Lead Opinion
Opinion
This is a classic high conflict, overlitigated family matter, where a minor child has been the subject of parental conflict in the court system since 1994. The child lived primarily with his mother, the defendant, Rose Li-Hwa Strobel, after the dissolution of marriage in 1997, and now resides with his father, the plaintiff, Kevin L. Strobel, after a motion for modifi
The defendant claims that the court improperly (1) considered the visitation issue without adhering to General Statutes § 46b-7, which requires advance notice of the contents of a family services evaluation, and (2) entered its custody and visitation orders without affording her an opportunity to be heard.
The following facts are relevant to our resolution of the defendant’s appeal. The parties married on Septеmber 9, 1989, and had one child, bom March 24, 1990. The court dissolved the parties’ marriage on July 22, 1997, granting joint legal custody of the minor child, but awarding primary physical custody to the defendant. The court modified the custody arrangement and granted primary physical custody of the minor child to the plaintiff on November 15, 1999.
On April 12, 2001, counsel for the minor child filed a motion that supervised visitation between the defendant and the minor child be ordered, subsequent to a suicidal gesture by the minor child. The child’s guardian ad litem joined in the request. On April 16, 2001, the court denied the motion without prejudice with a date of June 26,2001, to report back to the court, andreferred the matter to family services for a custody and visitation evaluation (report). That was the most recent of several interventions by family services over the years.
The parties and the court received the report on October 10, 2001. Neither the court nor the plaintiff or the defendant had the opportunity to view the reрort prior to appearing in court on that day. The court accordingly took a recess to permit the defendant to complete her review of the report before proceeding. During the in-court review of the report, counsel for the minor child expressed grave concern about the ongoing conflict between the defendant and the minor child and its negative impact on the child. Kathleen Goncalves, the family services counselor who had prepared the rеport, further expressed the need for the court’s intervention to protect the minor child immediately.
When the proceedings reconvened, the defendant claimed that she was entitled to a hearing to call witnesses to counter the information contained in the report. In response, the court stated: “Let me hear all your concerns then. But remember, we’re not going to litigate the report right now. I just need to know what your primary concerns are about today . . . .” The defendant reiterаted that she wanted a full hearing on the report. The court noted that it had reviewed the entire file and was duly alarmed by the information
On the basis of the severity of the allegations contained in the report, the court issued temporary orders of supervised visitation to protect the interest of the child. Moreover, the court ordered that the plaintiff temporarily have sole legal custody of the minor child. The court then articulated that the orders of custody and supervised visitation were temporary, and that the next hearing would be held in one month. In fact, the court scheduled such a hearing for three days, on November 13, 14 and 15, 2001. The defendant filed the present appeal.
As previously indicated, we dismiss the defendant’s appeal for lack of a final judgment.
“With the exception of certain statutory rights of appeal that are not relevant here, appellate jurisdiction is limited to appeals from final judgments. See General Statutes §§ 51-197a, 51-199 and 52-263; see also Practice Book § 4000 [now § 61-1]. . . . Limiting appeals to judgments that are final serves the important public policy of minimizing interference with and delay in the resolution of trial court proceedings. See [Melia v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co.,
Although our jurisdiction is limited to appeals from final judgment, a “gray area” exists between those judgments “which are undoubtedly final and others that are clearly interlocutory and not appealable.” (Internal quotаtion marks omitted.) Madigan v. Madigan, supra,
In the seminal case of Madigan v. Madigan, supra,
In the present case, the considerations that influenced the Madigan court are inapplicable. Madigan involved a situation in which the plaintiff father and defendant mother had requested that the court enter pendente lite orders with respect to their minor children during the pendency of the parties’ marriage dissolution proceedings. After conducting a hearing where both parties testified and presented evidence, the court granted joint legal custody, with primary physical custody awarded to the defendant. It was within that context that the court in Madigan concluded that temporary custody orders, namely, pendente lite orders, constituted a final judgment for appeal.
Contrary to the situation in Madigan, where a full hearing on the pendente lite orders had been held, in the present matter a hearing on the merits had not been conducted, nоr did the court enter any findings. Rather, as previously set forth, the court ordered the temporary custody and supervised visitation in response to an “emergency” situation with respect to the minor child’s suicidal gesture. The court’s order was akin to an ex parte order of temporary custody, not a temporary order. In fact, the court stated that “this [entering of the orders] is in terms of an emergency order. I view it as I would had I still been in Juvenile [Court] in terms of an order of temporary custody.”
Moreover, unlike the trial court in Madigan, the court here explicitly provided that in entering the temporary orders, it was not making any findings and that a full hearing on the matter would be scheduled soon thereafter. Accordingly, the concern that the Madigan court expressed with respect to affording an aggrieved parent immediate relief does not apply here because the defendant in this case was scheduled to receive the relief sought, namely, a full hearing on the report and temporary emergency orders.
Time with one’s child has been deemed “not recoverable.” Taff v. Bettcher, supra,
The “label” of “temporary custody” utilized by the court here does not ensure appealability. See Rosenfield v. Rosenfield,
We therefore conclude that this matter fails to meet the standards set forth in Curdo and Madigan and, accordingly, dismiss the appeal for lack of a final judgment. We further note that even if we assume arguendo that the appeal arose from a final judgment, we would nonetheless decline to address its merits. “[F]or this court judiciously and efficiently to consider claims of error raised on appeal . . . the patties must clearly and fully set forth their arguments in their briefs. . . .
The appeal is dismissed.
In this opinion MIHALAKOS, J., concurred.
Notes
We decline to address the defendant’s third and final claim that the court granted supervised visitation after a different judge had denied such a request. A review of the record reveals that the court had denied the request without prejudice and initiated the process of information gathering by family services. Therefore, the defendant’s third claim is without merit.
Although the court has a policy that reports of family services are sealed to protect the child or children who are the subject of the evaluation, the plaintiff inexplicably has reproduced the entire evaluation as appеndix two in his brief.
In dismissing the appeal, we revisit our prior denial of the plaintiffs motion to dismiss on the same ground of lack of jurisdiction. See Governors Grove Condominium Assn., Inc. v. Hill Development Corp.,
We note that the parties convened for the hearing on the scheduled dates, but the defendant’s obstreperous behavior in court prevented a hearing on the merits from occurring and forced the court to discontinue the hearing and to recuse herself.
Given the pending hearing on the merits, the defendant also cannot satisfy the first standard set forth in Curdo, namely, whether “the order or action terminates a separate and distinct proceeding . . . State v. Curdo, supra,
We distinguish this matter from that before our Supreme Court in Taff v. Bettcher, supra,
Contrary to the situation in Taff the rights of the parties here are not so affected. Given that the court scheduled a hearing for the next month, the parties had legal redress available to them. Moreover, we note that the
We reiterate that the defendant’s behavior prevented the сourt from conducting a hearing on the merits.
The dissent seems to focus on the vindication of the mother’s rights and a parent’s lost time with the minor child. Although we recognize those rights to be important, we focus primarily on the need for appropriate judicial intervention to provide immediate protection for children while also ensuring all family members a timely disposition of custody issues. We favor a jurisprudence that recognizes a child’s compressed sense of time while protecting the rights of all family members. If we follow the path suggested by the dissent, we enable serial litigation and extend the conflict, which harms the child. At the conclusion of this matter in this court or in the Supreme Court, the child’s access to his parents will have to be determined again within a trial court proceeding.
The case of In re Shamika F., supra,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. The majority dismisses the defendant’s appeal for lack of a final judgment. Because I conclude that the trial court’s order was a final judgment, I respectfully dissent.
The procedural history of the case as it concerns this appeal is troubling in many respects. Well over one year ago, in April, 2001, the issue concerning supervised visitation arose. The family services report ordered by the trial court was not completed for more than four months, although the subject was considered to be urgent. Even after the report was finished, one and one-half months elapsed before a hearing was convened. At the hearing, on October 10, 2001, the parties, both pro se, were given the reportfor the first time. Although the trial court gave the defendant, Rоse Li-Hwa Strobel, a short time during a recess to read the report, the
I disagree with the majority’s conclusion that the order in this case is not a final judgment. I believe that the logic formulated in Madigan v. Madigan,
As did the court in Madigan, I conclude that there is a final judgment in the present case because the trial court’s order so concluded the defendant’s rights that furthеr proceedings cannot affect them. The court awarded sole custody to the plaintiff, Kevin L. Strobel, and ordered that the defendant, the former custodian of the child, be restricted to supervised visitation with the child. Although that order was termed temporary and deemed necessary in this emergency situation, the order nonetheless governed the ability of the defendant to interact with her child for whatever period of time elapsed until the next hearing was held.
Although the majority views the scheduling of the hearing on the merits as a bar to meeting the second factor of the Curdo test, I do not agree. The majority,
As stated in Madigan, “[a] lost opportunity to spend significant time with one’s child cannot be replaced by a subsequent order of custody . . . .” Madigan v. Madigan, supra,
Similarly, the reasoning in Madigan should be applied to the present case because, as that casе stated, “a temporary custody order may have a significant impact on a subsequent permanent custody decision. . . . [A]n order of temporary custody may establish a foundation for a stable long-term relationship that
Guided by the principles articulated in Madigan, I conclude that the defendant in the present case has satisfied the second factor of the Curdo test. I also would note that although the majority’s position may seem persuasive in light of the scheduling of a full hearing within one month in this case, such considerations of time are not relevant under the Curdo test. I also note that despite one unsuccessful attempt to hold a lull hearing, the temporary order has continued in effect for nearly nine months.
As stated previously, despite any further hearing that may occur, no prospective order that may enter can affect the time that has elapsed prior to the entry of that order in which the defendant has been limited to supervised visitation with her child. In light of that reality, if the defendant’s appeal is dismissed, the defendant will be left with no way to seek redress from the court’s order. Despite the possible future modification of the orders that may come with the subsequent hearing, such a result is not preferable.
Finally, although neither of the pro se parties has briefed the issues as fully and adequately as we might want, the defendant’s claims on appeal are sufficiently clear and understandable for us to address them. The defendant’s first claim is that she did not receive a copy of the family relations report, on which the trial court’s orders appear to have been based, until just before the
For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent.
