Lead Opinion
Fаther, Brian Pritchard, appeals the order of the family court suspending indefinitely visitation with his daughter, Briana, and granting sole legal parental rights and responsibilities (PRR) to Briana’s mother. Father argues that (1) the court’s rulings are not supported by the record, (2) he was not properly noticed for the hearing .on mother’s motion to modify legal PRR, (3) the court improperly admitted a “past recorded recollection” of mother, and (4) the court abused its discretion when it appointed mother’s uncle to supervise father’s past visits. We affirm.
Mother and father were living together in Florida at the time of Briana’s birth on January 1, 1993. Shortly thereafter, mother moved to Vermont with Briana to live with mother’s family, and father remained in Florida. A Florida paternity decree awarded physical custody to mother, granted father visitation, and awarded joint legal PRR.
Father’s last visit during this period occurred in March 1995 when he absconded with Briana following an
Only one day of visitation took place under the court’s July 1996 order. Because of the prior incident involving the police, mother’s uncle was present at the drop-off following this visit. Mother’s uncle is a former police officer and volunteers as a guardian ad litem with the Windham Family Court. According to uncle, father would not at first bring Briana inside, and when he did finally, he stood at the end of the hallway with the crying child in his arms, goading mother with questions about whether she really wanted Briana back. Briana was hаving trouble breathing because father was squeezing her so hard, and he did not let go until uncle approached him, at which time Briana ran to her mother. Mother did not bring Briana back the next day for visitation because of this incident.
Mother testified that in the months following this isolated visit father called her several times and left messages, but he did not leave a phone number where he could be reached and did not mention that he was interested in visitation. Mother also indicated that father did not make any contact during Christmas or on Briana’s birthdays. They did receive a box of toys before Christmas of 1996, but there was no note or return address with the package. Mother sent two certified letters to father regarding visitation, both of which went unclaimed. Mother indicated that Briana did not ask about her father during this period of no contact.
Following this period of two and a half years, father contacted mother’s attorney on April 5,1999, indicating that he would be coming to Vermont to collect Briana for seven days of overnight visitation starting on April 12. In response, mother filed a motion on April 7 for an emergency, ex parte order modifying visitation. The family court granted the motion, ordering that father have only supervised visitation for several hours a day for the seven-day period. The court subsequently held a hearing on April 13 at which both parties were present.
After the hearing, the court established a temporary schedule for monthly supervised visitation and weekly telephone contact for Briana and her father, and appointed mother’s uncle to supervise visits. The court noted both at the hearing and in its order that father’s failure to maintain contact with Briana as established by the court’s temporary order could result in suspension of his parent-child contact.
Another hearing took place on December 13, 1999. Father was now living in Cheyenne, Wyoming.
Mother also testified that she had made all decisions regarding Briana’s health and welfare since she left Florida with her in 1993. She and father could not converse constructive!y about Briana because father continually, and inappropriately, would turn the conversation to mother and father’s previous relationship; therefore, she stopped discussing matters concerning Briana with him.
Uncle also testified, relating his observаtions made while supervising father’s visits with Briana. He chronicled a series of bizarre behaviors by father during the visits, including father incessantly taking pictures of Briana. He described father and Briana’s interaction as that of “pursuit and avoidance,” with Briana trying to hide from father and often crying when father was pursuing her. Uncle said that he had also witnessed Briana cry and throw tantrums about having to go to visitation.
At the conclusion of the hearing, the family court issued an oral decision in which it determined by clear and convinсing evidence that it was not in Briana’s best interest that she have continuing contact with father. The court suspended any further parent-child contact and granted mother sole legal PRR. It subsequently issued a written order setting forth in more detail its reasons for doing so. Father now appeals.
Father argues that the court’s findings and conclusions resulting in the suspension of his visitation rights are not supported in the record. We will not disturb findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous. Nickerson v. Nickerson,
We have noted “[i]t is conceivable that a court could find visitation so inimical to the interests of a child that visitation would be greatly circumscribed or even denied. Indeed, our own cases provide that visitation may be denied upon a showing of good cause.” Fenoff v. Fenoff,
The court based its decision to suspend father’s visitation on its findings that father repeatedly failed to establish consistent and sustained contact with Brianа, that he failed to. demonstrate genuine concern for Briana’s emotional development, and that he has never made efforts to provide appropriate parental support or establish a meaningful relationship with Briana. In so doing, it determined that father’s proffered explanations and excuses for his behavior were neither satisfactory nor credible. See In re A.F.,
The record reflects that father did not visit with Briana regularly until she was a year and a half old, and then only for a period of several months. A gap of roughly a year then followed with little or no contact. Father visited with Briana only once, in August of 1996, under the family court’s July 1996 order. Father did not have contact again with Briana until April 1999 under the court’s emergency order. Finally, father’s contact following the court’s temporary order of April 1999 continued to be inconsistent, including three days of prearranged visitation missed without notice. Mother testified to drastic changes in Briana’s behavior, including bathroom accidents, bouts of violence, periods of withdrawal and extreme emotional distress surrounding the monthly visitation with father. On this record, we cannot say the court’s findings lack support.
Father also specifically challenges the court’s factual finding that he failed to prosecute a motion to enforce visitation he filed in August 1996 (father concedes that the time to appeal the failure of the court to hold a hearing has long since passed; rather he simply argues that the factual finding is clearly erroneous and should not have played a role in the court’s disposition). The record reflects that father filed a motion to enforce the family court’s July 1996 order in early August 1996. The family court advised that a hearing could not be scheduled for the week of his motion due to the lack of an available judge. The court indicated, however, that a hearing would be scheduled at the earliest possible datе, taking into consideration father’s availability. The docket entry made by the clerk regarding this order states: ,
I handed [father] the motion/reaction form for his motion for emergency hrg on parent/child contact and asked him when he could be available for a hearing. He stated that he could be*456 available only this week. I explained that the Judge had written there was no available Court time this week. ... He tossed the motion reaction form, the motion and affidavit back on the counter and tоld me to keep it.
Father subsequently filed a notice of appeal from the earlier order of the court asserting jurisdiction over the parties, but never responded regarding his availability for a hearing on his motion to enforce. While his appeal was pending, the trial court clerk sent a letter to father again inquiring about his availability for a hearing on his motion to enforce, also sending a copy to the attorney representing him in his appeal. There was no response tо this inquiry either. On this record, we cannot say the trial court’s factual finding was clearly erroneous.
Father also argues that the order suspending his parent-child contact is unsupportable in the absence of expert testimony. The court determined it was not needed due to the “patent inadequacies” in father’s history of involvement with Briana. Given that expert evaluations in family court proceedings are merely advisory, Mansfield v. Mansfield,
Father next argues that, because he was not provided sufficient notice of mother’s motion to modify legal PRR under V.R.F.P. 4, the court was foreclosed from considering mother’s motion. After the final hearing on mother’s motion to modify parent-child contact was scheduled for December, mother filеd a motion to also modify legal PRR. A copy of the motion was sent to father’s attorney. The trial court then attempted to serve father with notice of the motion and the court’s order regarding the motion via certified mail. Father, however, refused receipt of the letter, and the court became aware of this the day of the December 13 hearing.
V.R.F.P. 4(j)(2)(B) and (b)(2)(B) provide that, in cases involving minor children, service of motions to modify PRR may be made either in person or via certified mail, and, if service via certified mad is refused, the clerk may simply effect service by ordinary first class mail.
Father also contends that the court committed reversible error by. admitting a journal mother kept over the duration of the court’s temporary order granting father supervised visitation. The court admitted it as a past-recorded recollection. To be admissible under Rule 803(5), the witness for whom the recorded recollection is offered must have an insufficient memory such that the witness is unable to testify fully and. accurately. V.R.E. 803(5); State v. Marcy,
Finally, father argues that the court abused its discretion by appointing mother’s uncle as supervisor for father’s visitation, and, therefore, the court should not have taken into account his testimony regarding his observations during father’s visits with Briana. We discern no such abuse of discretion. See Bissonette v. Gambrel,
Affirmed.
Notes
The actual order appears nowhere in the record; rather the family court characterized the Florida decree as such.
Father had testified at the April hearing that he had numerous addresses and was on the road most of each month for his job. Specifically, he noted that he maintained a Florida driver’s license listing his sister’s address, but was renting a room at an address in Fоrt Collins, Colorado. He also had a mailing service in Aurora, Colorado and maintained an office in Brigham City, Utah.
The dissent notes that there is no dispute regarding the applicable standard of review in this case. Indeed, this case appears to be simply another example of the disparate approaches with regard to applying the standard of review in child custody matters that this Court takes. This very issue was addressed at length in the parallel dissents in Cloutier v. Blowers,
We note that, although the suspension of parent>ehild contact is indefinite, father may still move to modify the court’s order at a later date should father’s, mother’s or Briana’s circumstances change. See 15 V.S.A. § 668.
Father testified that he refuses all certified mail and that he did not know that the letter he refused was from the court.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. Because I cannot agree that the drastic step of suspension of parent-child contact between father and Briana was warranted in this case, I respectfully dissent. The record does not sufficiently support a determination that continuing contact between father and Briana would be so inimical to the child’s best interest that it should be indefinitely terminated. Furthermore, given that the trial court based its suspension of parent-child contact on father’s failure to maintain “consistent and nurturing contact” with Briana, I am concerned that we are confronted with what will be in practical effect a permanent termination of father’s relationship with his daughter. I believe that the trial court’s ordering such was not within the bounds of reasonableness in light of the evidence before it, and therefore constituted an abuse of discretion. Thus, I would reverse and remand for reconsideration of the numerous and less drastic alternatives to this disposition.
I take no issue with the Court’s recitation of the relevant standards of review, but disagree with their application in this case. As we have taken pains to point out, a court order which undertakes the significant step of severing a parent-child relationship is a serious matter. Gates v. Gates,
The record in this case reveals that father’s contact with Briana has been sporadic over the years. The evidence also demonstrates that father’s own life lacks consistency. Furthermore, based on the testimony of mother’s uncle, it would appear that father did not handle himself well in the course of his visits with Briana, although this must be put in the context of the fact that the visits were supervised by a relative of mother’s with whom father had a very poor relationship. Furthermore, neither father nor Briana has received educational or emotional supports such as those traditionally available to parents and children prior to termination of a parent-child relationship pursuant to 33 V.S.A. §§ 5531 and 5532. As a result, we have no evidence and are left to speculate at how such services would benefit the two. Cf. In re J.T.,
The majority points out that father could seek modification of the court’s moratorium on contact with his daughter at a later date. While this is true as a matter of law, I fear in this case it is not a
In circumstances such as this case presents, there are myriad resolutions available to the court short of terminating the parent-сhild relationship. The court’s concern about the anxiety father’s resumption of visitation with Briana provoked in her could have been addressed through counseling. Counseling would be especially helpful here, where the parties have an extremely acrimonious relationship that might stand in the way of mother helping Briana adjust to the reintroduction of her father into her life. Ordering supervision and support by a qualified, neutral third party is precisely what the trial court did when faced with similar circumstances in Fenoff v. Fenoff,
Because I do not believe that the facts of this case present the extreme situation where all contact between parent and child should be severed, I would reverse and remand to allow the trial court to craft a less draconian resolution. I am authorized to say that Chief Justice Allen (Ret.) joins in this dissent.
