dispute about whether mother told daughter not to tell father about the house, the court found that daughter said nothing for several days. After daughter’s disclosure tо father, an email exchange followed where father requested that mother inform him
¶ 8. In late May, daughter arrived in Vermont for her summer vacation with mother. At some point, father discovered that, unbeknownst to him, mother had given daughter an iPhone. When father asked daughter for the access code to cheek the phone, daughter became upset. The court found that mother’s attitude with regard to this incident was “much ado about nothing” and that she was oblivious to the fact that the situation could have been avoided if she had simply told father about the phone and its limitations on internet usage.
¶ 9. Following a hearing in July 2011, the court entered a twenty-five page order which clarified and modified parent-child contact. The court found that mother placed her needs ahead of the best interests of daughter, engaged in selfish and unreasonable behavior, has been patently unreasonable, has had “no insight whatsoever” as to why her behavior has caused daughter stress, and has failed to gain insight “as to the devastating impact of her behavior.” The court also found that father attempted to relieve daughter’s stress and that his “good basic parenting” has allowed daughter to have a “consistent, stable routine.” The court found a change in circumstances because mother’s harmful behavior had not lessened, as anticipated by the court’s July 2010 order. Turning to the best-interests analysis, the court found that daughter’s emotional development would be harmed if she spent the whole summer with mother. Thus, the court set forth a specific contact schedule and limited mother’s summertime contact to approximately one month.
¶ 10. Mother appeals, arguing that: (1) the court exceeded its jurisdiction and violated her right to due process by issuing an order limiting her summertime contact with daughter insofar as she was never notified that summertime contact would be at issue; (2) father failed to make an adequate showing that there was a real, substantial, and unanticipated change in material circumstances to modify the previous custody order; and (3) the court failed to consider the best-interests factors in further limiting her contact with daughter.
¶ 11. Mother argues thаt the motions before the court referred exclusively to contact in Missouri, not summertime contact, and therefore she had no notice that the court would consider modifying her summertime contact.
¶ 12. Mother claimed that there was a change in circumstances with respect to parent-child contаct in her October 2010 motion. Mother requested in pertinent part “clarification regarding the parent-child contact schedule for this school year and for the future,” that a cell phone be given to daughter, that father pay daughter’s travel expenses, that she have a blocks of time with daughter in Missouri, that shе be given specified periods of contact time from October 2010 to May 2011, and that she be able to travel internationally with daughter in the summer. In March 2011, the court characterized mother’s motion as a motion for “enforcement and clarification/modification of. .. parental rights,” and said it would set all pеnding motions for a full-day hearing.
¶ 13. Father’s April 2011 motion requested an order precluding mother from traveling to Missouri unannounced, precluding
¶ 14. The parties’ motions clearly contemplated a change in parent-child contact, as the court recognized. Both parties pleaded the existence of a change in circumstances; mother’s own motion raised the issue of summertime contact, and father’s motion argued for limitations on mother’s contact. Importantly, mother argued below that there was a change in circumstances because the school vacation schedules in Missouri and Vermont conflicted, and also because she alleged that father engaged in obstructionist behavior regarding parent-child contact. Thus, her argument that she had no notice fails. A requеst to open inquiry into one aspect of parent-child contact opens for inquiry the entire contact schedule, since it implicates the best interests of the child. Parent-child contact provisions do not stand alone, but are inextricably linked to create a visitation scheme. Cf. Cleverly v. Cleverly,
¶ 15. Mother also argues that the court’s finding of a real, substantial, and unanticipated change in circumstances was based on speculation, and that there have been positive changes in the parties’ relationship. She also argues that the case should be remanded for a clarifying order because the court erronеously interpreted the July 2010 order when it suggested that the court previously changed custody to reduce mother’s influence over daughter and to reduce mother’s contact with daughter.
¶ 16. Because mother pled a change of circumstances below, she cannot now complain that the court so found. Cf. P.F. Jurgs & Co. v. O’Brien,
¶ 18. When asked on direct examination whether he had a request with respect to changing summertime contact before the court, father testified:
I struggle — I have struggled for days and days and days trying to figure out how best to handle this, and just like the same struggle with weighing the impact to [daughter] of not seeing her mom versus the impact short-term and long-term, and I don’t — that ten weeks is about what the summer is, about — it’s about 75 days or so that she’s in Vermont. I — I believe that that length of timе negatively impacts my relationship to the point where if — if •— perhaps it’s not addressed that I will — I believe in — at some point I’m going to lose contact with [daughter] completely if something doesn’t change.
¶ 19. As always, the best interests of the child are paramount. The court, correctly focusing on daughter’s best interests, concluded that spending the entire summer with mother, with no opportunity for father to take a summer vacation with daughter, was not in daughter’s best interests. Assuming the applicability of the best-interests factors contained in 15 V.S.A. § 665, the court’s analysis is supported. Although the court did not explicitly go through the factors, it clearly considered the relevant ones in its decision. Specifically, looking at the order as a whole, the court considered § 665(b)(1), the relationship of the child with each parent and the ability and disposition of each parent to provide the child with love, affection, and guidance, and § 665(b)(3), the ability and disposition of each parent to meet the child’s present and future developmental needs.
¶ 20. Father’s testimony indicated that daughter’s best interests would be served by having physical contact with both parents over the summer, as opposed to mother only. He testified that mother’s visits were detrimental to daughter, that mother’s interactions were perilous and disingenuous, and that he does not have telephone or Skype contact with daughter when she is away without “pressure and intensity,” stating that mother often emails him with a recap of the conversation and why it has made daughter uncomfortable. This evidence supports the court’s findings аbout mother’s unreasonableness and lack of insight, and father’s efforts to minimize daughter’s stress, which in turn support the conclusion that daughter’s best interests would be served by limiting mother’s summertime contact.
Affirmed.
Notes
A conflict arose over the holidays surrounding flights and travel expenses. Daughter spent her holiday break in Vermont. Her flight back to Missouri was cancelled because of bad weather, and mother got a hotel room in Boston. She accused father of “mak[ing] money on the deal” by getting a voucher from the airline because of the cancellation. The court stated that father, as custodial parent, makes the travel decisions, but urged him to consider daughter’s travel time when making flight arrangements. This issue is not on appeal.
