Lead Opinion
Opinion
In this child custody case the following issues are raised: (1) whether in modifying a prior order of the juvenile court, the circuit court was required to conduct a de novo hearing or apply a “change in circumstance” test, and (2) assuming the circuit court applied the correct standard, whether the evidence was sufficient to warrant a modification of the existing custody order. For the reasons stated below, we affirm the decision of thе trial court.
Katherine and Lowndes Peple separated on September 2, 1983, after an eight year marriage to which one child, a son, Lowndes IV, was born. At the time of the separation, this child was four years old. On September 8, 1983, Lowndes filed a bill of complaint in the circuit court seeking a divorce on the ground of Katherine’s desertion. In her answer Katherine admitted her desertion. Both parties sought custody and support for the child.
On September 24, 1983, the juvenile court entered an order granting custody of the child to Katherine and reasonable and liberal visitation rights to Lowndes.
On appeal, Katherine contends that the proper standard to be applied under the facts of this case was the “change in circumstance” test enunciated in Keel v. Keel,
The record in this case does not definitively reveal the procedural standard that the chancellor applied. However, he specifically concerned himself with the proper procedural standard to apply, and from his comments we conclude that he applied the “change in circumstance” test rather than the de novo standard. Fоr the reasons that follow, we conclude that the “change in circumstance” test was proper, and because it imposed a higher burden of proof upon Lowndes, we must consider the merits of Katherine’s appeal using that test.
We turn now to our analysis of the procedural standard applicable to custody disputes in the circuit court between natural parents under the facts of this case. In Virginia, custody disputеs may be resolved in the juvenile and domestic relations district courts or the circuit courts. These courts are granted concurrent jurisdiction by Code §§ 16.1-241 (A)(3) and 16.1-244. Generally, under this statutory scheme, the juvenile courts have exclusive original jurisdiction in custody cases unless and until the circuit courts assume jurisdiction. The circuit courts may assume jurisdiction either by an appeal from the juvenile courts or by the direct filing of an appropriаte proceeding in the circuit courts. The procedural standard to be applied in the circuit courts is dictated by the manner in which those courts assume jurisdiction.
On September 24, 1983, when the juvenile court entered the award of custody to Katherine, Code § 16.1-244(A) contained the following provision:
[W]hen a circuit court shall have taken jurisdiction [to determine custody] by entry of an order relating to custody ... the juvenile and domestic relations district сourts shall be divested of such jurisdiction.
(1982 Repl. Vol.)(emphasis added).
Code § 16.1-244(A) was amended in 1984, 1985 and 1987 and now provides in pertinent part:
However, when a suit for divorce has been filed in a circuit court and the custody, guardianship, visitation or support of*419 children of the parties or spousal support is at issue, the juvenile and domestic relations district courts shall be divested of the right to enter any further decrees or orders and such matters shall be determined by the circuit court.... Nothing in this section . . . shall deprive the juvenile and domestic relations district courts of the jurisdiction to enforce its orders prior to the оrder of any circuit court ....
(1987 Cum. Supp.)(emphasis added).
Clearly, before the amendments to Code § 16.1-244(A), in this case the juvenile court had jurisdiction to enter a valid custody award because the circuit court had not entered an order divesting the juvenile court of jurisdiction.
It is also clear that the circuit court must conduct a de novo hearing in custody cases on appeal from the juvenile courts. Code §§ 16.1-136, 16.1-296. “[A]n appeal to the circuit court from a court not of record under Code § 16.1-136 annuls the judgment of the inferior tribunal as completely as if there had been no previous trial .... [S]uch a trial de novo in the circuit court grants to a litigant every advantage which would have been his had the case been tried originally in such court.” Box v. Talley,
We turn now to Lowndes’ position in this appeal that the circuit court should have conducted a de novo hearing and that our Supreme Court’s decision in Harper v. Harper,
When a court of competent jurisdiction has entered a valid custody order in favor of one parent, the parent seeking to obtain a transfer of custody has the burden to show a change in circumstances since the most recent custody award and that a change in custody would be in the best interests of the child. See Keel, 225 Va. at 611,
We turn now to the issue whether the evidence was sufficient to warrant a change in custody from Katherine to Lowndes using the “change in circumstances” test. Under familiar principles, we review the evidence in the light most favorable to Lowndes as the prevailing party below. See Turner,
The record clearly supports the conclusion that neither parent is unfit or unwilling to properly care for the child. The chancellor found proof of a change in circumstances from Lowndes’ more active participation in the child’s daily activities and Katherine’s current employment obligations which rendered her schedule less suitable than Lowndes’ in attending to the child’s daily needs. We believe this evidence satisfies the first prong of the Keel test and establishes a material change in circumstances.
The second prong of the Keel test, concededly the more important and more difficult to apply, is whether a change in custody from Katherine to Lowndes would be in the best interests of the child. “[Tjhere is no simple, mechanical, ‘cut and dried’ way to determine whether a change in custody will be in the best interests of childrеn. Yet, the trial court is bound to consider evidence
In Turner, we noted: “[T]he trial court must recognize that all children are unique to some degree and that the circumstances of their divorced parents are unique to some degree. Consequently, the court [’s] . . . paramount concern [is] the best interests of the child at a given point in time, recognizing that it may become appropriate to make a change in the future.” Id. at 36,
Finally, while Katherine appealed the circuit court’s award of child support, she has not pursued this issue in her brief or in oral argument. The record contains adequate evidence of the needs of the child and her ability to contribute financially towards the satisfaction of those needs. Accordingly, we find no abuse of the chancellor’s discretion in setting the award of child support in this case.
Affirmed.
Benton, J., concurred.
Notes
The record does not contain this order. In this appeal, however, the parties have stipulated that it was entered and was a valid order. We note that, for the reasons ex
Neither party contends that these provisions of the final decree of divorce constituted a temporary award of custody by the circuit court. No evidence was presented to the circuit court on the issue of custody and thеse provisions were considered merely as a continuance and preservation of the issue of custody which was to be determined at a later hearing in the circuit court. Accordingly, we do not treat these provisions as constituting a pendente lite order and express no opinion as to the standard to be applied at a hearing on the merits subsequent to the entry of such an order in the circuit court.
We note that, pursuant tо the amendments of this Code section, the filing of the suit for divorce prior to the entry of a custody order by the juvenile court would have divested the juvenile court of its concurrent jurisdiction. Consequently without an order of reference to the juvenile court by the circuit court the issue in this case would not have occurred.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring
While concurring with the result reached by the majority, I would hold that the ore tenus hearing conducted after the divorce decree was entered should have been conducted as a de novo proceeding, and that the change of circumstance principle was not applicable. I am unable to find any language in the Code sections cited by the majority to support a legislative intent to deprive circuit courts of their power to make independent determinations in custody matters unencumbered by a prior decision of а juvenile and domestic relations district court (district court).
I respectfully disagree with the majority’s assertion that the record fails to show that prior to the ore tenus hearing the circuit court had not entered an order “relating to custody” which divested the district court of further jurisdiction. While in a footnote the majority asserts that no evidence was presented to the circuit court on the issue of custody, in its opinion the majority notes that at the time the divorce decree was entered the circuit court had before it a background report received pursuant to its order of October 18, 1984.
Further, in the footnote referred to above, the majority declares that neither party contends that the provisions relating to сustody contained in the divorce decree constitute a temporary custody decree, and for the reason stated declines to consider those provisions as constituting a “pendente lite” decree. In such matters, by intent or oversight, parties may neither bestow nor deprive courts of their jurisdiction. This is not a matter of failure to preserve a point or comply with a rule. It is a matter of our duty to review the record and determine the issue submitted. To make that determination, I suggest we first ask what authority was possessed by the district court to change custody from wife to husband after the circuit court entered the divorce decree containing a provision which ordered that the district court custody order remain in full force and effect pending an ore tenus hearing. In my view the answer is that the district court possessed no such authority because the circuit court’s order contained in the divorce decree deprived the district court of further jurisdiction.
I am of opinion that by the reference to custody in the divorce decree the circuit court assumed jurisdiction of all matters relating to custody; therefore, the district court was without authority to alter custody or exercise control over the parties concerning that issue.
Having deprived the district court of jurisdiction, the ore tenus hearing should have been conducted, de novo-, thus the ultimate question to be answered is whether this rеcord discloses an abuse of the discretionary powers possessed by the circuit court in matters of custody. I agree with the majority that the record clearly supports the judgment of the trial court and its judgment should be affirmed.
Even if there had been no evidence, the time honored rule is that error is not presumed. Moreover, no objection to the decree was made on the ground of lack of evidence to support it.
