180 Conn. 705 | Conn. | 1980
This is an appeal from a judgment awarding the custody of a minor child to her mother. The plaintiff, Dennis Seymour, "brought an action against the defendant, Margaret Seymour, seeking dissolution of their marriage and custody of their minor child. The defendant’s cross complaint did not contest that the marriage had irretrievably broken down, but sought an order that custody be awarded to the defendant as well as an order for ancillary financial relief. No appeal has been taken from the trial court’s judgment insofar as it dissolved the parties’ marriage and divided their joint assets. The parties continue to be at issue about the custody of their child, which the trial court, Berdon, J., awarded to the defendant mother.
The trial court’s extensive finding, corrected as appropriate,
The parties’ living arrangements, and their arrangements for the care of their child, took various forms from the time of separation in January, 1976, to the time of trial, which began in July, 1977. In 1976, the mother and the child first lived in a variety of marginally adequate temporary quarters. In an effort to find more suitable quarters and to make more permanent plans, the mother, in May of that year, found a baby-sitter for the child during weekdays and asked the father to care for her at night. The father remained in sole custody of the child until some time in June, when the mother resumed personal responsibility for the care of the child for part of each week. The father’s custody continued to include leaving the child on weekdays with the baby-sitter the mother had located. The mother’s custody did not require the use of baby-sitters, since the mother was able to schedule her part-time work for the time when the child was with her father. Although both parents tried, in good faith, to make a success of joint custody, both had become persuaded, by the time of trial, that joint custody was not feasible.
Although all aspects of the issue of custody of the minor child, then two and one-half years old, were thoroughly and extensively contested at trial by all of the interested parties, there was wide
To assist the court in its Solomonic responsibility to make a choice between the child’s suitable but irreconcilable parents, the court appointed Attorney Peter A. Kelly as counsel for the minor child and conducted extensive hearings for seven trial days. The court received testimony not only from the parents and their friends but also from a number of professional experts. The court heard from Kay Shafer, a psychiatric social worker who had counseled extensively with the parents before and after the marital breakdown; she recommended that custody be awarded to the father. The court asked for a report from a family relations officer, Allen Rubin, who, after a custody investigation, also recommended that custody be awarded to the father. The court received reports, finally, from two psychiatrists. Earl S. Patterson, M.D., concluded from his psychiatric examination of the parents that psychiatrically it made no difference which parent was awarded custody. Kyle D. Pruett, M.D., finding that
The court concluded, in accordance with the criteria of General Statutes § 46b-56 (b),
The appellants mount a twofold attack on the trial court’s determination to award custody to the mother. First, the appellants argue that the custody statute’s failure to provide guidelines for the exercise of the trial court’s discretion makes the statute unconstitutionally vague. Second, the appellants
This is not the first occasion upon which this court has been asked to interpolate objective guidelines into the open-ended fact-oriented statutes which govern family disputes. In Joy v. Joy, 178 Conn. 254, 255, 423 A.2d 895 (1979), we declined to impose guidelines to eonstrain a trial court’s inquiry into the irretrievable breakdown of a marriage. In Posada v. Posada, 179 Conn. 568, 573, 427 A.2d 406 (1980), and Fucci v. Fucci, 179 Conn. 174, 179-80, 425 A.2d 592 (1979), we refused to require specific findings concerning each of the factors that a trial court must consider in making financial settlements pursuant to General Statutes $§46b-81 (assignment of property) and 46b-82 (alimony). We continue to adhere to the view that the legislature was acting wisely in leaving the delicate and difficult process of fact-finding in family matters to flexible, individualized adjudication of the particular facts of each case without the constraint of objective guidelines. See Mnookin, “Child-Custody Adjudication: Judicial Functions in the Face of Indeterminacy,” 39 Law & Contemp. Prob. 226, 249-68 (Summer, 1975); Foster & Freed, “Child Custody,” 39 N.Y.U.L. Rev. 423, 441 (1964). Certainly, a statute that vests discretion in the trial court to determine the best interests of a child in awarding custody is no more unconstitutional than is a statute that allows dissolution of a marriage without fault upon a factual finding that a marriage has irretrievably broken down. See Joy v. Joy, supra, 255, and cases there cited.
The role that psychological evaluations play in the determination of the best interests of the child is not susceptible to generalization by appellate courts. It is significant that Goldstein, Freud & Solnit characterize as the “least detrimental available alternative” their suggestion that child placement should maintain “on a continuous, unconditional, and permanent basis a relationship with at least one adult who is or will become the child’s psychological parent.” Goldstein, Freud & Solnit, Beyond the Best Interests of the Child, p. 99 (1979). Such a characterization serves to emphasize that the concept of the psychological parent is not a fixed
The appellants challenge not only the concept of the psychological parent but also the methodology of the psychiatrist who presented the concept to the court. The weight to be given to psychological testimony by professionals in mental health is, in matters of custody, as it is elsewhere, a question for the trier of fact. It should be noted, however, that expert opinion must be evaluated in light of the expert’s opportunity to come to a reasoned conclusion. Duley v. Plourde, 170 Conn. 482, 487, 365 A.2d 1148 (1976); Stephanofsky v. Hill, 136 Conn. 379, 384, 71 A.2d 560 (1950); see Tait and LaPlante,
In the circumstances of the case before it, the trial court was certainly not unjustified in concluding that it was relevant to inquire as it did into the psychological relationship between the child and her parents. Once it is definitively established, as it was here, that each parent is loving, caring and otherwise entirely suitable, the court perforce must look to other factors to come to a decision about custody. The court was not in error in basing its award of custody to the mother on her strong and healthy relationship to her daughter, her willingness and ability to devote time to her daughter, and her willingness to facilitate visitation by the father.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
The appellant’s effort to add fifty-two proposed draft findings, many of which are merely duplicative of findings actually made, is, as we have noted in the past, a singularly unhelpful approach to appellate review. See Fucci v. Fucci, 179 Conn. 174, 177, 425 A.2d 592 (1979).
Section 46b-56 provides, in relevant part: “superior COURT ORDERS RE CUSTODY AND CARE OP MINOR CHILDREN IN ACTIONS POR DISSOLUTION OP MARRIAGE, LEGAL SEPARATION AND ANNULMENT. . . . (b) In making or modifying any order with, respect to custody or visitation, the court shall be guided by the best interests of the child, giving consideration to the wishes of the child if he is of sufficient age and capable of forming an intelligent preference, provided in making the initial order the court may take into consideration the causes for dissolution of the marriage or legal separation.”
Pruett saw the ehild with her father on two occasions, and with her mother once. Each interview lasted between forty-five and fifty minutes. Pruett never saw the child in the company of both of her parents. Pruett supervised the administration of a development assessment for the child alone, which involved both interviews and observations of undisclosed length.