The opinion of the court was delivered by
Defendant Roseann Rente, the mother of now three-and-one-half-year-old Joseph, appeals from an order of the Family Part entered on October 7, 2005, granting plaintiffs Barbara and Louis Rente, the paternal grandparents, visitation of Joseph. Defendant also appeals from the order of December 16, 2005, denying her motion for reconsideration and consolidation of the grandparent
Defendant asserts the following arguments on appeal:
POINT i
THE PLAINTIFFS FAILED TO MAKE ANY EFFORTS TO RESOLVE THEIR DIFFERENCES WITH THE DEFENDANT BEFORE FILING SUIT.
POINT II
THE PLAINTIFFS FAILED TO ESTABLISH A RELATIONSHIP WITH THE CHILD AND THEREFORE DO NOT COME UNDER THE GVS.
POINTS III, IV &V
THE TRIAL JUDGE ERRED IN GRANTING UNSUPERVISED VISITATION TO PLAINTIFFS OVER THE MOTHER’S OBJECTION BECAUSE THEY WERE UNABLE TO DEMONSTRATE BY A PREPONDERANCE OF THE EVIDENCE THAT THE CHILD WOULD SUFFER ANY HARM IF VISITATION WAS DENIED.
POINT VI
FACTOR NUMBER EIGHT OF THE NEW JERSEY STATUTE CONTRAVENES THE LOGIC OF TROJEL AND IS UNCONSTITUTIONAL.
POINT VII
THE TRIAL JUDGE ERRED BY FAILING TO CONSOLIDATE THE DIVORCE PROCEEDING WITH THE GRANDPARENTS VISITATION PROCEEDING.
We reverse.
Joseph was born on July 18, 2003. Defendant and Daniel separated in March 2005 when she obtained a final restraining order (FRO) against him, and he moved in with his parents. The FRO provided for Daniel to have supervised visitation with Joseph at a court facility. Daniel filed a complaint for divorce on April 25, 2005. The final judgment of divorce was entered on April 5, 2006, and pursuant to the property settlement agreement, defendant has temporary sole legal and physical custody, and Daniel has supervised visitation on alternate weekends, monitored by plaintiffs.
On April 11, 2005, plaintiffs’
Joseph and I have a very good relationship. When he’s at my house, we have dinner ... [a]nd then after dinner ... I always have books for him that we read. Then he has trucks and toys and cars and some videos that have like songs on them and little games that you play with the alphabet.
Louis’ sole comment about his relationship with Joseph was “I’m his grandfather” and “We spend time with him ... when [defendant] drops him off ... when she has to go to work.”
Defendant disputed the frequency of the occasions that plaintiffs babysat, testifying that her mother was Joseph’s primary babysitter when she was at work. She estimated that plaintiffs had only seen Joseph about five times between January and June 2005. It was undisputed that plaintiffs had not seen Joseph since March 28, 2005. Defendant claimed the child “doesn’t even know” his grandmother and claimed she was shocked by the GVS application because the grandmother “was never concerned about [Joseph and s]he would go for three months at a time not seeing him.” Defendant further claimed the grandparents did not know how to properly care for Joseph, complaining that when they babysat in the past he suffered severe diaper rashes because of their failure to change his diapers and foot blisters because they would not remove his shoes at any time during the day. Despite the problems, defendant stated she did not want to terminate Joseph’s
Although the judge stated he did not have proof before him that any harm would come to the child by not visiting with the grandparents, which he recognized was the standard under the GVS, he then entered an interim order for weekly supervised visitation and appointed Dr. Dasher to perform a psychological evaluation. It appears from the colloquy the judge ordered supervised visitation because the mother had acquiesced, although it is clear that defendant objected to the weekly visitation ordered by the court.
By the continuation hearing of October 7, 2005, plaintiffs were supervising their son’s visitation with Joseph two hours on Wednesday nights. At the hearing, the judge read Dr. Dasher’s report into the record, in which he opined:
It is my impression that both natural parents have significant adjustment problems that impair their parenting ability, which in my opinion, underscores the need for grandparent contact, because Barbara and Louis Rente, in my opinion, represent the only stable influence in Joseph’s life at this time.
The judge further referenced portions of the report in which Dr. Dasher stated that there was no substantive evidence to suggest the paternal grandparents presented any risk to Joseph and recommended they be granted unsupervised visitation every other weekend. Over defendant’s objection, the judge admitted Dr. Dasher’s report into evidence. Based on this report, which the judge found to be “quite comprehensive,” the judge concluded it “would harm [Joseph] to have this stability [of the grandparents] removed ... from his life at the present time,” and granted unsupervised grandparent visitation on alternate weekends by order of October 7, 2005. By order of December 16, 2005, the judge denied defendant’s motion for reconsideration and consolidation of the GVS with the pending divorce proceeding. Thus, as represented in defendant’s brief, plaintiffs currently supervise their son’s visitation with Joseph on alternate weekends pursuant to the matrimonial order, and have independent visitation with Joseph on the remaining two weekends pursuant to the GVS
Because the GVS is an incursion on a fundamental right of the parent, our Supreme Court has held that “the only state interest warranting the invocation of the State’s parens patriae jurisdiction to overcome the presumption in favor of a parent’s decision and to force grandparent visitation over the wishes of a fit parent is the avoidance of harm to the child.” Moriarty v. Bradt, 177 N.J. 84, 114-15, 827 A.2d 203 (2003). In Moriarty the Court held that grandparents will only be given visitation against the wishes of a parent if they can prove by a preponderance of the evidence that such visitation is necessary to avoid harm to the child. Id. at 117, 827 A.2d 203. In Mizrahi v. Cannon, 375 N.J.Super. 221, 867 A.2d 490 (App.Div.2005), we reversed the award of grandparent visitation, holding that in the wake of Moriarty,
[grandparents] must establish that denying visitation would wreak a particular identifiable harm, specific to the child, to justify interference with a parent’s fundamental due process right to raise a child free from judicial interference and supervision. Condusory, generic items, such as “loss of potentially happy memories,” are not a sufficient basis to warrant such an intrusion into a parent’s decision making.
[Id. at 234, 867 A.2d 490.]
The harm can be demonstrated by factual or expert evidence. Moriarty, supra, 177 N.J. at 117, 827 A.2d 203. Such testimony can include evidence of a longstanding relationship between the grandparents and the child, with expert testimony assessing the effect of the termination of such relationship. Ibid. (citations omitted). Moreover, the trial court has the discretion to appoint a medical expert if it believes the expert will assist it in disposing of an issue in dispute. R. 5:3-3(a). The expert’s report must be submitted to the court and parties, and the parties are entitled a reasonable opportunity to conduct discovery of the expert. R. 5:3-3(f). Moreover, the court-appointed expert is subject to cross-examination. R. 5:3-3(g).
Only after the court finds the potential for harm has been shown and the presumption in favor of parental decision-
Here, the judge recognized the high burden of proof necessary for a grandparent to obtain visitation over the objection of a parent. He acknowledged at the conclusion of the June hearing that he did not have the proof before him that any harm would come to Joseph by not visiting with plaintiffs. He made no finding that plaintiffs had proven that visitation was necessary and the monthly supervised schedule offered by defendant was inadequate to avoid harm to Joseph. Regardless, the judge ordered that the grandparents be given weekly supervised visitations, over the strenuous objection of the mother, pending psychological evaluations of both parents and bonding evaluations of the grandparents and Joseph, and continued the case for four months. We perceive this as error. The grandmother’s testimony of babysitting for her two-year-old grandson on occasion failed to establish even a prima facie case of the requisite harm under Moriarty to rebut the presumption in favor of parental decision-making that would necessitate a psychological evaluation and hearing. In light of defendant’s willingness to allow the grandparents to have visitation, though limited in time and scope, which was well within' defendant’s prerogative as the toddler’s mother, the court should
Even assuming plaintiffs had established a prima facie case or the court felt the need to appoint an expert and schedule another hearing because of the parties’ pro se status, there were procedural and substantive deficiencies that require reversal of the GVS order. At the October hearing, the trial judge failed to comply with Rule 5:3-3, when he admitted Dr. Dasher’s report into evidence without offering defendant an opportunity to obtain her own expert, providing a copy to defendant to review prior to the hearing and permitting her a reasonable opportunity to depose Dr. Dasher, or making Dr. Dasher available for cross-examination. R. 5:3 — 3(e)(f)(g)(h).
Moreover, Dr. Dasher’s report was insufficient to establish the requisite harm to the child under Moriarty. It was clear Dr. Dasher was less than impressed with defendant’s and Daniel’s parenting abilities and, essentially based on that assumption, articulated the net opinion that the grandparents represented the only stable influence in Joseph’s life. The psychologist had limited contact with the parties and provided no examples of such stability to support his opinion. He further opined there was “no substantial evidence to suggest that the paternal grandparents present any risk” to Joseph. The standard for grandparent visitation, however, is not a “best interests” test. Rather, the burden is on the grandparents to demonstrate, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the child would be harmed in the absence of visitation. Moriarty, supra, 177 N.J. at 117, 827 A.2d 203. Dr. Dasher’s report failed to articulate any particular harm that would result from the denial of plaintiffs’ visitation rights with their grandson or indicate that any restriction of plaintiffs’ rights beyond the once-monthly supervised visitation scheduled proffered by defendant was inadequate to avoid harm to Joseph. Dr. Dasher’s recommendation of unsupervised weekly visitation was immaterial to the issue before the court.
As plaintiffs failed to satisfy their burden of proof under Moriarty, we reverse the October 7, 2005 grandparent visitation order. We therefore need not address the other issues raised in defendant’s brief. Nothing in this opinion precludes defendant from consenting to grandparent visitation under terms and conditions she deems appropriate or precludes plaintiffs from filing a subsequent application for visitation under the GVS if the circumstances materially change.
Reversed.
The grandmother Barbara filed the initial application and grandfather Louis was joined as a plaintiff by the trial judge after the initial hearing.
