Nauditt v. Haddock
Nauditt v. Haddock
Opinion
Jeffery L. Nauditt ("the father") and Regina M. Nauditt Haddock ("the mother") were divorced in 1998. Pursuant to their divorce judgment, they shared joint custody of their three sons, alternating physical custody each week. In July 2002, the mother remarried. Around that same time, the children spoke with their father about their desire to live full-time with him. The father filed a petition to modify custody, seeking sole physical custody, in August 2002. After a trial, the trial court entered a judgment stating:
"[T]his Court concludes that the recommendations of the Northwest Alabama Children's Advocacy Center are reasonable and offer an adjustment in the time that each parent can spend with the children.
"The evidence presented shows that the children are well adjusted, well behaved, doing excellent work in school, and giving the appearance of thriving; all of this, in spite of the fact that the parents can't seem to communicate or work well together for the betterment of their children."
The judgment adopted the recommendations of the Northwest Alabama Children's Advocacy Center. The report from the Northwest Alabama Children's Advocacy Center stated, in part:
"1. No changes to the joint custody arrangement will be made, as no significant issues were presented that would fall under the guidelines of significant changes that would warrant a change in custody.
"2. A modification as to the current visitation situation as follows: the children would reside with the mother every other Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. We are recommending that standard visitation guidelines be followed regarding holidays, birthdays, etc. This would allow the children to be with the mother approximately 1/3 of the time and with the father approximately 2/3 of the time. This is taking into consideration all issues presented by all parties involved."
Both parents appeal from this judgment. The father argues that the trial court erred in not modifying child support despite the fact that, he says, he is, in essence, the sole physical custodian of the *Page 366 children. He also argues that the record does not contain the appropriate child-support forms, which, he says, necessitates a reversal. The mother argues that the trial court erred by modifying the "visitation" provisions of the prior custody judgment because, she says, the father failed to prove a material change in circumstances warranting such a modification. We affirm the judgment.
The mother asserts that the father's arguments on appeal are without merit. She says that the father did not request a modification of child support until he filed his postjudgment motion and that, because of that fact, the modification of child support was not an issue before the trial court. The mother is correct. The father's petition to modify custody alleges that the children expressed a desire to live with him "all of the time" and that he desired that the children live with him "all of the time." The petition sought sole physical custody of the children. The petition does not contain a reference to child support. Interestingly, the mother's answer and counterpetition does request a modification in the amount of child support, in addition to requesting that the trial court award her sole physical custody. At trial, however, the only issue tried was custody, and the testimony and evidence admitted pertained only to that issue. In fact, when the trial court questioned the parties regarding the issues to be tried, the only issue mentioned was child custody.
This court has reversed judgments modifying a child-support obligation "[w]here there is no pleading, either written or oral, seeking modification of the amount of child support, and the issue is not tried by consent of the parties, expressly or impliedly." State ex rel. Vickers v. Vickers,
The mother's argument on appeal is more complex. She argues in the first instance, in response to the husband's characterization of the trial court's judgment as one granting him sole physical custody, that the trial court's judgment does not truly modify the prior judgment under which the parties were granted joint custody but that it instead only modifies the "visitation" provisions of that judgment. She bases this assertion on the trial judge's statements at trial and on the language in the judgment indicating that the parties' situation had not changed significantly and that the joint-custody arrangement had worked out well and produced well-adjusted children. In addition, she points to the language contained in the report from the Northwest Alabama Children's Advocacy Center, which the trial court adopted in its judgment. That report, as quoted above, indicates that the Center did not recommend a change in the joint-custody arrangement; rather, it urged a change in the "visitation" provisions of the judgment, providing that the *Page 367 mother would have physical custody of the children approximately one-third of the time, while the father would have physical custody two-thirds of the time.
Despite the institution of a joint-custody statute in 1997,see Ala. Code 1975, §
In this case, which involves a true joint-custody arrangement where the parents share both joint legal custody and joint physical custody, see Ala. Code 1975, §
However, such a conclusion does not solve the ultimate issue in this case. The mother argues that the trial court's modification of the custodial provisions of the divorce judgment should be reversed. We must still determine how we are to review the trial court's change in the custodial provisions of the divorce judgment — as a change in custody or as a change in visitation. We conclude that, in general, a change in the amount of time a joint custodial parent will exercise his or her custodial rights (referred to hereinafter as a parent's "custodial period") is more akin to a change in visitation rights than a change in custody.
Alabama courts have long held that a trial court has broad discretion in determining visitation rights. Skipper v.Skipper,
The mother argues that the father failed to demonstrate changed circumstances that warranted a modification of her custodial period. The impetus behind the father's filing of his petition for modification was the mother's remarriage and the children's subsequent problems adjusting to their newly blended family. The mother says that the children were experiencing "growing pains" as a result of her remarriage but that the children were not so drastically affected as to require a change in her custodial period. Although written in the context of a custody modification, the following statement of law has equal pertinence here: "The remarriage of one or both of the parties is not in and of itself such a material change of circumstances as to justify modification, but it is nevertheless a factor to be considered by the trial court." Sherrod v. Sherrod,
The mother also argues that the trial court and the Northwest Alabama Children's Advocacy Center, upon whose report the trial court based its judgment, placed too much emphasis on the desire of the children to live with their father. The mother correctly points out that the wishes of children involved in a custody dispute are not determinative. See Smith v. Smith,
Although the mother is correct in noting that her remarriage, in and of itself, and the children's wishes, standing alone, should not be considered as material changes in circumstances warranting a change in her custodial period, both of those factors, combined with other evidence at trial, could have, in the trial court's estimation, indicated a change in circumstances sufficient to warrant a modification. As the Sherrod court explained, "[t]he trial court in reaching a determination on whether these and other factors justify a modification . . . must consider and weigh them with the principle always in mind that the best interests and welfare of the child are of paramount importance." Sherrod, 361 So.2d at 19. The trial court was presented with a report from the Northwest Alabama Children's Advocacy Center indicating that the children felt that their mother was not meeting their emotional needs and that the mother, on parenting tests conducted during the assessment, demonstrated "a lack of awareness of addressing the feelings of the [children] in various situations." The children indicated that they felt that their mother was more concerned about the feelings of their stepsiblings and that they felt like "strangers" in their new home.
The trial court could have determined that the children felt unsupported by their mother, who was more focused on her new marriage and assimilating to her new stepchildren than on her children's reaction to her remarriage. The trial court's adoption of the Northwest Alabama Children's Advocacy Center's recommendation in its entirety, which included counseling to improve communication between the mother and the children, supports a conclusion that the trial court considered and weighed the combination of the mother's remarriage, the children's feelings of emotional abandonment, and the children's wishes to spend more time living with the father and that it determined that the best interest of *Page 369 the children, at this time and under these circumstances, were served by a change in the parents' custodial periods. The trial court then adjusted the custodial period of each parent under the joint-custody arrangement based upon the recommendation of the Northwest Alabama Children's Advocacy Center. We cannot say that the trial court's determination that a modification of the parents' custodial periods is an abuse of the trial court's discretion in this case. Therefore, we affirm the trial court's modification of the parents' custodial periods.
AFFIRMED.
YATES, P.J., and THOMPSON, PITTMAN, and MURDOCK, JJ., concur in the result, without writing.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Jeffery L. Nauditt v. Regina M. Nauditt Haddock. Regina M. Nauditt Haddock v. Jeffery L. Nauditt.
- Cited By
- 23 cases
- Status
- Published