¶ 1. Mother appeals a Windham Family Court decision denying her motion to modify parental rights and responsibilities so that she could relocate to Florida with the parties’ minor child. Because it is undisputed that mother’s proposed relocation is a “real, substantial and unanticipated change of circumstances,” 15 V.S.A. § 668, this case turns on a determination of the best interests of the child. The family court’s evaluation of the factors contained in 15 V.S.A. § 665(b) is supported by the record, and, therefore, we will not disturb the court’s conclusion that it is in the child’s best interests to remain with father in Vermont. Accordingly, we affirm the court’s decision to award primary legal and physical parental rights and responsibilities to father.
¶ 2. The parties were married in 1991, and have one child, Demetri, who was born in September 1998. Following their separation, the parties entered into an interim stipulation, filed with the family court in March 2002, providing for a shared custodial arrangement — De-metri would spend from 8:00 a.m. Thursday morning until noon on Sunday with father and from noon on Sunday until Wednesday at 4:30 p.m. with mother, with alternating custody on Wednesdays from 4:30 p.m. until Thursday morning. The parties have followed that contact schedule since the filing of the interim stipulation, and in fact began splitting Demetri’s time between them roughly in half in March 2001 when the divorce action was filed.
¶ 3. The court issued a final divorce order in April 2003, awarding mother sole physical and legal parental rights and responsibilities, while maintaining the contact schedule from the interim stipulation. Mother appealed, and, while that appeal was pending, she moved in family court to modify the shared parent-child contact schedule to enable her to move to Florida to live for part of the year with her flaneé, who is employed principally in that state. Father opposed the motion and cross-moved for sole parental rights and responsibilities. Following a hearing, the court issued the decision currently on appeal, concluding that mother’s planned move constituted a real, substantial, and unanticipated change of circumstances, and that the child’s best interests required an award of primary parental rights and responsibilities to father, and substantial parent contact with mother during summers and holidays.
¶ 4. The family court enjoys broad discretion in determining custody, and we accept its findings unless they are clearly erroneous. Payrits v. Payrits,
¶ 5. The legal framework for custody modification cases consists of a two-step inquiry. First, the party seeking to modify custody must demonstrate that the proposed modification is a “real, substantial and unanticipated change of circumstances.” 15 V.S.A. § 668. See Habecker v. Giard,
¶ 6. Next, the moving party must show that the proposed modification would be in the best interests of the child. 15 V.S.A. § 668; Habecker,
¶ 7. This Court has described a change in physical custody as a “violent dislocation,” Kilduff v. Willey,
¶ 8. This case required just such a reassessment of the custodial arrangement established in the divorce order. While the divorce order granted sole physical and legal responsibility to mother, it continued the parties’ preexisting contact schedule under which father and mother equally share time with Demetri.
¶ 9. The family court evaluated De-metri’s best interests properly, carefully assessing the factors contained in 15 V.S.A. § 665(b) in light of the evidence presented at the modification hearing and mother’s proposed move to Florida. First, the court acted within its discretion in determining that several factors did not weigh in either party’s favor. Under § 665(b)(1), the court concluded that both parties are devoted to Demetri and are equally able to provide him with love, affection, and guidance. Discussing § 665(b)(5), the court observed that each party wants Demetri to have a positive relationship with the other, but simultaneously wants to be his primary parent. Thus, the court concluded they are equally likely to “encourage regular and frequent contact with the other parent.” Under § 665(b)(8), the court noted that both parties have failed to communicate effectively with each other and thus did not weigh this factor in either party’s favor. As for § 665(b)(9), the court found it irrelevant because there was no evidence of abuse.
¶ 10. The court also determined that “the quality of the child’s relationship with the primary care provider,” § 665(b)(6), played no role in the decision because the parties had been sharing their time with Demetri equally since before the divorce order. Mother argues that the court abused its discretion by concluding that she was not the primary care provider because the court considered no new evidence and thus was bound by collateral estoppel from revising the divorce court’s order. This argument fundamentally misapprehends the nature of these proceedings. “For purposes of a modification motion, of course, the most relevant period is that between the divorce and the filing of the motion to modify.” deBeaumont,
¶ 12. The court concluded that the remaining factors showed that Demetri’s bests interests would be served by allocating primary legal and physical rights to father. The tipping point of the court’s analysis was its assessment of each parent’s ability to meet Demetri’s “present and future developmental needs,” § 665(b)(3). The court recognized that the time father had spent in parenting classes gave him “a somewhat more sensitive ability to meet Demetri’s developmental needs,” and that father’s testimony “showed a much more detailed and thoughtful understanding of how to impose discipline in a positive manner than did the mother’s.” Significantly, the court found that “[t]his is clearly one of De-metri’s most important needs ... as described by all parties.” Thus, the court properly concluded that this factor was critical to Demetri’s best interests and that it tipped the § 665(b) balance in father’s favor.
¶ 13. As we noted at the outset, the family court enjoys broad discretion in determining the best interests of the child in deciding a motion to modify parental rights and responsibilities. Habecker,
Affirmed.
Notes
In light of the decision granting parental rights and responsibilities to father, we dismissed as moot mother’s appeal of the initial divorce order’s parent-child contact schedule. Sochin v. Sochin,
Excluding the alternating 15.5 hour period from Wednesday afternoon until Thursday morning, mother spent 76.5 hours per week with Demetri and father spent 76.
As for the remaining two factors, the court found that Demetri’s “adjustment to [his] present housing, school and community and the potential effect of any change,” § 665(b)(4), and his “relationship[s] ... with any other person who may significantly affect [him],” § 665(b)(7), weighed in father’s favor. The court based that conclusion on its findings that Demetri, having spent his whole life in his current community, “has established routines” in Vermont where he enjoys “a network of loving relatives.”
