The former husband, Mark S. Weiss-man, seeks certiorari review of a September 20, 2012, emergency ex parte order. We grant the petition in part and quash the portion of the order providing that the children shall have no direct or indirect contact with the former husband for ninety days.
Background
As a result of the parties’ dissolution of marriage in 2005, the parties had equal timesharing with their three minor children.
In July 2012, the former wife filed a motion to enjoin the former husband’s girlfriend from having contact with the children, based on a preliminary report and recommendation from Dr. Day. The trial court entered the temporary injunction enjoining the former husband from allowing his children to have contact with his girlfriend. The former husband moved to dissolve the injunction, and the former wife then filed two motions, alleging that the former husband was in contempt for failing to obey the terms of the injunction and asking the court to suspend the former husband’s unsupervised timesharing. The former wife asserted that the former husband had allowed the children to have contact with his girlfriend during a vacation. The former wife sought temporary sole parental responsibility to determine the best treatment for the oldest daughter. The former husband filed a motion to modify the injunction and sought supervised contact between the oldest daughter and his girlfriend.
On August 22, 2012, the trial court held a hearing on the pending motions filed by both parties. The former husband with
On September 18, 2012, the former wife, through her counsel, filed an ex parte letter with the trial court, advising the trial court that Dr. Day and the former wife had decided on a treatment program in California. Included was a proposed order, the terms of which were purportedly consistent with the recommendations of the treatment program. The letter informed the trial court that the treatment program recommended that the order be entered ex parte “because of the substantial likelihood that [former husband] would tell and/or inform the [oldest child] that she will be leaving with [former wife] to attend the program, which would likely cause a disruption in the process.” The former wife also submitted a letter from Dr. Day, who indicated that she had conferred with the intake doctor at the treatment program. Dr. Day “concur[red] with [the intake doctor’s] plan of intervention and requested that] the plan be implemented.”
On September 20, 2012, the trial court entered the proposed ex parte order submitted by the former wife. The order identified the program and provided that it would run from September 22, 2012, to October 2, 2012. The order directed the wife and all three children to attend the program. The order provided that “[u]ntil further order of the [c]ourt, consistent with [the program’s] protocol, it is in [the children’s] best interests to immediately have no direct or indirect contact in any form whatsoever with the [fjormer [h]us-band; relatives, friends, and associates of the [fjormer [h]usband; and [his girlfriend].” The order further provided that it shall be in effect for no less than ninety days from the family’s return from the program. The order directed the former husband to bring the oldest child to the courthouse on September 21, 2012, so that the former wife could transport her to the program.
The former husband now seeks review of the September 20, 2012, order.
In his petition for writ of certiorari, the former husband claims that the trial court violated his due process rights by entering the order prohibiting all contact with his children for ninety days without providing him notice or an opportunity to be heard. He contends that he was not given any notice that the trial court would alter the order entered only two weeks before on September 5, 2012, in a way that would -prevent him from having any contact with his children for a period of ninety days. The former husband argues that no emergency existed that would warrant modifying his visitation oh contact without notice or a hearing.
When a trial court modifies a parent’s visitation without notice and an opportunity to be heard, the parent may seek certiorari review on the basis that the court departed from the essential requirements of the law, resulting in harm that is irreparable on appeal. See A.W.P., Sr. v. Dep’t of Children & Family Servs.,
The trial court did not depart from the essential requirements of law in ordering the children to participate in the treatment program selected by Dr. Day and the former wife.
However, the language in the September 20, 2012, order preventing the former husband from having any contact, direct or indirect, with his children for ninety days appears to have been the result of recommendations made by the treatment program in California. The former husband was never provided notice that he may be prevented from having any contact with his children for a period of at least ninety days and he was not provided an opportunity to be heard on this issue. At the hearing, the trial court fashioned a temporary schedule of visitation,
[W]here a trial court properly enters [an emergency ex parte] order, an opportunity to be heard should be provided to the opposing party as soon thereafter as possible. Failure to give notice to the opposing party prior to the entry of anorder when no emergency exists, or failure to provide notice and an opportunity to be heard promptly after the entry of an order when an emergency is presented, deprives the opposing party of his or her right to procedural due process.
Smith,
Petition denied in part; petition granted in part.
Notes
. The parties have three daughters, born in 1996, 1998, and 2001.
. At this time, the oldest daughter was fifteen.
. It appears that the former husband complied with the order and that the former wife and the children attended the treatment program in California.
. This issue is likely moot because the treatment program was scheduled to end on October 2, 2012.
. At one point at the hearing, the trial court stated that the schedule would be temporary until they could "try this case," but later, the trial court stated that the schedule would be in place until the children come back from the treatment program. At the time of the hearing, the former wife and Dr. Day were considering a treatment program in Texas.
