Title: Sabatine v. Sabatine (Opinion on Application - Remand to TC)

State: michigan

Issuer: Michigan Supreme Court

Document:

SABATINE v SABATINE 
 
Docket No. 165279.  Argued on application for leave to appeal November 9, 2023.  
Decided June 11, 2024. 
 
 
Plaintiff, Andrew P. Sabatine, moved in the Leelanau Circuit Court, Family Division, to 
amend a temporary custody order that granted defendant, Colleen K. Sabatine, primary physical 
custody of the parties’ two children.  The couple had lived together in Traverse City, but in 
September 2020, defendant left with the children and moved to Fenton.  While in Fenton, and 
without plaintiff’s knowledge, defendant switched the children’s primary-care doctors and school 
enrollments, although the children had not yet started school for the year.  She later testified that 
she did not think to include plaintiff on any of the decision-making and just parented as a single 
mother.  Shortly thereafter, the parties commenced divorce proceedings.  On January 7, 2021, the 
trial court entered the temporary custody order, which granted the parties joint legal custody, 
granted defendant primary physical custody, and granted plaintiff parenting time every other 
weekend and two nonconsecutive weeks during the summer.  In accordance with that order, the 
children spent the majority of their time with defendant in Fenton.  Plaintiff moved to have the 
children returned to the Traverse City area.  Following an evidentiary hearing, the trial court issued 
an order awarding the parties joint legal custody, granting defendant primary physical custody, 
and awarding parenting time as follows: (1) during the school year, defendant would have the 
majority of parenting time, whereas plaintiff would have parenting time every other weekend plus 
the week during spring break, and plaintiff would also have the option of an additional weekend 
day per month to be exercised in Fenton; (2) during the summer when the children were out of 
school, plaintiff would have the majority of parenting time, while defendant would have parenting 
time every other weekend plus one week for vacation time.  In reaching this result, the trial court 
determined that the children had established custodial environments with both parents, that the 
parenting-time order would not upset the established custodial environments, and that the schedule 
was in the children’s best interests by a preponderance of the evidence.  In March 2022, the trial 
court entered a judgment of divorce that incorporated this custody and parenting-time order.  Both 
parties appealed, and the Court of Appeals consolidated the appeals.  In plaintiff’s appeal (Docket 
No. 361068), the Court of Appeals, SHAPIRO, P.J., and BORRELLO and YATES, JJ., in an 
unpublished per curiam opinion issued on December 15, 2022 (Docket Nos. 361068 and 361074), 
affirmed the trial court’s analysis of the best-interest factors, reversed the trial court’s holding that 
the custody order would not change the children’s established custodial environments, and 
remanded the case to the trial court to “reassess its decision using the proper standard.”  Defendant 
 
 
Michigan Supreme Court 
Lansing, Michigan 
Syllabus 
 
Chief Justice: 
Elizabeth T. Clement 
 
 
Justices: 
Brian K. Zahra 
David F. Viviano 
Richard H. Bernstein 
Megan K. Cavanagh 
Elizabeth M. Welch 
Kyra H. Bolden 
This syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been  
prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader. 
Reporter of Decisions: 
Kathryn L. Loomis 
sought leave to appeal the issues in Docket No. 361068 in the Supreme Court; the issues in 
defendant’s appeal in Docket No. 361074 were not appealed.  The Supreme Court ordered and 
heard oral argument on the application.  511 Mich 989 (2023).   
 
 
In a unanimous opinion by Justice VIVIANO, the Supreme Court, in lieu of granting leave 
to appeal, held: 
 
 
The question whether a parenting-time provision modifies a child’s established custodial 
environment is to be answered on the basis of the circumstances that exist at the time the trial court 
renders its custody decision, and appellate courts have a statutory obligation under MCL 722.28 
of the Child Custody Act, MCL 722.21 et seq., to affirm trial court determinations unless they are 
based on findings of fact against the great weight of the evidence, a palpable abuse of discretion, 
or a clear legal error on a major issue. 
 
 
1.  MCL 722.27(1)(c) gives the circuit court the authority to modify or amend its previous 
judgments or orders for proper cause shown or because of a change of circumstances, except that 
the court shall not modify or amend its previous judgments or orders or issue a new order so as to 
change the established custodial environment of a child unless there is presented clear and 
convincing evidence that it is in the best interests of the child.  The custodial environment of a 
child is established if over an appreciable time the child naturally looks to the custodian in that 
environment for guidance, discipline, the necessities of life, and parental comfort.  The age of the 
child, the physical environment, and the inclination of the custodian and the child as to permanency 
of the relationship shall also be considered.  Because it was not contested, it was assumed that a 
child can have an established custodial environment with both parents.  
 
 
2.  In this case, the Court of Appeals held that the children had established custodial 
environments with both parents because before defendant departed with the children, the parties 
and children all lived together as a family and both parents cared for the children.  But the Court 
of Appeals improperly held that the focus of the established-custodial-environment determination 
was the child-rearing situation for the children before defendant’s departure.  Instead, in cases in 
which the preseparation custodial environment no longer exists, the relevant point in time for 
purposes of determining whether an established custodial environment exists is at the time the trial 
court makes its custody determination.  The preseparation circumstances are only relevant to the 
extent that they continue to exist or are probative of whether a new established custodial 
environment exists at the time the trial court is rendering its decision.  For instance, in determining 
whether a custodial environment has been established over an appreciable time, the trial court will 
often need to compare and contrast the lives of the children before separation and afterward.  But 
the dispositive inquiry is not whether an established custodial environment existed prior to 
separation; rather, it is whether such an environment continues to exist, or a new one exists, at the 
time of the trial court’s custody determination.  The trial court in this case properly made its 
ultimate determination on the basis of the circumstances that existed at the time of its decision, 
although the circumstances of the family prior to the separation were relevant to that determination.   
 
 
3.  When considering an important decision affecting the welfare of the child, the trial court 
must first determine whether the proposed change would modify the established custodial 
environment of that child.  In making this determination, it is the child’s standpoint, rather than 
that of the parents, that is controlling.  If the proposed change would modify the established 
custodial environment of the child, then the burden is on the parent proposing the change to 
establish, by clear and convincing evidence, that the change is in the child’s best interests.  Under 
such circumstances, the trial court must consider all the best-interest factors because a case in 
which the proposed change would modify the custodial environment is essentially a change-of-
custody case.  On the other hand, if the proposed change would not modify the established 
custodial environment of the child, the burden is on the parent proposing the change to establish, 
by a preponderance of the evidence, that the change is in the child’s best interests.   
 
 
4.  The Court of Appeals’ analysis regarding whether the parenting-time modification 
altered the children’s established custodial environments was flawed in two respects.  First, the 
Court of Appeals failed to afford proper deference to the trial court’s decision.  The Court of 
Appeals quoted the proper standard, but it never explained how the facts clearly preponderated 
against the trial court’s factual findings or how the findings were against the great weight of the 
evidence.  Second, the facts did not clearly preponderate in the direction of finding that the 
parenting-time provision in the judgment of divorce amounted to a change in the children’s 
established custodial environments.  The Court of Appeals’ analysis was incorrect because it 
measured the change from the period prior to the separation—i.e., when the children were with 
both parents for 365 days a year—to what the custody order required.  In doing so, the Court of 
Appeals ignored what happened between the separation and the judgment of divorce: the trial court 
had entered a temporary order that addressed parenting time, giving plaintiff approximately 69 
overnights per year, and the children had new established custodial environments with both parents 
during this time.  Thus, contrary to the Court of Appeals’ assertion, the judgment of divorce did 
not give plaintiff significantly fewer overnights or substantially change the nature of his interaction 
with the children.  Despite the imbalance in time spent with each parent, at the time the judgment 
of divorce entered, the children had established custodial environments with both parents.  Given 
the strong bonds the children had with both parents and the fact that established custodial 
environments existed with both parents despite the imbalance in time spent with each parent, any 
changes caused by the judgment of divorce to the established custodial environments that the 
children share with each parent would be minor.  Accordingly, the trial court did not err when it 
concluded that the entry of the judgment of divorce would not modify the children’s established 
custodial environments, and it was appropriate for the trial court to apply the preponderance-of-
the-evidence standard. 
 
 
Part I(C) of the Court of Appeals’ judgment reversed; case remanded to the trial court for 
further proceedings. 
 
 
Justice ZAHRA, concurring, wrote separately to express his concern with the trial court’s 
initial determination that the established custodial environment of the children did not change since 
before separation when defendant unilaterally removed the children from Traverse City, the only 
home they ever knew, and relocated them to Fenton.  The court appeared to ignore the emotional 
and physical disruption the children experienced as a result of defendant’s unilateral actions.  Trial 
courts must strictly adhere to a review of all statutory factors in MCL 722.27(1)(c) when making 
an initial determination of a child’s established custodial environment. 
 
FILED  June 11, 2024 
 
 
 
S T A T E  O F  M I C H I G A N 
 
SUPREME COURT 
 
 
ANDREW PAUL SABATINE, 
 
 
Plaintiff-Appellee, 
 
 
v 
No. 165279 
 
COLLEEN KNECHT SABATINE, 
 
 
 
Defendant-Appellant. 
 
 
 
BEFORE THE ENTIRE BENCH 
 
VIVIANO, J. 
At issue in this case is whether the parenting-time provision incorporated into the 
judgment of divorce modified any established custodial environment or environments the 
parties’ children had with their parents.  We conclude that the Court of Appeals erred by 
reversing the trial court because the facts do not clearly preponderate against the trial 
court’s findings that the parenting-time provision in the judgment of divorce would not 
modify the children’s established custodial environments with both parents.  Two points 
 
Michigan Supreme Court 
Lansing, Michigan 
OPINION 
 
Chief Justice: 
Elizabeth T. Clement   
 
 
 
Justices: 
Brian K. Zahra 
David F. Viviano 
Richard H. Bernstein 
Megan K. Cavanagh 
Elizabeth M. Welch 
Kyra H. Bolden 
 
 
 
2 
 
bear emphasis: (1) the question whether a parenting-time provision modifies a child’s 
established custodial environment is to be answered on the basis of the circumstances that 
exist at the time the trial court renders its custody decision; and (2) appellate courts have a 
statutory obligation under MCL 722.28 to affirm trial court determinations unless they are 
based on findings of fact against the great weight of the evidence, a palpable abuse of 
discretion, or a clear legal error on a major issue.  We reverse Part I(C) of the judgment of 
the Court of Appeals and remand this case to the trial court for proceedings not inconsistent 
with this opinion. 
I.  FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY 
Plaintiff-father and defendant-mother married in 2013 and had two daughters: AVS 
in 2015 and VLS in 2018.  The couple lived together in Traverse City, but in September 
2020, defendant left with the children and moved to Fenton.1  While in Fenton, and without 
plaintiff’s knowledge, defendant switched the children’s primary-care doctors and school 
enrollments, although the children had not yet started school for the year.  She later testified 
that she did not think to include plaintiff on any of the decision-making and just parented 
 
1 Fenton is approximately 170 miles from Traverse City.  The parties dispute the 
circumstances surrounding the move.  Plaintiff contends that defendant took the girls on a 
trip without any indication that she intended not to return or that she intended to divorce 
plaintiff.  She sent him messages that implied that she would bring the children back to 
Traverse City and attend marriage counseling with plaintiff.  Plaintiff eventually found out 
that defendant had no intention of coming back with the children when he went to Fenton 
to retrieve his vehicle and family.  Defendant counters that she was not being sneaky but 
rather hid the move from plaintiff until she and the children were in Fenton because 
plaintiff frequently drank to excess and had “drinking rages.”  She had safety concerns for 
herself and the children and concerns about how plaintiff would react.  The trial court 
questioned defendant’s credibility with respect to plaintiff’s alcohol use. 
 
3 
 
as a single mother.  Shortly thereafter, the parties commenced divorce proceedings.2  On 
January 7, 2021, the trial court entered a temporary order granting the parties joint legal 
custody, granting defendant primary physical custody, and granting plaintiff parenting time 
every other weekend and two nonconsecutive weeks during the summer (for a total of 
approximately 69 overnights per year).  In accordance with the temporary custody order, 
the children continued to spend the majority of their time with defendant in Fenton. 
Plaintiff filed motions regarding parenting time, seeking to have the children 
returned to the Traverse City area.  After an evidentiary hearing, the trial court issued an 
order on November 16, 2021, awarding the parties joint legal custody, granting defendant 
primary physical custody, and awarding parenting time as follows: (1) during the school 
year, defendant would have the majority of parenting time, whereas plaintiff would have 
parenting time every other weekend plus the week during spring break, and plaintiff would 
also have the option of an additional weekend day per month to be exercised in Fenton; (2) 
during the summer when the children are out of school, plaintiff would have the majority 
of parenting time, while defendant would have parenting time every other weekend plus 
one week for vacation time.  In reaching this result, the trial court determined that the 
children had established custodial environments with both parents, that the parenting-time 
order would not upset the established custodial environments, and that the schedule was in 
the children’s best interests by a preponderance of the evidence.  In March 2022, the trial 
 
2 Defendant filed for divorce in Genesee County, where Fenton is located, and plaintiff 
filed for divorce in Leelanau County four days later.  The Genesee County case was 
dismissed, and the Leelanau County case has continued. 
 
4 
 
court entered a judgment of divorce that incorporated this custody and parenting-time 
order. 
Both parties appealed, and the Court of Appeals consolidated the appeals.  In 
plaintiff’s appeal (Docket No. 361068), the Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s 
analysis of the best-interest factors, reversed the trial court’s holding that the custody order 
would not change the children’s established custodial environments, and remanded the case 
to the trial court to “reassess its decision using the proper standard.”  Sabatine v Sabatine, 
unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals, issued December 15, 2022 
(Docket No. 361068), p 9.3 
Defendant sought leave to appeal in this Court.  We ordered oral argument on the 
application, directing the parties to brief whether: 
(1) the Leelanau Circuit Court and the Court of Appeals correctly determined 
that the children have an established custodial environment with each parent, 
see Baker v Baker, 411 Mich 567 (1981); Rains v Rains, 301 Mich App 313 
(2013); (2) the parenting-time terms incorporated into the judgment of 
divorce altered a potential established custodial environment, see Pierron v 
Pierron, 486 Mich 81 (2010); (3) the Court of Appeals remand instructions 
are sufficiently clear to guide the circuit court on remand as to what 
evidentiary burden it must apply, see Griffin v Griffin, 323 Mich App 110, 
128 (2018); but see Butters v Butters, 510 Mich ___ (2022) (Docket No. 
164888); and (4) in an initial judgment of divorce, a court should consider 
the circumstances of the parties at the time of separation or prior to their 
separation to determine the child’s established custodial environment, see 
Bofysil v Bofysil, 332 Mich App 232, 246 (2020).  [Sabatine v Sabatine, 511 
Mich 989, 989 (2023).] 
 
3 The issues in defendant’s appeal (Docket No. 361074) have not been appealed in this 
Court. 
 
5 
 
II.  STANDARD OF REVIEW 
Under MCL 722.28 of the Child Custody Act, MCL 722.21 et seq., “[t]o expedite 
the resolution of a child custody dispute by prompt and final adjudication, all orders and 
judgments of the circuit court shall be affirmed on appeal unless the trial judge made 
findings of fact against the great weight of evidence or committed a palpable abuse of 
discretion or a clear legal error on a major issue.”  MCL 722.28 incorporates three standards 
of review into the act: (1) “a reviewing court should not substitute its judgment on questions 
of fact unless the factual determination clearly preponderates in the opposite direction,” 
Pierron v Pierron, 486 Mich 81, 85; 782 NW2d 480 (2010) (cleaned up); (2) “an abuse of 
discretion occurs if the result is so palpably and grossly violative of fact and logic that it 
evidences not the exercise of will but perversity of will, not the exercise of judgment but 
defiance thereof, not the exercise of reason but rather of passion or bias,” Maier v Maier, 
311 Mich App 218, 221; 874 NW2d 725 (2015) (cleaned up); and (3) clear legal error 
exists when “a court incorrectly chooses, interprets, or applies the law,” Fletcher v 
Fletcher, 447 Mich 871, 881; 526 NW2d 889 (1994). 
These three deferential standards of review “are part of the Legislature’s 
comprehensive effort to promote the best interests and welfare of children.”  Fletcher, 447 
Mich at 877.  By incorporating them into the act, “the Legislature apparently recognized 
that in custody cases the proceedings themselves may jeopardize a child’s welfare.”  Id.  
Therefore, MCL 722.28 “limits the power of an appellate court to disturb a trial court’s 
custody decision . . . .”  Baker, 411 Mich at 577.  When exercising their limited powers in 
this area, appellate courts should always bear in mind 
 
6 
 
that trial courts are in a superior position to make accurate decisions 
concerning the custody arrangement that will be in a child’s best interests.  
Although not infallible, trial courts are more experienced and better situated 
to weigh evidence and assess credibility.  Trial courts not only hear testimony 
and observe witnesses, but also may elicit testimony, interview children, and 
invoke other judicial resources to assure a thorough and careful evaluation 
of the child’s best interests.  [Fletcher, 447 Mich at 889-890.] 
III.  ANALYSIS 
A.  LEGAL BACKGROUND 
MCL 722.27(1)(c) gives the circuit court the authority to “modify or amend its 
previous judgments or orders for proper cause shown or because of change of 
circumstances,” with the following exception: 
The court shall not modify or amend its previous judgments or orders or issue 
a new order so as to change the established custodial environment of a child 
unless there is presented clear and convincing evidence that it is in the best 
interest of the child.  The custodial environment of a child is established if 
over an appreciable time the child naturally looks to the custodian in that 
environment for guidance, discipline, the necessities of life, and parental 
comfort.  The age of the child, the physical environment, and the inclination 
of the custodian and the child as to permanency of the relationship shall also 
be considered. 
The Legislature adopted MCL 722.27 “to minimize the prospect of unwarranted and 
disruptive change of custody orders and to erect a barrier against removal of a child from 
an ‘established custodial environment’, except in the most compelling cases.”  Baker, 411 
Mich at 576-577.  An established custodial environment depends 
upon a custodial relationship of a significant duration in which [the child is] 
provided the parental care, discipline, love, guidance and attention 
appropriate to his age and individual needs; an environment in both the 
physical and psychological sense in which the relationship between the 
custodian and the child is marked by qualities of security, stability and 
permanence.  [Id. at 579-580.] 
 
7 
 
Because it is not contested, we assume, without deciding, that a child can have an 
established custodial environment with both parents. 
Finally, we have summarized the approach a trial court must follow when making a 
decision that could modify an established custodial environment: 
When considering an important decision affecting the welfare of the child, 
the trial court must first determine whether the proposed change would 
modify the established custodial environment of that child.  In making this 
determination, it is the child’s standpoint, rather than that of the parents, that 
is controlling.  If the proposed change would modify the established custodial 
environment of the child, then the burden is on the parent proposing the 
change to establish, by clear and convincing evidence, that the change is in 
the child’s best interests.  Under such circumstances, the trial court must 
consider all the best-interest factors because a case in which the proposed 
change would modify the custodial environment is essentially a change-of-
custody case.  On the other hand, if the proposed change would not modify 
the established custodial environment of the child, the burden is on the parent 
proposing the change to establish, by a preponderance of the evidence, that 
the change is in the child’s best interests.  [Pierron, 486 Mich at 92-93.] 
B.  THE PROPER TEMPORAL FOCUS WHEN DETERMINING IF A JUDGMENT OR 
ORDER WILL MODIFY A CHILD’S ESTABLISHED CUSTODIAL ENVIRONMENT 
The Court of Appeals believed the children had established custodial environments 
with both parents because prior to defendant’s departure, the parties and children all lived 
together as a family and both parents cared for the children.  But in reaching this 
conclusion, the Court of Appeals held that the proper focus of its inquiry was “the child-
rearing situation for the girls before defendant’s departure.”  Sabatine, unpub op at 6, citing 
Bofysil v Bofysil, 332 Mich App 232, 244; 956 NW2d 544 (2020).  We disagree with the 
Court of Appeals’ emphasis on the preseparation child-rearing situation on the facts of this 
case.  Instead, in cases like this one, where the preseparation custodial environment no 
longer exists, the relevant point in time for purposes of determining whether an established 
 
8 
 
custodial environment exists is at the time the trial court makes its custody determination.  
See MCL 722.27(1)(c) (precluding a trial court from taking an action “so as to change the 
established custodial environment of a child unless there is presented clear and convincing 
evidence that it is in the best interest of the child”).  A judgment or order cannot change an 
established custodial environment that no longer exists. 
In Baker, we addressed a similar situation involving a unilateral move by one parent 
with the children to a remote location.  The father argued that his son—the child whose 
custody was at issue—lived in an established custodial environment in Alpena from his 
birth to the time of trial.  Baker, 411 Mich at 580.  The Court noted the many familial and 
community contacts the child had when living together in the family home and that “these 
contacts and associations contributed importantly to the custodial environment” in which 
the child lived.  Id.  But the Court observed that “[t]hat environment began to deteriorate, 
however, with the disruptive events of the summer of 1978, and it was ultimately destroyed 
by the breakup of the parents’ marriage and the dissolution of the family.”  Id.  As a result, 
the Court found that “those repeated custodial changes and geographical moves, with the 
necessarily attendant emotional implications, destroyed the previously established 
custodial environment in which the boy was living and precluded the establishment of a 
new one, at least until after the trial.”  Id. at 581.  The child’s community contacts and 
familiar associations “were not, by their nature, sufficient to preserve [the previously 
existing custodial] environment once the family unit dissolved and the boy entered into a 
new custodial relationship with his father alone, in a radically altered lifestyle in a new 
home.”  Id. at 581-582.  Significantly, the Court concluded that “at the time of trial there 
had been no ‘appreciable time [during which] the child naturally look[ed]’ to his father 
 
9 
 
alone ‘for guidance, discipline, the necessities of life and parental comfort’ in a stable, 
settled atmosphere in order that an ‘established custodial environment’ within the meaning 
of [MCL 722.27(1)(c)] could exist.”  Id. at 582 (first two alterations and emphasis by the 
Baker Court). 
Thus, as Baker demonstrates, for purposes of MCL 722.27(1)(c), whether an 
established custodial environment existed prior to the parents’ separation is immaterial if 
that established custodial environment no longer exists.  However, this does not mean that 
the circumstances of the parties and children prior to the separation should not carefully be 
evaluated.  In some cases, the custodial environment prior to separation might be relevant 
to whether an established custodial environment exists at the time the trial court is set to 
enter the judgment of divorce. 
But the Court of Appeals in this case did not look to the family dynamics before 
separation for this purpose.  The Court of Appeals found Bofysil, 332 Mich App at 236-
243, to be “instructive” as to the circumstances that were relevant for determining the 
children’s established custodial environment.  Sabatine, unpub op at 6.  In Bofysil, the 
Court of Appeals looked to the preseparation household dynamic but failed to consider 
whether it continued after the parties separated.4  In the present case, the Court of Appeals 
took this a step further and expressly held that “what is important here is the child-rearing 
situation for the girls before defendant’s departure.”  Sabatine, unpub op at 6.  But the 
Court did not explain how a custodial environment that no longer existed was relevant to 
determining whether an established custodial environment existed at the time the trial court 
 
4 Indeed, it is difficult to determine from the opinion how long the postseparation period 
lasted until the order or judgment concerning custody was entered. 
 
10 
 
made its custody determination, which was approximately 14 months later.  Thus, the Court 
of Appeals erred by focusing on the time prior to the parties’ separation. 
To summarize, the circumstances of the parties at the time of separation or prior to 
separation might be relevant to determining whether an established custodial environment 
exists at the time the judgment of divorce is issued.  For instance, in determining whether 
a custodial environment has been established over an appreciable time period, the trial 
court will often need to compare and contrast the lives of the children before separation 
and afterward.  But the dispositive inquiry is not whether an established custodial 
environment existed prior to separation; rather, it is whether such an environment continues 
to exist, or a new one exists, at the time of the trial court’s custody determination.  The 
preseparation circumstances are only relevant to the extent that they continue to exist or 
are probative of whether a new established custodial environment exists at the time the trial 
court is rendering its decision—in this case, when it issued the custody order. 
Here, the trial court found “that an established custodial environment existed and 
continues to exist with both parties.”  The trial court properly made its ultimate 
determination on the basis of the circumstances that existed at the time of its decision, 
although the circumstances of the family prior to the separation were relevant—as they 
often will be—to that determination.  Neither party disputes the trial court’s finding on this 
point. 
C.  THE JUDGMENT OF DIVORCE DID NOT ALTER THE CHILDREN’S 
ESTABLISHED CUSTODIAL ENVIRONMENTS 
At issue in this case is whether a modification to parenting time altered the 
children’s established custodial environments.  Not all modifications to parenting time will 
 
11 
 
automatically constitute a change in custody.  See Shade v Wright, 291 Mich App 17, 25; 
805 NW2d 1 (2010).  Because a modification to parenting time is “distinct” from a change 
in custody, “only if a ‘change in parenting time results in a change in the established 
custodial environment’ should the court apply the ‘proper cause and change of 
circumstances’ framework [from MCL 722.27(1)(c)] to a proposed change in parenting 
time.”  Rains v Rains, 301 Mich App 313, 340; 836 NW2d 709 (2013), quoting Shade, 291 
Mich App at 27.  If the modification would change the child’s established custodial 
environment, the clear-and-convincing-evidence standard applies to the best-interest 
inquiry, but if the modification does not change the child’s established custodial 
environment, the preponderance-of-the-evidence standard applies.  See Rains, 301 Mich 
App at 340.  Thus, as noted above, the relevant question to determine whether the “proper 
cause and change of circumstances” framework applies is whether the modification to 
parenting time will “change whom the child naturally looks to for guidance, discipline, the 
necessities of life, and parental comfort . . . .”  Pierron, 486 Mich at 86.   
The Court of Appeals in this case relied on Lieberman v Orr, 319 Mich App 68; 900 
NW2d 130 (2017), in which the defendant-mother had primary physical custody of the 
children, and the parties had stipulated to a parenting-time schedule that gave the plaintiff-
father approximately 1/3 of the overnights per year, id. at 72.  The plaintiff sought to change 
the parenting-time schedule to essentially swap the amount of overnights, and the Court of 
Appeals concluded that this would have been a significant modification that would have 
changed the children’s established custodial environment.  Id. at 89-92.  Although 
Lieberman addressed the issue whether proper cause or a change in circumstances existed, 
 
12 
 
the Court of Appeals applied its analysis to the established-custodial-environment 
determination in this case. 
Applying Lieberman, the Court of Appeals in this case explained that both parents 
had the children for 365 overnights per year before the parents’ separation, and the custody 
order the trial court entered gave “plaintiff significantly fewer overnights” and 
“substantially chang[ed] the nature of his interaction with the children,” making him “a 
weekend parent.”  Sabatine, unpub op at 8, 9.  As a result, the Court of Appeals held that 
the trial court erred by concluding that the parenting-time schedule did not disrupt the 
established custodial environments and by applying the preponderance-of-the-evidence 
standard to the best-interest determination. 
The Court of Appeals’ analysis is flawed in two respects.  First, the Court of Appeals 
failed to afford proper deference to the trial court’s decision.  The Court of Appeals quoted 
the proper standard, but it never explained how the facts “clearly preponderate[d]” against 
the trial court’s factual findings or how the findings were “against the great weight of 
evidence.”  Pierron, 486 Mich at 85 (quotation marks and citations omitted); MCL 722.28; 
see also Fletcher, 447 Mich at 889-890.  After extensively analyzing the facts in 
Lieberman, the Court of Appeals cursorily explained that it saw no reason why 
Lieberman’s analysis should not apply to the established-custodial-environment analysis 
in this case.  In contrast with the trial court’s lengthy analysis, which made up almost three 
pages of its opinion and order, the Court of Appeals’ actual analysis of the facts in this case 
was very limited.  Absent from the Court of Appeals’ analysis was any meaningful 
explanation of how the facts clearly preponderated against the trial court’s factual findings 
or how the findings were against the great weight of the evidence.  In short, the Court of 
 
13 
 
Appeals failed to provide the trial court’s factual findings with the deference they are due 
under MCL 722.28 and this Court’s precedents.  See Fletcher, 447 Mich at 877-881, 889-
890; Baker, 411 Mich at 577-578. 
The Court of Appeals ignored the trial court’s particularized analysis of the specific 
facts relevant to this family and instead cursorily applied the mathematical principles from 
Lieberman.  In doing so, it treated the established-custodial-environment question as if it 
were a simple math equation that could be answered by looking at the number of overnights 
the children spend with each parent.  But determining whether an established custodial 
environment will be modified by a court order or judgment is not that simple.  Although 
the “physical environment” of the children is to be considered in determining a child’s 
established custodial environment, it is not the only factor, and it is not alone dispositive.  
See MCL 722.27(1)(c) (listing “physical environment” as one of a number of factors to be 
considered).5 
Of course, this is not to say that the physical environment and number of overnights 
a child spends with a parent is not important to the determination of whether an established 
custodial environment exists.  For an established custodial environment to exist, the 
custodial relationship must endure for “an appreciable time,” and “the inclination of the 
custodian and the child as to the permanency of the relationship shall also be considered.”  
MCL 722.27(1)(c).  In other words, the custodial relationship must be “of a significant 
duration.”  Baker, 411 Mich at 579.  We caution courts not to place too much or too little 
 
5 In reaching this conclusion, it is unnecessary to overrule Lieberman, and no party has 
asked us to do so.  But we caution courts performing an analysis under MCL 722.27(1)(c) 
not to place too much emphasis on the number of overnights a child spends with each 
parent. 
 
14 
 
emphasis on the child’s physical environment and instead recognize that child-custody 
cases are often factually complex.  It is the trial courts that are typically in the best position 
to analyze the factual complexities of child-custody cases.  See Fletcher, 447 Mich at 889-
890; see also Baker, 411 Mich at 577-578. 
Second, the facts do not clearly preponderate in the direction of finding that the 
parenting-time provision in the judgment of divorce amounted to a change in the children’s 
established custodial environments.  The Court of Appeals’ analysis is incorrect because it 
measured the change from the period prior to the separation (i.e., when the children were 
with both parents for 365 days a year) to what the custody order required.  In doing so, the 
Court of Appeals ignored what happened between the separation and the judgment of 
divorce: the trial court had entered a temporary order that addressed parenting time, giving 
plaintiff approximately 69 overnights per year, and the children had new established 
custodial environments with both parents during this time.  Thus, contrary to the Court of 
Appeals’ assertion, the judgment of divorce did not “giv[e] plaintiff significantly fewer 
overnights” or “substantially chang[e] the nature of his interaction with the children.”  
Sabatine, unpub op at 8.  Rather, the judgment of divorce increased plaintiff’s overnights, 
and more importantly, it maintained the nature of his interaction with the children as it 
existed at the time the trial court made its decision on parenting time when issuing the 
judgment of divorce. 
Despite the imbalance in time spent with each parent, at the time the judgment of 
divorce entered, the children had established custodial environments with both parents.  
The children were relatively young at the time of the separation; AVS was just under five 
years old, and VLS was four months shy of her third birthday.  More than a year had passed 
 
15 
 
between the separation and the entry of the judgment of divorce.6  Thus, for a significant 
portion of their lives, the children spent most of their time with defendant.  Despite this, 
they had a strong bond with both parents and “naturally look[ed]” to both parents “for 
guidance, discipline, the necessities of life, and parental comfort.”  MCL 722.27(1)(c).  
Given these strong bonds and the fact that established custodial environments existed with 
both parents despite the imbalance in time spent with each parent, we believe that—from 
the children’s perspective—any changes caused by the judgment of divorce to the 
established custodial environments that the children share with each parent will be, at most, 
minor.  See Pierron, 486 Mich at 89.  As a result, we find no error in the trial court’s 
conclusion that the entry of the judgment of divorce would not modify the children’s 
 
6 We recognize that it might seem unfair that one parent can make a unilateral decision to 
move the children and, because of the length of time between the initial separation and the 
final determination of custody, create a new established custodial environment.  However, 
as the Court of Appeals recognized in Blaskowski v Blaskowski, 115 Mich App 1, 7; 320 
NW2d 268 (1982), this is a consequence of the necessity of temporary custody orders, and 
that consequence is not without a potential remedy: 
The trial court emphasized that temporary custody orders are 
necessary for care of the child while the parties prepare for a hearing on the 
merits of the custody dispute.  We recognize a potential for unfairness to the 
noncustodial parent if custody pursuant to such a temporary order may ripen 
into an established custodial environment.  Nevertheless, the Legislature has 
decided that the best interests of the child prevail over procedural fairness to 
the parents and that the best interests of the child generally require 
continuance of an established custodial environment.  We note, however, that 
contested custody cases have been given precedence over all other civil 
cases.  MCL 722.26; MSA 25.312(6), GCR 1963, 501.5.  Trial courts and 
parties should endeavor to avoid having custody pursuant to a temporary 
order ripen into an established custodial environment by expediting the 
progress of contested custody cases to trial. 
 
16 
 
established custodial environments, and it was appropriate for the trial court to apply the 
preponderance-of-the-evidence standard.  See Rains, 301 Mich App at 340. 
IV.  CONCLUSION 
The Court of Appeals erred to the extent that it reversed the trial court.  First, we 
clarify that the question whether a parenting-time provision modifies a child’s established 
custodial environment for purposes of MCL 722.27(1)(c) is to be answered on the basis of 
the circumstances that exist at the time the trial court renders its custody decision—here, 
when it issued the custody order.  Second, we reiterate that appellate courts have a statutory 
obligation under MCL 722.28 to affirm trial court determinations in child-custody cases 
unless they are based on findings of fact against the great weight of the evidence, a palpable 
abuse of discretion, or a clear legal error on a major issue.  We hold that the Court of 
Appeals failed to give proper deference to the trial court’s findings of fact, and the facts 
here do not clearly preponderate against the trial court’s factual findings that the parenting-
time provision in the judgment of divorce did not alter the children’s established custodial 
environments.  For these reasons, we reverse Part I(C) of the judgment of the Court of 
Appeals and remand this case to the trial court for further proceedings not inconsistent with 
this opinion. 
 
 
David F. Viviano 
 
Elizabeth T. Clement 
 
Brian K. Zahra 
 
Richard H. Bernstein 
 
Megan K. Cavanagh 
 
Elizabeth M. Welch 
 
Kyra H. Bolden 
 
S T A T E  O F  M I C H I G A N 
 
SUPREME COURT 
 
 
ANDREW PAUL SABATINE, 
 
 
Plaintiff-Appellee, 
 
 
v 
No. 165279 
 
COLLEEN KNECHT SABATINE, 
 
 
 
Defendant-Appellant. 
 
 
 
ZAHRA, J. (concurring).   
I concur in the Court’s decision to reverse Part I(C) of the Court of Appeals judgment and 
thereby reinstate the trial court’s custody order.  However, I am troubled by the trial court’s 
initial determination that the established custodial environment (ECE) of the children did not 
change when defendant unilaterally removed the children from Traverse City, the only home 
they ever knew, and relocated them to Fenton, a finding that was inconsistent with that made by 
the Friend of the Court referee.1  At every stage of divorce proceedings, trial courts must 
determine the ECE in accordance with the plain language of MCL 722.27(1)(c).  Specifically, 
trial courts must consider all the listed statutory factors, not just those that achieve a desired 
outcome.  Here the trial court observed that the separation of the children from their father and 
their lifelong home “[c]ould . . . have been handled more gracefully . . . .”  This is an 
understatement.  Notwithstanding its concerns, the court appears to have ignored the emotional 
 
1 The trial court concluded that “[t]he established custodial environment with both parents that 
existed before separat[ion] continues.”  It then applied a preponderance-of-the-evidence 
standard, as is required when the custody order does not alter an ECE.  See Pierron v Pierron, 
486 Mich 81, 92-93; 782 NW2d 480 (2010).   
 
 
2 
 
and physical disruption the children experienced as a result of the mother’s unilateral actions, in 
part because Michigan is a “no fault” divorce state.  But nothing in Michigan family law gives a 
parent the right to unilaterally disrupt the emotional and physical stability of children, and 
certainly that right does not arise from the lack of a fault requirement to procure a divorce.2   
Trial courts faced with similar facts must focus on every statutory factor identified in 
MCL 722.27(1)(c).  Thus, the trial court must consider not just the psychological aspects of a 
child’s ECE but also the physical aspects, which can be just as important to the determination 
and which appear to have been omitted in the trial court’s analyses in this case.3  Given the 
 
2 Unless ordered otherwise, whether through statutory authority under divorce proceedings or 
through other legally recognized means, parents are presumed to have equal rights to the 
direction and control of their children.  59 Am Jur 2d, Parent and Child (May 2024 update), § 32 
(“In a custody dispute between father and mother, the modern view is that neither has a superior 
right to custody . . . .”); 67A CJS, Parent and Child (May 2024 update), § 56 (“Where parents 
are each seeking custody of their children, each has a full and equal constitutionally protected 
paramount right to custody, care, and control of their children and there exists no presumption 
regarding custody merely on the basis of either party’s parental status.”); In re Ayala, 344 Ill 
App 3d 574, 585; 800 NE2d 524 (2003) (“Neither parent’s right to custody, control and care of 
their child is superior to that of the other parent.  This means that the equal right of one parent 
to custody, care and control of the child does not encompass the right to shift custody of a child 
to a third party.”) (citation omitted); accord Sabo v Sabo, 858 NE2d 1064, 1068 (Ind App, 2006); 
Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co v Borchers, 3 Ohio App 3d 452, 454; 445 NE2d 1160 (1982); 
see also Troxel v Granville, 530 US 57, 66; 120 S Ct 2054; 147 L Ed 2d 49 (2000) (“In 
subsequent cases also, we have recognized the fundamental right of parents to make decisions 
concerning the care, custody, and control of their children.”); In re Sanders, 495 Mich 394, 400, 
421-422; 852 NW2d 524 (2014) (holding that the right to control and custody of children 
constitutionally must extend equally to a parent, despite the other parent being the direct subject 
of neglect proceedings for supervision of children).  
3 MCL 722.27(1)(c) (“The custodial environment of a child is established if over an appreciable 
time the child naturally looks to the custodian in that environment for guidance, discipline, the 
necessities of life, and parental comfort.”) (emphasis added); Rains v Rains, 301 Mich App 313, 
327; 836 NW2d 709 (2013) (“It is both a physical and a psychological environment that fosters 
a relationship between custodian and child and is marked by security, stability, and 
permanence.”) (quotation marks and citation omitted); Powery v Wells, 278 Mich App 526, 528; 
752 NW2d 47 (2008) (holding that one parent’s move to an entirely different region and 
 
 
 
3 
 
changing facts on the ground and the potential for strategic behavior, which ultimately redounds 
to the significant detriment of children, it is critically important that the trial court strictly adhere 
to a review of all statutory factors when making an initial determination of ECE.   
Notwithstanding concerns with this aspect of the trial court proceedings, vacation of the 
trial court’s order and remand for further proceedings is not warranted at this time.  As this Court 
has recently instructed, a trial court should reconsider the children’s ECEs as they exist at the 
time of remand while considering up-to-date information.4  The judgment of divorce in this case 
entered more than two years ago, and the children moved to Fenton almost four years ago.  
Reevaluation at this point would be superfluous given the lengthy time these youthful children 
have established their lives in Fenton.   
Therefore, I concur in the Court’s decision to reverse the Court of Appeals judgment in 
part and thereby to reinstate the trial court’s custody order.  
 
 
Brian K. Zahra 
 
community, relegating the other parent’s status with the child to a “weekend parent,” constituted 
a change in ECE); see also Stoudemire v Thomas, 344 Mich App 34, 48-49; 999 NW2d 43 (2022) 
(noting the long line of Michigan caselaw where family courts consider the circumstances of 
temporary relocation of a child away from a prior environment in order to prevent parental 
behavior that harms children, i.e., through parental refusal to place a child in short-term custodial 
arrangements despite the child’s best interests).   
4 See Butters v Butters, 510 Mich 1096, 1096-1097 (2022).