Court Opinion

ID: 4190770
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-07-31 07:06:31.730475+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:39:45.444568
License: Public Domain

STATE OF MICHIGAN

                           COURT OF APPEALS

SIMONA CAMPEAN,                                                    UNPUBLISHED
                                                                   July 27, 2017
              Plaintiff-Appellee,

v                                                                  No. 335861
                                                                   Macomb Circuit Court
                                                                   Family Division
MARIAN CAMPEAN,                                                    LC No. 2008-003531-DM

              Defendant-Appellant.

Before: MARKEY, P.J., and METER and SHAPIRO, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

       Defendant appeals as of right an order denying his motion for a change of parenting time.
We affirm.

        In 2009, the parties divorced and were awarded joint legal and joint physical custody of
their child (MC), who was one year old at the time. According to the consent judgment of
divorce, defendant’s parenting time included a continuously rotating four-week schedule
consisting of 10 overnight stays during the four-week period. In 2012, the parties entered into a
consent order to modify defendant’s parenting time so that it would align with the Sixteenth
Judicial Circuit Court of Michigan Family Division Reasonable Parenting Time Schedule. At
the time, defendant’s work schedule prevented him from following the four-week parenting time
schedule defined in the judgment of divorce. Pursuant to the consent order, defendant’s
parenting time was reduced to six overnights per month during the school year and eight
overnights per month during the summer, plus a holiday and vacation schedule. In August of
2016, defendant filed a motion for a change of parenting time claiming there was a change of
circumstances. According to defendant, his work schedule was now more flexible, he had
moved into a new house with his fiancée and their three-year-old son, and his mother would be
moving from Romania to live with him at least nine months out of the year. Due to these
changes, defendant claimed he was entitled to equal parenting time.

        The referee determined that because he sought equal parenting time, defendant’s motion
was premised on a change of custody and entered a recommended order denying his motion for
failure to show a threshold proper cause or change of circumstances sufficient to warrant a
change of custody hearing. When defendant filed his objection to the recommended order, he
requested either a change of custody by way of equal parenting time or, in the alternative, some

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increase in parenting time that would not amount to a change of custody. The trial court
determined that defendant had not met the threshold burden for a hearing on either a change in
custody or a change in parenting time. The trial court ordered that the referee’s recommended
order denying defendant’s motion be adopted in its entirety. 1

        Pursuant to MCL 722.27(1)(c), a trial court “[m]ay modify or amend its previous
judgments or orders for proper cause shown or because of a change of circumstances.”
Therefore, a party seeking a change in custody must first establish proper cause or a change of
circumstances “before the trial court can consider whether an established custodial environment
exists (thus establishing the burden of proof) and conduct a review of the best interest factors.”
Vodvarka v Grasmeyer, 259 Mich App 499, 509; 675 NW2d 847 (2003). If a party fails to
provide proper cause or a change of circumstances, “the trial court is not authorized by statute to
revisit an otherwise valid prior custody decision and engage in a reconsideration of the statutory
best interest factors.” Id. at 508-509 (citation and quotation marks omitted).

        Defendant does not dispute that his request for equal parenting time would result in a
change of custody, but contends that he has met the threshold showing of a change in
circumstances sufficient for the trial court to revisit the previously existing custody order. “The
purpose of the proper-cause or change-of-circumstances requirement is ‘to erect a barrier against
removal of a child from an established custodial environment and to minimize unwarranted and
disruptive changes of custody orders.’ ” Frowner v Smith, 296 Mich App 374, 384; 820 NW2d
235 (2012) quoting Vodvarka, 259 Mich App at 509. To establish a change of circumstances,
the “movant must prove that, since the entry of the last custody order, the conditions surrounding
custody of the child, which have or could have a significant effect on the child’s well-being, have
materially changed.” Vodvarka, 259 Mich App at 513. “[T]he evidence must demonstrate
something more than the normal life changes (both good and bad) that occur during the life of a
child, and there must be at least some evidence that the material changes have had or will almost
certainly have an effect on the child.” Id. at 513-514.

       The last custody order was entered in 2012, and, at that time, defendant was traveling
approximately 45 nights out of the year and worked long hours. Now, defendant claims that his
work schedule has become more flexible and that he spends, at most, four nights traveling each

1
  We review this discretionary ruling in a custody dispute for an abuse of discretion. Vodvarka v
Grasmeyer, 259 Mich App 499, 507-508; 675 NW2d 847 (2003). “In child custody cases, ‘[a]n
abuse of discretion exists when the trial court’s decision is so palpably and grossly violative of
fact and logic that it evidences a perversity of will, a defiance of judgment, or the exercise of
passion or bias.’ ” Shade v Wright, 291 Mich App 17, 21; 805 NW2d 1 (2010), quoting Berger v
Berger, 277 Mich App 700, 705; 747 NW2d 336 (2008). A trial court’s findings of fact are
reviewed under the great weight of the evidence standard, meaning the trial court’s factual
findings must stand “unless the evidence clearly preponderates in the opposite direction.”
Vodvarka, 259 Mich App at 507 (quotations and citation omitted). We review questions of law
for clear legal error. Id. at 508. “A trial court commits a clear legal error when it incorrectly
chooses, interprets, or applies the law.” Id. (quotations and citation omitted).

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year. Additionally, defendant claims there has been a change of circumstances because he now
lives in a stable family living environment, i.e., he bought a house with his fiancé where they
raise MC’s half-brother. Finally, defendant claims that his mother is living with him for at least
nine months out of the year and that she can help care for MC when defendant is at work.
Despite defendant’s claim to the contrary, these kinds of changes can be appropriately
characterized as those normal life changes that occur during the life of a child. Changing
employment, or the schedule of one’s employment, is something that a child’s parent will
normally confront at some point. Additionally, moving to a new home and a parent’s plan to re-
marry are both common changes in a child’s life. There is nothing that proves these changes will
almost certainly have an effect on the child. As the trial court properly pointed out, these
changes focus on defendant and his schedule, rather than on MC and her environment, behavior,
and well-being. Accordingly, the trial court did not abuse its discretion when it denied
defendant’s request for an evidentiary hearing to determine whether equal parenting time was in
MC’s best interest.

        Whether the trial court erred in denying defendant’s request for a minor increase in his
parenting time that would not amount to a change in custody presents a much closer call. Unlike
the standard set forth in Vodvarka, normal life changes may very well amount to a change of
circumstances warranting the modification of parenting time. Shade v Wright, 291 Mich App 17,
30-31; 805 NW2d 1 (2010). The focus of parenting time is on a strong relationship between the
child and his parents. See id. at 29. Additionally, “[e]ven ordinary changes in the parties’
behavior, status, or living conditions might justify a trial court in finding that a previously
imposed condition is no longer in the child’s best interests.” Kaeb v Kaeb, 309 Mich App 556,
571; 873 NW2d 319 (2015) (emphasis added).

        Therefore, defendant is correct that substantial changes in a parent’s schedule can be a
consideration in determining whether that parent has made a sufficient threshold change in
circumstances showing to justify a parenting time hearing. A significant change in availability
can be a consideration when ruling on a motion for an increase in parenting time. However, in
this case we do not believe the trial court’s ultimate decision that defendant had not met the
threshold showing for a parenting time hearing constituted an abuse of its discretion. 2 The
changes that defendant points to since 2012 do amount to normal life changes, but he has not
shown how they affect MC to such an extent that a modification of parenting time is warranted.
The parenting time schedule in place at the time of defendant’s August motion was roughly
equal to the Sixteenth Judicial Circuit Court of Michigan Family Division Reasonable Parenting
Time Schedule, and it allowed defendant over 100 days of parenting time per year. While these
changes show an increase in his availability, defendant has not articulated how they will prevent
him from being able to foster and develop a healthy relationship with MC under the current
parenting time arrangement. It is commendable that defendant seeks more time with his
daughter, but given the absence of any showing that the current parenting time schedule, which

2
 The trial court’s determination on parenting time is a discretionary ruling reviewed for an abuse
of discretion. Diez v Davey, 307 Mich App 366, 389; 861 NW2d 323 (2014).

                                               -3-
is in conformity to trial court’s reasonable parenting time schedule, prevents him from fostering
that relationship the trial court’s denial of his request is not an abuse of discretion.3

         Defendant’s reliance on our opinion in Shade and on the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Kane v Kane, 314 Mich 529; 22 NW2d 773 (1946) is misplaced as each case is distinguishable.
An important fact in Shade was that the parents lived in different states, and extensive travel was
required in order to accommodate the exercise of parenting time. Shade, 291 Mich App at 29-
30. For that reason, we held that a modification of parenting time was warranted because the
existing parenting time schedule was no longer feasible due to the distance between the parents’
homes, the child starting high school, and the fact that the schedule prevented the child from
engaging in certain extracurricular activities. Id. at 29-31. Here, the parenting time schedule
already fosters MC’s relationship with both parents. Concerning Kane, in addition to the fact
that it preceded the current statutory framework as applied in Vodvarka by nearly 60 years, the
facts are distinguishable because the father in that case had no set parenting time schedule, and,
after he came home from the war, he had difficulty visiting his son, in part, because the mother
was attempting to have her new husband adopt the child. Kane, 314 Mich at 531-534. There are
no facts that suggest defendant is unable to foster a relationship with MC, as was the case in
Kane.

       In sum, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying defendant’s request for a
change in parenting time, including its denial of his request for an increase in his parenting time
that would fall short of a change in custody.

       Affirmed.

                                                            /s/ Jane E. Markey
                                                            /s/ Patrick M. Meter
                                                            /s/ Douglas B. Shapiro

3
  At the hearing, formal testimony was not offered, but the parties were placed under oath and
were permitted to speak. Defendant argues that we should direct the trial court to conduct a full
evidentiary hearing. However, virtually all of defendant’s claims regarding the change in his
work schedule and life style were undisputed. Thus, the trial court did not have to resolve
factual disputes. Rather, it had to determine, based upon the largely undisputed facts, whether a
change in parenting time was justified.

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