ANNE K. SZYMCZAK v. ANDREW N. TANNER
C.A. No. 10CA0101-M
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
February 13, 2012
[Cite as Szymczak v. Tanner, 2012-Ohio-540.]
APPEAL FROM JUDGMENT ENTERED IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS COUNTY OF MEDINA, OHIO CASE No. 01 DR 0651
DECISION AND JOURNAL ENTRY
Dated: February 13, 2012
CARR, Presiding Judge.
{1} Appellant, Anne Szymczak, appeals from a judgment of the Medina County Court of Common Pleas, Domestic Relations Division, that denied her motion to remove the restrictions on her parenting time with her minor child. Because the evidence before the trial court demonstrated that Ms. Szymczak had remedied her behavioral problems through counseling and no longer posed a threat to her child‘s emotional well-being, the trial court erred by failing to reinstate the standard order of parenting time. Consequently, this Court reverses and remands.
I.
{2} Ms. Szymczak and appellee, Andrew Tanner, divorced in 2002, when their minor child, D.T., was one year old. Although the parents initially agreed to an order of shared parenting of the child, it soon became apparent to the trial court that their animosity toward each other prevented them from following the shared parenting order. The parties later agreed that
{3} On January 5, 2007, however, following an evidentiary hearing that included a forensic custody and visitation evaluation of both parents and the child, the trial court found that Ms. Szymczak was exhibiting extreme animosity toward Mr. Tanner in the presence of D.T. and that her inappropriate behavior posed a threat to his emotional well-being. Consequently, it restricted her parenting time with D.T. to three-hour, supervised visits every other weekend.
{4} During June 2008, the parties agreed to continue restricting Ms. Szymczak‘s parenting time because she was still exhibiting improper behavior around D.T. Because her behavioral problems stemmed from her feelings of anger and bitterness toward her ex-husband, the parties agreed to engage in co-parenting counseling. The June 2008 order further provided that Ms. Szymczak would have expanded, unsupervised visits after she completed three co-parenting sessions, which she later did.
{5} The parties also agreed that they would continue in co-parenting counseling at the discretion of the therapist and that the trial court would review the matter again in six months to determine whether Ms. Szymczak‘s parenting time would be returned to the standard order. By the terms of the order, the trial court‘s review would “be a determination of [the parties‘] good faith compliance with all of the provisions of this order together with receipt of any appropriate reports of the therapist for [Ms.] Szymczak, the therapist of [the child], [the parties‘] co-
{6} In September 2009, Ms. Szymczak moved to enforce the June 2008 order and to modify her parenting time. During a two-day hearing, the trial court heard testimony from Ms. Szymczak, her therapist, Mr. Tanner, and the parties’ co-parenting therapist. After the hearing, the trial court concluded that Ms. Szymczak had “failed to demonstrate that she [had] made significant strides in her own therapy or co-parenting therapy” because she had not overcome her bitterness and anger toward Mr. Tanner. Based on its implicit finding that it had not received “appropriate reports” from the therapists to justify expanding Ms. Szymczak‘s parenting time, the trial court denied her motion. It also explained that Ms. Szymczak failed to present evidence that it would be in D.T.‘s best interest for her to have additional parenting time. Ms. Szymczak appeals and raises two assignments of error.
II.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR I
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED AND COMMITTED AN ABUSE OF DISCRETION BY OVERRULING THE APPELLANT‘S MOTION TO ENFORCE THE TRIAL COURT‘S PREVIOUS JOURNAL ENTRY.
{7} Ms. Szymczak‘s first assignment of error is that the trial failed to timely schedule a review hearing, as required by its June 2008 journal entry. Although the parties dispute whether the trial court held a timely review of this matter, even if the trial court erred in failing to conduct a timely hearing, there is no relief this Court can grant Ms. Szymczak to correct that error.
{8} The sole purpose of an appeal is to provide an aggrieved party an opportunity to seek relief in the form of a correction of errors of the lower court. Petitioners v. Bd of Twinsburg Twp. Trustees, 4 Ohio App.2d 171, 176 (9th Dist.1965). An appellate court is not required to rule on a question of law that cannot affect matters at issue in a case, however. Carroll Cty. Bur. of Support v. Brill, 7th Dist. No. 05 CA 818, 2005-Ohio-6788, ¶ 32, citing Miner v. Witt, 82 Ohio St. 237, 238 (1910); see also Stemock v. Stemock, 11th Dist. No. 2007-T-0072, 2008-Ohio-1131, ¶ 23-24 (appellate court could not enforce a temporary companionship order concerning a time period that had already expired).
{9} Ms. Szymczak asserts that the trial court failed to conduct a timely review of this matter, but there is no dispute that she was ultimately afforded the review hearing that she requested. Although she may have been temporarily aggrieved by waiting longer than she should have, we cannot undo the passage of time. As there is nothing that we can do to provide any relief to Ms. Szymczak, this Court will not address the merits of her first assignment of error.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR II
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED AND COMMITTED AN ABUSE OF DISCRETION BY OVERRULING THE APPELLANT‘S MOTION TO MODIFY HER PARENTING TIME WITH [D.T.]
{10} Ms. Szymczak next asserts that the trial court erred by failing to grant her motion to remove the restrictions from her parenting time with her child and to reinstate a standard order. Pursuant to the parties’ agreement, the trial court was to determine whether Ms. Szymczak should be returned to a standard parenting time order based on: (1) whether the parties had demonstrated good faith compliance with the requirements of the prior order and received “appropriate reports” from the therapists and (2) whether a modification of parenting time would be in the child‘s best interest. A review of the record reveals that the trial court erred both by implicitly finding that it had not received “appropriate reports” from the therapists to justify
“Appropriate Reports” of the Therapists
{11} First, the trial court was required to determine the parties’ good faith compliance with the 2008 order, “together with receipt of any appropriate reports of the therapist for [Ms.] Szymczak, the therapist of [the child], [the parties‘] co-parenting counselor, and the Guardian Ad Litem.” The agreement did not explain what it meant by “appropriate reports” of the therapists that would justify returning Ms. Szymczak to the standard parenting time order.
{12} The trial court apparently believed that “appropriate reports” from the therapists should focus on whether Ms. Szymczak had resolved her feelings of animosity toward Mr. Tanner and, because she had not, it found that she had not received favorable reports from the therapists. Given the surrounding circumstances in this case, as well as the four corners of the parties’ agreement to restrict Ms. Szymczak‘s parenting time, however, a more reasonable construction of the term “appropriate reports” would focus on whether the therapists opined that Ms. Szymczak had remedied her behavioral problems through counseling, as that was the sole reason for restricting her parenting time. By focusing on the therapists’ opinions about Ms. Szymczak‘s inward thoughts, rather than her outward behavior in the presence of her child, the trial court misconstrued the meaning of “appropriate reports” in the prior parenting time order.
{13} “The purpose of contract construction is to effectuate the intent of the parties[,]” which “is presumed to reside in the language they chose to employ in the agreement.” Kelly v. Med. Life Ins. Co., 31 Ohio St.3d 130, 132 (1987). Common, undefined words appearing in a written instrument “will be given their ordinary meaning unless manifest absurdity results, or
{14} The record in this case and the overall terms of the June 2008 order reveal that the sole reason for the restrictions on Ms. Szymczak‘s parenting time was her inappropriate behavior around her child, which was causing him to suffer emotional harm. Although Ms. Szymczak‘s counseling focused on her negative thoughts about Mr. Tanner, which were at the heart of her negative behavior, it was her outward attitude and behavior in the presence of her child that posed a risk to him, not her thoughts. The only reasonable construction of the parties’ agreement is that Ms. Szymczak would engage in counseling and demonstrate to the therapists that she could modify her behavior so that she no longer acted on her ill feelings toward her ex-husband in the presence of her child.
{15} If Ms. Szymczak had never acted inappropriately around her child, but simply harbored negative feelings toward her ex-husband, this case would not be before us. Divorced parents often have negative feelings toward each other and courts do not intervene to restrict their parenting time unless their negative feelings cause inappropriate behavior that poses a threat to their child. It would lead to an absurd result to construe “appropriate reports” in the parties’ agreement to require that Ms. Szymczak rid her mind of all negative thoughts about her ex-husband before she is entitled to a standard order of parenting time with her child.
{16} With this focus on whether the therapists gave “appropriate” or suitable reports about Ms. Szymczak‘s progress in therapy, the evidence before the trial court clearly demonstrated that, although she continued to have negative feelings about her ex-husband, Ms. Szymczak had made substantial progress in modifying her behavior around her child and was no longer behaving inappropriately around him. According to the testimony of the therapists, Ms.
{17} There was absolutely no evidence that Ms. Szymczak continued to say anything negative about her ex-husband to D.T. or that she was otherwise behaving inappropriately around him. D.T. was doing well and having no problems, even after Ms. Szymczak began seeing him at school on a regular basis and having expanded and unsupervised visitation with him. Mr. Tanner even conceded that the unsupervised visits were going well.
{18} According to all the evidence before the trial court, there was no reason to continue restricting Ms. Szymczak‘s parenting time. If the trial court had properly focused on whether Ms. Szymczak had remedied her behavioral problems, rather than her feelings about her ex-husband, it should have concluded that the evidence before it included favorable reports from the therapists that supported expanding Ms. Szymczak‘s parenting time with D.T.
Best Interest of the Child
{19} Ms. Szymczak asserts that, in concluding that it was not in D.T.‘s best interest for Ms. Szymczak to have expanded parenting time, the trial court improperly focused almost entirely on her past behavior, rather than on her current relationship with D.T. The trial court‘s statutory authority to modify parenting time with the nonresidential parent was controlled by the child‘s best interest as determined by the factors set forth in
{20} For example, under the factor set forth in
{21} The trial court findings under
{22} Finally, the trial court‘s finding under
{23} Furthermore, the trial court‘s best interest analysis was premised on its mistaken understanding that Ms. Szymczak had the burden of demonstrating that it would be in the child‘s best interest to remove the visitation restrictions and return her to the “standard” order of parenting time. Both the Ohio Revised Code and the Local Rules of the Medina County Domestic Relations Court express a clear preference for the “standard” parenting time order for nonresidential parents, absent evidence that it is not in the child‘s best interest.
{24} The Medina County Domestic Relations Court adopted its version of the standard parenting time plan “to ensure that the minor child[ren] have frequent and consistent contact with both parents.”
{25} Because the trial court did not have evidence that the standard order of parenting time was not in D.T.‘s best interest, nor did it have competent, credible evidence under the factors in
III.
{26} Ms. Szymczak‘s first assignment of error was not addressed and her second assignment of error is sustained. The judgment of the Medina County Common Pleas Court, Domestic Relations Division, is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
There were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
We order that a special mandate issue out of this Court, directing the Court of Common Pleas, County of Medina, State of Ohio, to carry this judgment into execution. A certified copy of this journal entry shall constitute the mandate, pursuant to App.R. 27.
Immediately upon the filing hereof, this document shall constitute the journal entry of judgment, and it shall be file stamped by the Clerk of the Court of Appeals at which time the period for review shall begin to run. App.R. 22(E). The Clerk of the Court of Appeals is instructed to mail a notice of entry of this judgment to the parties and to make a notation of the mailing in the docket, pursuant to App.R. 30.
Costs taxed to Appellee.
DONNA J. CARR
FOR THE COURT
DICKINSON, J. DISSENTS, SAYING:
INTRODUCTION
{27} The trial court reduced Anne Szymczak‘s parenting time after her son, D.T., began having emotional problems that his therapist attributed to her. A year later, Ms. Szymczak and her ex-husband, Andrew Tanner, agreed to allow Ms. Szymczak some additional parenting time. They also agreed that her time could increase even more if they attended co-parenting therapy sessions and the court found it was in D.T.‘s best interest. Two years later, the court held a hearing to consider whether Ms. Szymczak should be allowed more parenting time, but determined it was not in D.T.‘s best interest. Ms. Szymczak has appealed, assigning as error that the trial court did not follow the parties’ agreement and incorrectly determined that additional parenting time for her was not in D.T.‘s best interest. I would affirm because any error that the trial court committed regarding the parties’ agreement was harmless and it exercised proper discretion when it determined that allowing Ms. Szymczak additional parenting time is not in D.T.‘s best interest.
BACKGROUND
{28} Ms. Szymczak and Mr. Tanner divorced in 2002 when D.T. was one year old. They initially agreed to shared parenting, but, later, decided that Mr. Tanner should be D.T.‘s residential parent. In 2006, D.T.‘s guardian ad litem moved for an emergency custody order, alleging that Ms. Szymczak had failed to attend required co-parenting therapy sessions and that
{29} In June 2008, the parties agreed to allow Ms. Szymczak to have unsupervised visits and to expand her parenting time to seven hours every other Saturday and some Sundays if she and Mr. Tanner attended three co-parenting counseling sessions together. The court entered a journal entry adopting the parties’ agreement. The agreement also provided that “the issue of parenting time visitation shall be set for a review hearing before this court in September 2008 and to be scheduled pursuant to the availability of the Visiting Judge in that month. This Court‘s review shall be a determination of [Ms.] Szymczak‘s and [Mr.] Tanner‘s good faith compliance with all of the provisions of this order together with receipt of any appropriate reports of the therapist for [Ms.] Szymczak, the therapist of [D.T.], [Ms. Szymczak‘s and Mr. Tanner‘s] co-parenting counselor, and the Guardian Ad Litem. The Court shall then determine if it is in the best interest of the minor child, [D.T], for parenting time visitation to be modified to [allow Ms. Szymczak even more parenting time].”
{30} Despite the journalized agreement, the court did not hold a review hearing in September 2008. It did schedule a “Status Conference” for October 2, 2008, and, on that day, scheduled another “Status Conference” for January 27, 2009. Between the status conferences, D.T.‘s guardian ad litem moved for payment of his fees and for an order prohibiting the parties from calling their co-parenting therapist as a witness. He also moved to change the location at which the parties exchanged D.T. because the building that they thought would be a good place for it to take place was closed on weekends. The trial court set the guardian ad litem‘s motion
{31} In September 2009, Ms. Szymczak moved to enforce the June 2008 journal entry and to modify her parenting time. In August 2010, the trial court held a two-day trial on Ms. Szymczak‘s motions, receiving testimony from Ms. Szymczak, her therapist, Mr. Tanner, and the parties’ co-parenting therapist. It subsequently denied Ms. Szymczak‘s motions. In its journal entry, the court noted that Ms. Szymczak‘s parenting time had been reduced because of her extreme bitterness and anger toward Mr. Tanner. It found that, even though working on her anger had been the focus of her individual therapy, Ms. Szymczak‘s therapist opined that her prognosis was only “fair.” It also found that Ms. Szymczak‘s individual therapist and the parties’ co-parenting therapist continued to be concerned about whether her bitterness toward Mr. Tanner would impair her ability to parent D.T. effectively. The court determined that, even though Ms. Szymczak‘s mental health had been the central impediment to her parenting, she had “yet to overcome her anger and hostility toward [Mr. Tanner] and her conceptualization that she has been victimized by him.” It concluded that, because Ms. Szymczak had not “made significant strides in her own therapy or co-parenting therapy to allow for expanded visitation and companionship time” and had failed to present any evidence that it would be in D.T.‘s best interest for her to have additional parenting time, her motion to modify parenting time should be denied.
MOTION TO ENFORCE ENTRY
{32} Ms. Szymczak‘s first assignment of error is that the trial court incorrectly denied her motion to enforce its June 2008 journal entry. She has argued that the court failed to schedule a review hearing, as required by the journal entry. She has also argued that, even though the court did not hold a review hearing, it wrote in its September 2010 journal entry that it had held two of them: one in October 2008 and one in January 2009, and that it had determined at those hearings that she had not met the requirements for expanded visitation. According to Ms. Szymczak, while the court may have held “status conferences” in October 2008 and January 2009, it did not hold a “review hearing,” let alone decide whether the requirements of the June 2008 journal entry had been met.
{33} It is not clear from the record what occurred at the October 2008 and January 2009 meetings. The trial court mailed a “Notice of Hearing” to the parties for each date, indicating that the case would come before the court for a “status conference.” It also mailed a notice of hearing to the parties regarding the guardian ad litem‘s motion for fees, indicating that it would be heard at the same time as the January 2009 “status conference.” Following the January hearing, the trial court issued two orders, one granting the guardian ad litem‘s motion for fees, and one granting his motions to limit the testimony of the parties’ co-parenting therapist and to change the location of where the parties exchanged custody. The orders granting the guardian ad litem‘s motions indicate that the motions “came on for hearing.” Because Ms. Szymczak has not provided this Court with a transcript of what occurred at the “status conferences,” however, we must presume that the trial court correctly wrote that it conducted review hearings on those dates. See Knapp v. Edwards Labs., 61 Ohio St. 2d 197, 199 (1980).
{35} Despite the trial court‘s mistake, Ms. Szymczak was only entitled to an increase in her parenting time under the June 2008 journal entry if the trial court concluded that it was in D.T.‘s best interest. Ms. Szymczak has argued that the trial court failed to hold an evidentiary hearing to determine that issue. After Ms. Szymczak moved for modification of her parenting time, however, the trial court conducted a two-day trial to determine whether an increase in Ms. Szymczak‘s parenting time was in D.T.‘s best interest. Ms. Szymczak has not established that the court‘s failure to hold a hearing on that issue earlier affected her substantial rights. Her first assignment of error should be overruled.
BEST INTERESTS OF THE CHILD
{36} Ms. Szymczak‘s second assignment of error is that the trial court incorrectly overruled her motion to modify parenting time. A trial court‘s decision to modify visitation is governed by
{37} If a party challenges a trial court‘s findings under the factors listed in
{38} Ms. Szymczak has contested four of the trial court‘s findings under
{39} Ms. Szymczak has argued that the court improperly focused in its decision on what happened before June 2008. According to her, it should have made its findings based on
{40} Ms. Szymczak‘s therapist testified that, since Ms. Szymczak has been in therapy with him, he is not aware of her saying anything negative to D.T. about Mr. Tanner. He testified that one of the problems Ms. Szymczak has is focusing on the past too much, including having been the victim of physical abuse. He said that, although she has made significant progress moving past that issue, she vacillates “from being focused on the past and moving more towards the present and future.” Because she also desires to have the past wrongs righted, he said her overall prognosis is “fair.” He also said that they have worked on the “very negative” attitude Ms. Szymczak has displayed towards Mr. Tanner at their co-parenting therapy sessions, and he opined that Ms. Szymczak has improved on that issue. According to the therapist, Ms. Szymczak still has a lot of anger towards Mr. Tanner and has a difficult time acknowledging that Mr. Tanner is a good parent. He testified, however, that Ms. Szymczak does not have any psychological problems that would give him any concern about her ability to take care of D.T.
{42} Ms. Szymczak is correct that the trial court‘s findings under
{43} Regarding the court‘s findings under
{44} Regarding the court‘s findings under
{45} The record establishes that Ms. Szymczak has significant anger towards Mr. Tanner. In the past, that anger has caused her to say things to D.T. about Mr. Tanner and his family that have caused D.T. to have emotional and psychological problems. Even though Ms. Szymczak has refrained from disparaging Mr. Tanner in front of D.T. since she has resumed unsupervised visits, the trial court remained concerned that she has not made enough progress in
CONCLUSION
{46} The trial court exercised proper discretion when it determined that Ms. Szymczak failed to demonstrate that an increase in her parenting time was in D.T.‘s best interest. The judgment of the Medina County Common Pleas Court, Domestic Relations Division, should be affirmed.
APPEARANCES:
DAVID H. FERGUSON, Attorney at Law, for Appellant.
JAMES L. LANE, Attorney at Law, for Appellee.
