Court Opinion

ID: 1075640
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-09 20:15:35.813248+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:15:32.932865
License: Public Domain

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Benton, Elder and Senior Judge Duff
Argued at Richmond, Virginia

RUTH B. HUGHES
                                       MEMORANDUM OPINION * BY
v.   Record No. 2565-97-2              JUDGE CHARLES H. DUFF
                                          AUGUST 11, 1998
RICHARD LEE HUGHES

           FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF CHESTERFIELD COUNTY
                      Timothy J. Hauler, Judge
           Jill L. Weiss (Hunton & Williams, on briefs),
           for appellant.

           Denis C. Englisby (Englisby & Englisby, on
           brief), for appellee.

      Ruth B. Hughes (mother) appeals the decision of the circuit

court awarding custody of the parties' two minor children to

Richard Lee Hughes (father).    The trial court ordered a change in

custody based solely upon evidence that mother was living in the

same house with a man to whom she was not married.    We reverse

the trial court's custody decision and return custody to the

mother.

      "In matters concerning custody and visitation, the welfare

and best interests of the child are the 'primary, paramount, and

controlling consideration[s].'"    Kogon v. Ulerick, 12 Va. App.

595, 596, 405 S.E.2d 441, 442 (1991) (citation omitted).
               In matters of a child's welfare, trial
          courts are vested with broad discretion in
          making the decisions necessary to guard and
          to foster a child's best interests. A trial
      *
      Pursuant to Code § 17-116.010 this opinion is not
designated for publication.
          court's determination of matters within its
          discretion is reversible on appeal only for
          an abuse of that discretion, and a trial
          court's decision will not be set aside unless
          plainly wrong or without evidence to support
          it.

Farley v. Farley, 9 Va. App. 326, 328, 387 S.E.2d 794, 795 (1990)

(citations omitted).

     The record before us shows that the parties separated due to

various incidents of abuse by father often occurring in the

presence of the two young children, Adam and Luke Boyd.   On one

occasion when the children were present in the same room, father

threw mother against the wall and held her there by her neck,

leaving her with bruises.   On another occasion, father threatened

to kill both himself and mother with a gun.
     After leaving the home because of such abuse, mother and the

children moved in with her brother for a while and then to her

parents' home.   Due to her father's ill-health, she moved to a

YMCA shelter and then to St. Joseph's Villa, which provides

housing for abused and homeless women and their children.   She

was asked to leave the shelter because father sent her a package

which contained alcohol, a violation of the shelter's rules.    At

this point Mike Kopeski, a co-worker of mother, offered to allow

her and her children to stay in his home.   In June 1996, Kopeski,

mother and her two children moved into a two bedroom house.    She

testified that because she had no car and insufficient income to

support the boys and herself separately, she had no other options

than to accept Kopeski's offer.   Mother denied having a sexual

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relationship with Kopeski, although she admitted being in love

with him.    She produced evidence that Kopeski slept in one

bedroom and that she and her two sons slept in the other bedroom.

She slept in the bottom bunk bed, one son slept in the top bunk,

and the second son slept in a separate toddler bed in the room.

      "Exposing children to their parents' living with persons to

whom they are not married has been disfavored by our Supreme

Court."     Carrico v. Blevins, 12 Va. App. 47, 49, 402 S.E.2d 235,

237 (1991) (citing Brown v. Brown, 218 Va. 196, 237 S.E.2d 89
(1977)).    In Brown, unlike the situation in the case before us,

there was testimony that the mother's cohabitation adversely

affected the children.     See Brown, 218 Va. at 200, 237 S.E.2d at

92.   The trial court found that the mother's adulterous

relationship rendered her "an unfit and improper person to have

the care and custody of these children."       Id.

      In Sutherland v. Sutherland, 14 Va. App. 42, 43, 414 S.E.2d

617, 618 (1992), this Court rejected the contention that Brown

established a per se rule that cohabitation renders a parent
unfit.    Despite the mother's adulterous cohabitation with another

man, we found no abuse of discretion in the trial court's

decision to allow mother to maintain custody of the parties'

child.     See id. at 44, 414 S.E.2d at 618.

      Similarly, in Ford v. Ford, 14 Va. App. 551, 419 S.E.2d 415

(1992), the trial court awarded the parents joint custody,

despite the fact that the father lived with his girlfriend.    The

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evidence indicated that the father maintained a separate bedroom

in the home.   We found no abuse of discretion, noting that "no

evidence was introduced that [the child] was exposed to the

illicit nature of her father's relationship with [the

girlfriend]" and that the father and his girlfriend "not only

went to great lengths to shield [the child] from their adultery,

they were also open with her about their ultimate intentions with

regard to one another, telling her that they intended to marry."

 Id. at 555, 419 S.E.2d at 418.

     In this instance, the trial court stated that it considered

all of the statutory factors and that it did not "find the living

arrangements that exist here with regard to these children to

show that [mother] is an unfit mother."    The court found

insufficient evidence to prove adultery.   Nonetheless, the court

focused solely on mother's living with an unrelated male to

change custody to father. The court noted that it was
          of the opinion that the relationship, that
          the living arrangement, is more than one of
          more [sic] convenience. Were it not for that
          living relationship this Court would probably
          be more inclined to view the factors in this
          case as being persuasive of custody and
          support of [mother].

     No evidence was introduced to demonstrate that mother's

cohabitation had an adverse impact on the children.   Nonetheless,

the court stated that
          the question becomes this: How long do we
          have to wait to determine whether or not
          children are being adversely affected by a
          relationship in which there is a third party,
          unrelated male who could be the father of

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          [mother] living in the house. I don't
          believe I'm compelled to wait. These
          children are at very young, impressionable
          ages. These children are ages three and four
          and-a-half. . . . And this Court is not
          pleased with what it views to be the moral
          climate and atmosphere that exists within
          that household.

The trial court concluded that the moral climate was

inappropriate based solely on the fact of cohabitation.    No

evidence in the record supports the trial court's conclusion.

     Code § 20-124.3 codifies the factors which the trial court

must consider when determining the child's best interests for

purposes of visitation and custody.   Among those factors are

"[a]ny history of family abuse."   The court failed to address the

allegations of abuse by father against mother, despite father's

convictions for assault and battery arising from such abuse.    The

court noted no factor other than mother's living arrangement, and

presumed an adverse impact and negative moral climate without

evidentiary support.
     Because the trial court's conclusion that mother's

cohabitation adversely affected the children is not supported by

evidence in the record, the decree is reversed.   Custody of the

parties' two sons is returned to mother.

                                                          Reversed.

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