Court Opinion

ID: 6499339
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-12 15:01:29.441424+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:12:15.635433
License: Public Domain

IN THE
              ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
                                DIVISION ONE

                                        J.F.,
                                     Petitioner,

                                         v.

  THE HONORABLE GREG COMO, Judge of the SUPERIOR COURT
  OF THE STATE OF ARIZONA, in and for the County of MARICOPA,
                       Respondent Judge,

                                     C.F.,
                             Real Party in Interest.

                             No. 1 CA-SA 21-0123
                               FILED 7-12-2022

     Petition for Special Action from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
                               No. FC2020-007173
                     The Honorable Gregory Como, Judge

                    JURISDICTION ACCEPTED,
            RELIEF GRANTED IN PART, DENIED IN PART

                                     COUNSEL

The Cavanagh Law Firm, PA, Phoenix
By Helen R. Davis, Nicholas J. Brown
Counsel for Petitioner

krdlaw, PC, Scottsdale
By Kiilu Davis
Counsel for Real Party in Interest
                         J.F. v. HON. COMO/C.F.
                            Opinion of the Court

                                OPINION

Judge David D. Weinzweig delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
Judge Paul J. McMurdie joined. Presiding Judge Peter B. Swann dissented.

W E I N Z W E I G, Judge:

¶1            We must determine when the superior court may order a
parent to release mental health records for in-camera review in a child
custody dispute. The superior court ordered Father to release five years of
his mental health records for in-camera review from providers who treated
him for alcohol abuse. Father petitioned for special action review, arguing
he cannot be ordered to produce those records under the psychologist-
patient privilege, which he never waived. We grant relief in part and deny
in part, holding that Father impliedly waived the psychologist-patient
privilege on the discrete topic of his alcohol abuse but remand for the court
to reduce the responsive period of records from five years to one year. We
do not prematurely reach the issue of what sanctions would be proper if
Father chooses not to comply with the order, including whether an adverse
inference would be appropriate.

             FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶2           Mother and Father were married for seven years and have
three minor children. Mother filed for divorce in December 2020. Both
parents sought legal decision-making and parenting time.

¶3            Father moved for a temporary order that he receive
unsupervised parenting time. Mother objected, arguing that unsupervised
parenting time would jeopardize the children’s safety. She accused Father
of being “an alcoholic” who “disappear[ed] for days at a time while on
drinking binges,” and expressed “serious concerns” about “the children
being in a vehicle with Father due to his history of driving while
intoxicated.” She alleged that Father had once tried to pick up their
daughter from school while intoxicated. Given this “ongoing struggle with
alcoholism,” Mother insisted that Father have only supervised parenting
time, at least until the court “determine[s] whether he will be able to
provide a safe environment for the children.”

¶4            Father conceded he was diagnosed with “moderate to severe”
alcohol use disorder and agreed “he should not drink alcoholic beverages.”

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                         J.F. v. HON. COMO/C.F.
                            Opinion of the Court

He admitted to four DUI charges before the marriage. Still, Father argued
he “rebutted” any adverse presumption arising from his recent alcohol
abuse under Arizona law because his disorder was “in early remission,” he
had tested sober for nearly four months, and he continued to pursue “a
wide-range of self-care opportunities,” including support groups and
“counseling with Nancy Harris, Psy.D.” Indeed, Father insisted that
Mother’s concerns were not “rational” because he had “respon[ded] to [her]
concerns with honest acknowledgment and willingness to provide
objective measures of sobriety.”

¶5           Around this time, Mother asked Father to sign a release for
his counseling and outpatient alcohol rehabilitation records. Father
refused. He argued the records were privileged under state and federal
law. The superior court encouraged the parties to resolve the issue
themselves.

¶6            The court held an evidentiary hearing on Father’s request for
unsupervised parenting time in March 2021. Both parents testified under
oath, but we do not know what they said because Father never provided
this court with a transcript of the hearing.

¶7            After the hearing, the superior court issued temporary orders,
granting the parents joint legal decision-making and designating Mother as
the primary residential parent. The court also ordered Father to receive
unsupervised parenting time, but only on the condition he continue to
participate in extensive daily and monthly alcohol testing, install an
Intoxalock device on his vehicle, attend Alcoholics Anonymous, and
continue therapy with his therapist or another counselor specializing in
addiction.

¶8           About two months later, Father petitioned the superior court
to modify the temporary orders, asking the court to grant him equal
parenting time and relax his alcohol-testing burden. Father again stressed
his continued participation in “alcohol monitoring and treatment.” He later
argued this relief was appropriate because he had “admitted the issue,”
“taken multiple steps to address the disorder,” and had “another four
months of provable sobriety under his belt.”

¶9            Meanwhile, Father refused to release the counseling records
of providers who treated him for alcohol use disorder. He rejected Mother’s
offer to hire a neutral third-party to review the records under seal and
report on “whether Father[] was appropriately treating his addiction

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                          J.F. v. HON. COMO/C.F.
                             Opinion of the Court

through therapy.” And so, Mother asked the court to hear and decide the
issue.

¶10          The superior court heard evidence and argument on Father’s
request to modify the temporary orders and Mother’s request for Father’s
counseling records. Both parents testified under oath, but again, Father did
not provide us with the transcript. After the hearing, the superior court
issued a minute entry granting Father’s motion to modify the temporary
orders.

¶11            At the same time, the court ordered Father to release his
medical records from providers who had “seen or treated [him] for alcohol
abuse” since December 2015. The court ordered it would first review the
documents in camera to ensure the records were limited to the issue of his
alcohol abuse. This special action followed. We exercise jurisdiction. Blazek
v. Superior Court, 177 Ariz. 535, 536 (App. 1994) (“[A] special action is the
appropriate means of relief when a party is ordered to disclose what []he
believes is privileged material.”).

                               DISCUSSION

¶12           Father argues the superior court should not have required
him to release the records because they were protected under the
psychologist-patient privilege, A.R.S. § 32-2085(A), and he never waived
the privilege.1

¶13           We review de novo the waiver of an evidentiary privilege,
which “poses a mixed question of law and fact.” See Empire W. Title Agency,
LLC v. Talamante ex rel. County of Maricopa, 234 Ariz. 497, 498-99, ¶ 8 (2014).
We also review de novo issues of statutory interpretation. State ex rel. DES
v. Pandola, 243 Ariz. 418, 419, ¶ 6 (2018).

I.     Arizona Child Custody Laws and the Doctrine of Parens Patriae

¶14            The dispositive factor in all child custody disputes is the
child’s best interest, and Arizona courts must safeguard that interest. See
Hays v. Gama, 205 Ariz. 99, 102, ¶ 18 (2003) (child’s best interests

1       Father briefly contends that “[f]ederal law also protects
rehabilitation records from disclosure,” citing 42 U.S.C. § 290dd-2(a), but he
never develops the argument in his briefing and thus waives it here. See
Polanco v. Indus. Comm’n of Arizona, 214 Ariz. 489, 491, ¶ 6 n.2 (App. 2007)
(failure to develop argument in petition for special action constitutes
waiver).

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                          J.F. v. HON. COMO/C.F.
                             Opinion of the Court

“paramount” in custody determinations). This duty is rooted in Arizona
statutes and the common law.

¶15           Arizona law has a full chapter of statutes devoted to child
custody issues that invariably direct the superior court to protect a child’s
best interests. See, e.g., A.R.S. § 25-403(A) (legal decision-making and
parenting time); A.R.S. § 25-403.01(B) (“level of decision-making”); A.R.S. §
25-403.02 (parenting plans); A.R.S. § 25-404 (temporary orders); A.R.S. § 25-
407(C) (costs and expenses); A.R.S. § 25-407(D) (“public hearing”); A.R.S. §
25-408(G) (relocation); A.R.S. § 25-411 (modification); A.R.S. § 25-410(B)
(judicial supervision); A.R.S. § 25-414(A) (visitation or parenting time
violations); A.R.S. § 25-415(B)(3) (sanctions).

¶16           To that end, the courts “must strive to marshal, inspect and
analyze the relevant and admissible evidence needed for it to reach a well-
informed decision in the child’s best interests.” See Kelly v. Kelly, 252 Ariz.
371, 375, ¶ 18 (App. 2021).

¶17            As relevant here, Section 25-403 requires that courts
determine questions of legal decision-making and parenting time “in
accordance with the best interests of the child,” accounting for “all factors
that are relevant to the child’s physical and emotional well-being.” A.R.S.
§ 25-403(A). One factor is “[t]he mental and physical health of all
individuals involved.” A.R.S. § 25-403(A)(5). The legislature also
recognized an adverse presumption against parents who have abused
drugs or alcohol “within twelve months before the petition.” See A.R.S.
§ 25-403.04(A).     In those cases, Arizona law creates a “rebuttable
presumption that sole or joint legal decision-making . . . is not in the child’s
best interests.” Id.

¶18            Beyond these statutes, however, Arizona courts have long
assumed the “power and duty . . . to act for the child’s best interests” under
the common law doctrine of parens patriae. See Stewart v. Superior Court, 163
Ariz. 227, 228 (App. 1989) (describing the “parens patriae concern” as when
“a child’s parents, by conflict of interest or for other reasons, may be unable
or unwilling to perceive or advance the child’s best interest”); see also
Kinsella v. Kinsella, 696 A.2d 556, 577-78 (N.J. 1997) (describing this role as
“an expression of the court’s special responsibility to safeguard the interests
of the child at the center of a custody dispute because the child cannot be
presumed to be protected by the adversarial process”). This unique role of
our courts predates even statehood. See Bell v. Bell, 44 Ariz. 520, 528 (1934)
(the doctrine of parens patriae “dates from a very early period in the history
of these courts,” originating with “the king of England”).

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                          J.F. v. HON. COMO/C.F.
                             Opinion of the Court

¶19          Against this backdrop, a child’s best interest represents the
lens through which Arizona courts must review and decide all custody
disputes.

II.    The Psychologist-Patient Privilege and Waiver

¶20           Father asserts the psychologist-patient privilege under
Section 32-2085(A), which prevents a licensed psychologist from
“voluntarily or involuntarily divulg[ing] information that is received by
reason of the confidential nature of the psychologist’s practice.” See A.R.S.
§ 32-2085(A). This privilege recognizes that “confidential relations and
communication[s] between a client or patient and a psychologist . . . are
placed on the same basis as those provided by law between an attorney and
client.” Id. The legislature adopted this privilege to facilitate mental health
treatment, recognizing a safe space where patients are frank about their
thoughts and emotions without fear of public consequence. Bain v. Superior
Court, 148 Ariz. 331, 334 n.1 (1986).

¶21           Two more points on the privilege: First, Arizona courts have
construed it narrowly because it “exclude[s] relevant evidence and
impede[s] the fact-finder’s search for the truth.” Blazek v. Superior Court, 177
Ariz. at 537.

¶22           Second, the privilege is not absolute. Arizona courts have
recognized two forms of waiver. Section 32-2085 instructs that a patient
may “waive[] the psychologist-client privilege in writing or in court
testimony.” See A.R.S. § 32-2085(A) (emphasis added). And a patient may
impliedly waive the psychologist-patient privilege by “pursu[ing] a course
of conduct inconsistent with observance of the privilege.” See Bain, 148
Ariz. at 334. For instance, the privilege is “deemed waived with respect to
[a] particular medical condition” when a client or patient “places [that]
particular medical condition at issue by means of a claim or affirmative
defense.” Id.

¶23           Any implied waiver, however, is limited to the “privileged
communications concerning the specific condition which has been
voluntarily placed at issue by the privilege holder.” Id. at 335.

¶24            Even then, the superior court must first inspect the records in
camera, ensuring that only the relevant and necessary documents are
produced. See Blazek, 177 Ariz. at 542. According to the United States
Supreme Court, a lesser evidentiary showing is needed to trigger an in-
camera inspection because it represents “a smaller intrusion” on privacy
interests. See United States v. Zolin, 491 U.S. 554, 572 (1989) (“In fashioning

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                          J.F. v. HON. COMO/C.F.
                             Opinion of the Court

a standard for determining when in camera review is appropriate, we begin
with the observation that in camera inspection . . . is a smaller intrusion
upon the confidentiality of the attorney-client relationship than is public
disclosure.”) (citation omitted).

III.   Limited Waiver in Child Custody Actions

¶25           Arizona courts have not directly decided whether or how a
parent might waive the privilege in a child custody action. But see Amy J.
Amundsen, Balancing the Court’s Parens Patriae Obligations and the
Psychologist-Patient Privilege in Custody Disputes, 28 J. Am. Acad. Matrim.
Law. 1, 5 (2015) (stating that Arizona law recognizes “no psychologist-client
privilege once a parent seeks custody in a divorce proceeding”) (citing In re
Marriage of Gove, 117 Ariz. 324, 328 (App. 1977)). We turn there now.

¶26           Parents do not forfeit their psychologist-patient privilege by
requesting parenting time in a divorce or custody action. See Styers v.
Superior Court, 161 Ariz. 477, 478 (App. 1989) (finding privileged records
“irrelevant to any issue appropriate to the dissolution”). “The psychiatrist-
patient privilege would be seriously compromised if a treating psychiatrist
could be required to testify against his patient in any divorce proceeding
where the issue of child custody was raised. If such were the law, no
psychiatrist could ever assure his patient of confidentiality.” Roper v. Roper,
336 So.2d 654, 656 (Fla. App. 1976).

¶27            Even so, we cannot deny the tension between Arizona child
custody laws, which hinge on a child’s best interest, and a parent’s privacy
interest under the psychologist-patient privilege. See Courtney Waits, The
Use of Mental Health Records in Child Custody Proceedings, 17 J. Am. Acad.
Matrim. Law. 159, 160 (2001) (“[N]o privilege is absolute, especially when
it relates to determining the fitness of a parent to have custody of a child.
The privilege can seriously impact child custody and dissolution of
marriage proceedings.”).

¶28            And so, we make one thing clear: When a parent’s privacy
interest squarely conflicts with a child’s best interest, the child wins. By
legislative design, a parent’s recent, undisputed substance abuse disorder
has immediate significance for Arizona courts that must decide custody
issues “in accordance with the best interests of the child,” must account for
“all factors that are relevant to the child’s physical and emotional well-
being,” including “[t]he mental and physical health of all individuals
involved,” and must presume any form of legal decision making is not in
the child’s best interest. See A.R.S. §§ 25-403(A)(5), -403.04(A).

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                          J.F. v. HON. COMO/C.F.
                             Opinion of the Court

¶29            By the same token, Arizona courts have long assumed the
unique “power and duty” to protect the children’s best interest in custody
disputes. See Bell, 44 Ariz. at 528-29; Kinsella, 696 A.2d at 578 (“One
consequence of the special role of the courts in custody disputes is that
evidentiary rules that are accepted as part of the adversarial process are not
always controlling in child custody cases.”). After all, those children often
find themselves in the middle of loving but warring parents, and are often
left alone to accept their fate while dodging the emotional shrapnel.

              A.     Implied Waiver

¶30            We hold that Father partially waived the psychologist-patient
privilege on the discrete topic of alcohol abuse treatment. Cf. Clements v.
Bernini, 249 Ariz. 434, 438, ¶ 1 (2020) (recognizing that attorney-client
privilege is waived if the record has reasonable evidence to support a good
faith belief that an exception to the privilege applies).

¶31           For starters, Father provided no transcripts of either
evidentiary hearing, leaving an unknown chasm of evidence. Our rules
required that Father order and provide those transcripts to this court.
ARCAP 11(c); State ex rel. Dep’t of Econ. Sec. v. Burton, 205 Ariz. 27, 30, ¶ 16
(App. 2003) (“An appellant is responsible for making certain that the record
on appeal contains all transcripts or other documents necessary for us to
consider the issues raised on appeal.”). Since Father did not supply us with
transcripts of his testimony, we cannot tell whether he waived the
psychologist-client privilege “in court testimony.” See A.R.S. § 32-2085(A).
Nor can we tell what Father argued at the hearings or during oral argument
on that issue. But we presume the transcripts would support the superior
court’s ruling. Varco, Inc. v. UNS Electric, Inc., 242 Ariz. 166, 169, ¶ 3 (App.
2017).

¶32            Even under this limited record, however, the court did not
abuse its discretion. Father thrust his alcohol abuse counseling records to
the fore in this child custody dispute—not merely by seeking custody, but
by affirmatively seeking unsupervised parenting time and then a reduced
alcohol testing requirement—based on four months of sobriety, touting his
continued path of treatment and counseling, including his counseling from
a psychologist named Nancy Harris. See Bain, 148 Ariz. at 334 (privilege is
waived “with respect to th[e] particular medical condition” placed at issue);
Gove, 117 Ariz. at 328 (“In seeking custody of the children, appellant placed
her mental condition at issue.”). Father did more than parenthetically
acknowledge his path to treatment; he wielded that path as affirmative
evidence to prove that he presents no danger to the children. Having

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                         J.F. v. HON. COMO/C.F.
                            Opinion of the Court

brandished that sword, Father cannot turn around and hide behind the
privilege, depriving the court of material it reasonably concluded were
necessary to protect the children’s safety and welfare. See Danielson v.
Superior Court, 157 Ariz. 41, 43 (App. 1987) (“[A] party cannot, by selective
invocation of the privilege, disclose documents or testimony favorable to
that party while failing to disclose cognate material unfavorable to that
party.”) (citation omitted).

¶33           Put differently, Father’s pursuit of unsupervised parenting
time and a reduced alcohol testing requirement is “inconsistent with
observance” of a privilege that prevents the court from considering
relevant, admissible evidence about the children’s best interests. See Bain,
148 Ariz. at 334 (finding implied waiver of psychologist-patient privilege
when a party “pursue[d] a course of conduct inconsistent with observance
of the privilege”). And it bears repeating that the legislature has
empowered Arizona courts to protect the innocent and unrepresented
children embroiled in child custody disputes. See Bailey v. Bailey, 3 Ariz.
App. 138, 141 (1966) (when asked to modify a custody decree, “[t]he
primary consideration is the welfare of the child,” and “[t]he Court will
look to the best interests of the child and not to the gratification of the
parents.”).

¶34            On this record, it was undisputed that Father was recently
diagnosed with moderate to severe alcohol use disorder and that Father
had abused alcohol the year before he first moved for unsupervised
parenting time. Thus, the court had to presume it would “not [be] in the
child’s best interests” for Father to have any form of legal decision-making.
See A.R.S. § 25-403.04(A).

¶35           And when it came to parenting time, Mother has voiced
concern from the outset that unsupervised parenting time would
jeopardize the children’s safety, arguing the counseling records are
“necessary to confirm the nature of Father’s therapy, his attendance,
whether such therapy is effectively treating the overall cause of his
addiction[,] [and whether] Father has been transparent with his therapist
concerning his history and level of use.” Her concern was real. An award
of unsupervised parenting time meant that Father would be alone with the
children, and thus assume all responsibility to protect their safety and
welfare.

¶36          The centerpiece of Father’s argument is Laznovsky v.
Laznovsky, 745 A.2d 1054, 1073 (Md. App. 2000). His reliance is misplaced.
There, unlike here, the Maryland legislature expressly preserved the

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                          J.F. v. HON. COMO/C.F.
                             Opinion of the Court

psychiatrist/psychologist-patient privilege in custody disputes. Id. at 1063-
64 (“The [Maryland] Legislature clearly established a contrary public
policy. It chose to preserve the privilege in custody cases.”). The Laznovsky
opinion even stresses that point: “We emphasize again that we are not faced
with a privilege statute that has always been silent as to whether a court
could compel the production of otherwise confidential communications in
child custody cases.” Id. at 1063. Here, unlike the Maryland legislature
there, the Arizona legislature has not chosen to elevate a parent’s privacy
interest above a child’s best interests in custody proceedings.

              B.     Limited Scope

¶37           We pause to stress that courts must narrowly craft their
disclosure orders to minimize the intrusion on a patient’s privacy interests.
Like mining for iron but dreaming of gold, Mother should not mistake the
narrow, pointed inquiry described above as her chance to unearth new and
persuasive evidence on Father’s mental health. We understand that
Father’s mental health records might capture far more than needed to
ensure the children’s safety. For that reason, the superior court must first
inspect the mental health records in camera, ensuring a limited production
of information needed to protect the children’s best interest.

¶38          An in-camera review presents the least restrictive or intrusive
means of protecting the child’s best interest and the parent’s privacy. See
Amundsen, supra ¶ 25, at 5 (“In Arizona, the court conducts an in camera
review to determine what information may lead to admissible evidence.”).

¶39            And that happened here, mostly. The superior court limited
the waiver by subject matter, as in Bain, 148 Ariz. at 335, and ordered a
gatekeeper in-camera review before any records are released, as in Blazek,
177 Ariz. at 542. When fashioning an order to produce mental health
records, the court should limit the universe of responsive documents to the
shortest period required to accomplish its statutory objectives. Cf. R.S. v.
Thompson in & for Cnty. of Maricopa, 251 Ariz. 111, 121, ¶ 12 (2021) (balancing
competing rights, a court “may then carefully circumscribe the disclosure
to the extent permissible” when conducting in-camera review of privileged
records) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). On this point, we
hold the order was overbroad because five years of Father’s mental health
records were unnecessary to protect the safety and welfare of his children.

¶40           Summing up, Father partially waived the psychologist-
patient privilege when he moved the superior court for unsupervised
parenting time and later asked for a reduced alcohol testing requirement,

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                         J.F. v. HON. COMO/C.F.
                            Opinion of the Court

against a backdrop of red flags and mortal risks. See Johnson v. Johnson, 64
Ariz. 368, 370 (1946) (“When custody of children is involved in a court
proceeding, it seems to us to be the duty of the trial court to hear all
competent evidence which may be offered.”). Put simply, Father’s interest
in privacy must yield to his children’s best interest.

                             Response to Dissent

¶41             A few quick points on the dissent. What leaps from the
dissent is its singular focus on the evidentiary privilege, the psychologist-
patient privilege, boldly called “[t]he relevant statute,” compared to its
radio-silence on the chapter of Arizona statutes devoted to child custody
issues. That is most problematic in this child custody dispute. Justice
Frankfurter described this fallacy:

       Children have a very special place in life which law should
       reflect. Legal theories and their phrasing in other cases
       readily lead to fallacious reasoning if uncritically transferred
       to determination of a State’s duty towards children.

May v. Anderson, 345 U.S. 528, 536 (1953) (Frankfurter, J., concurring).

¶42             Beyond that, we agree the superior court may draw an
adverse inference if Father chooses not to produce the mental health
records. But we do not prematurely reach the issue of sanctions. See Ariz.
R. Fam. Law P. 65(b)(1)(A) (“For Not Obeying a Discovery Order or Rule. If a
person fails to obey an order to provide or permit discovery, or fails to
comply with a disclosure or discovery rule, the court may enter sanctions
including, . . . directing that designated facts be taken as established[.]”).

¶43           Lastly, we disagree that “the circumstances of this case would
also constitute a waiver of Father’s attorney-client privilege if he discussed
his recovery from alcohol addiction with his attorney.” Again, the superior
court granted Father unsupervised parenting time by temporary order on
the precondition that he receive therapy from a counselor specializing in
addiction. Unless the court ordered Father to retain an attorney for
substance abuse counseling, or Father requested unsupervised parenting
time based in part on his attorney’s counseling services, the attorney-client
privilege is not in jeopardy.

                              CONCLUSION

¶44          We understand and appreciate the inherent tension between
preserving   the confidential psychologist-patient relationship and

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                          J.F. v. HON. COMO/C.F.
                             Opinion of the Court

safeguarding a child’s best interests. But the Arizona legislature has
directed the courts to prioritize and protect children’s best interests when
resolving questions of legal decision-making and parenting time,
recognizing that children cannot fend for themselves. Though laudable,
Father’s pursuit of self-improvement does not defeat the rights of his three
minor children to an informed custody decision made in their best interest.
For the above reasons, we accept special action jurisdiction and grant
partial relief, limiting the release of Father’s records to those within the past
year from the date of filing for dissolution.

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                           J.F. v. HON. COMO/C.F.
                              Swann, J., dissenting
S W A N N, Presiding Judge, dissenting:

¶45           I respectfully dissent.

¶46             In an effort to craft an ideal search for the truth in this single
case, the majority severely undermines the sanctity of a legislatively created
privilege in a manner inconsistent even with the law upon which it relies.
If it survives, the holding in this case will be known principally for placing
Arizonans on notice that private conversations with mental health
providers will lose their shield of confidentiality at the very moment when
it is most needed. This result is not only poor public policy, but contrary to
the statute that creates the privilege.

I.  THE RELEVANT               STATUTE       DOES     NOT     SUPPORT       THE
MAJORITY’S OPINION.

¶47            The majority acknowledges that the privilege exists, and that
it applies to the communications at issue in this case, but determines that it
has been waived. A.R.S. § 32-2085 provides:

       The confidential relations and communication between a
       client or patient and a psychologist licensed pursuant to this
       chapter, including temporary licensees, are placed on the same
       basis as those provided by law between an attorney and client.
       Unless the client or patient waives the psychologist-client
       privilege in writing or in court testimony, a psychologist shall
       not voluntarily or involuntarily divulge information that is
       received by reason of the confidential nature of the
       psychologist’s practice.2

(Emphasis added.)

¶48           It is rare that the legislature includes analogies in statutes, and
the express parity between the attorney-client privilege and the
psychologist-patient privilege is both unambiguous and powerful.
Logically, then, the circumstances of this case would also constitute a
waiver of Father’s attorney-client privilege if he discussed his recovery

2     The statute also provides that “[t]he psychologist-client privilege
does not extend to cases in which the psychologist has a duty to report
information as required by law.” No such mandatory report is at issue here.

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                           J.F. v. HON. COMO/C.F.
                              Swann, J., dissenting
from alcohol addiction with his attorney. Such a broad waiver is surely not
what the majority intends, but it is what its decision portends.3

¶49           Our supreme court has underscored the importance of
adherence to the statutory language in this precise context. In Bain v.
Superior Court (Mills), 148 Ariz. 331 (1986), the court wrote:

       The Arizona statutes relating to the psychologist-patient
       privilege and the attorney-client privilege are unique by
       containing express provisions specifying the conduct which
       will be deemed a waiver of the privilege. In the case of the
       psychologist-patient privilege, the conduct constituting a
       waiver must be “in writing or in court testimony.” A.R.S. §
       32-2085.

Id. at 333. Recognizing that the privilege cannot be used both as a sword
and a shield, the court went on to hold that waiver could be evidenced by
“plac[ing] a particular . . . condition at issue by means of a claim or
affirmative defense.” Id. at 334.

¶50            At a purely textual level, the majority fails to identify any facts
that would constitute waiver under the plain language of the statute. It
cites no facts to suggest that Father waived the privilege “in writing,” nor
can it point to “court testimony” in which Father waived the privilege. But
the majority holds that “Father thrust his alcohol abuse counseling records
to the fore” by seeking custody, unsupervised parenting time, and a
reduced alcohol testing requirement. Supra ¶ 33. The logical consequence

3       The majority attempts to sidestep any concern about the attorney-
client privilege by pointing out that the court conditioned Father’s
parenting time on continued therapy. This attempt fails as a matter of logic
and law. First, the majority invades the privilege based on a purported
waiver, not the existence of a court order. There is nothing in the majority
opinion to suggest that the privilege would not have been waived if the
court had not imposed a condition on parenting time. Second, disclosure
and confirmation of the fact of Father’s counseling is not at issue—only the
contents of his communications are subject to the privilege. Third, the
majority does not address the language in § 32-2085 that ties the
psychologist-patient privilege to the attorney-client privilege. The statute
must be read as a whole – it is not a textual salad bar from which courts are
free to pick the morsels they wish to apply. Here, the legislature has made
clear that the two are to be treated “on the same basis.” If Father discussed
his alcohol addiction or mental health with his attorney, there is no logical
barrier to the invasion of that privilege under the majority opinion.

                                       14
                          J.F. v. HON. COMO/C.F.
                             Swann, J., dissenting
of the majority’s reasoning is that any parent who seeks unsupervised time
with his or her child “thrusts” his or her mental health conditions “to the
fore” and therefore waives privilege.

II.  THE CASELAW DOES NOT SUPPORT THE MAJORITY’S
OPINION.

¶51           The majority cites many cases, but none that support waiver
in these circumstances. Indeed, it cites no case in which waiver of the
psychologist-patient privilege was upheld at all.

¶52            It is hardly novel or controversial to state that in family court
proceedings, the best interests of children are paramount in substantive
decision-making. To this end, the majority cites Hays v. Gama, 205 Ariz. 99,
102, ¶ 18 (2003) and Kelly v. Kelly, 252 Ariz. 371, 375, ¶ 18 (App. 2021). Supra
¶¶ 14, 16. Though these cases recognize the importance of children’s
interests, they say nothing about privilege, much less waiver.

¶53           The majority cites Clements v. Bernini, 249 Ariz. 434, 438, ¶ 1
(2020), for the proposition that “attorney-client privilege is waived if the
record has reasonable evidence to support a good faith belief that an
exception to the privilege applies.” Supra ¶ 30. This paraphrased language
would imply a broad opportunity for implied waiver and would lend
significant support to the majority’s analysis—if only it accurately reflected
the case. The actual quote from Clements reads as follows:

       Once the privilege has been established, a party attempting to
       set it aside under the crime-fraud exception must demonstrate
       “‘a factual basis adequate to support a good faith belief by a
       reasonable person’ that in camera review of the materials may
       reveal evidence to establish the claim that the crime-fraud
       exception applies.”

249 Ariz. at 438, ¶ 1 (emphases added) (citation omitted).

¶54           Clements did not, as the majority suggests, prescribe a broad
opportunity for in camera review whenever there is a “good faith belief” that
there may be evidence of “an exception” to the privilege. Instead, Clements
dealt solely with the crime-fraud exception, under which only intentional,
reprehensible misuse of the privilege to pursue criminal or fraudulent ends
can result in waiver as a sanction. There is simply no parity between the
crime-fraud exception to the attorney-client privilege and implied waiver
of the privilege covering mental health communications. Clements
furnishes no reasoned basis for the result the majority reaches here.

                                      15
                          J.F. v. HON. COMO/C.F.
                             Swann, J., dissenting
¶55              The majority also relies heavily on Bain, 148 Ariz. 331. Supra
¶¶ 22, 33, 34, 40. That reliance is misplaced, not because Bain is unlike this
case, but because it reaches a conclusion opposite to that of the majority
opinion. In Bain, the court refused to acknowledge an implied waiver. The
contention there was that plaintiff in a medical malpractice case had placed
her psychological records at issue by claiming a “conversion reaction” and
by suing for loss of consortium. 148 Ariz. at 335. The court both announced
(for the first time) and narrowly construed the concept of implied waiver of
the psychologist-patient privilege, holding that (1) a claim relating to a
single condition did not effect a broad waiver of the privilege with respect
to all mental health records and (2) a husband’s claim for loss of consortium
did not effect a waiver of the wife’s privilege. Id. at 335–36. Nothing in Bain
supports the result here.

¶56           The majority cites Stewart v. Superior Court (State), 163 Ariz.
227, 230 (App. 1989), for the proposition that the court has the duty and
responsibility to act in a child’s best interests. Supra ¶ 18. Stewart, however,
said nothing about the waiver of privilege. The citation to Stewart appears
to have been included to bolster the majority’s refrain that the best interests
of children are predominate in family cases.

¶57           I have no quarrel with the proposition that the best interests
of children are paramount in family cases, but the principle does not
transform the courts into omnipotent agents of the law, free to override
statutes and caselaw at will so long as they can justify their actions by
reference to a child’s interests. A.R.S. § 32-2085 is law—of equal dignity
with the broad pronouncements of public policy—and Stewart does nothing
to support its evisceration in this case.

¶58            The majority pitches a false conflict between the exercise of
privilege and the best interests of children. Assertion of a privilege is not a
right to win a case to the detriment of a child—it is a right to keep certain
information confidential, and the exercise of that right may place the
litigant’s position in the case at grave risk.4 The lawful way to protect the
interests of a child in a case such as this is not to invade the privilege, but

4       To some individuals, personal privacy may be more important than
full advantage in a custody dispute. And because information revealed in
discovery may well be shared with the children, a parent may
understandably prefer the risk of an adverse inference in court to the risk
of the long-term adverse consequences of the revelation of difficult personal
facts to his or her children. Until today, the law recognized the parent’s
right to balance those risks. But the majority has now transferred control
over personal privacy to an adverse party.

                                      16
                          J.F. v. HON. COMO/C.F.
                             Swann, J., dissenting
to enter orders that promote the child’s interests based on the information
available. When a litigant invokes a privilege that deprives the court of
evidence relevant to the best interests of a child, an adverse inference may
arise. See Melissa W. v. Dep’t of Child Safety, 238 Ariz. 115, 117, ¶¶ 5–8 (App.
2015) (holding that court may draw negative inference based on parent’s
failure to testify). Contrary to the majority’s suggestion, this principle is not
a “sanction”—it is the lawful consequence of a lawful election to assert a
statutory privilege.

¶59           The majority next invokes Danielson v. Superior Court (Lopez),
157 Ariz. 41, 43 (App. 1987). Supra ¶ 33. But that case, like Bain, reaches a
conclusion opposite to that of the majority. In Danielson, the court rejected
a claim of implied waiver. There, the records at issue were alcohol
treatment records that the defendant doctor had released to the Board of
Medical Examiners. Danielson, 157 Ariz. at 42. In a separate malpractice
claim against the doctor, the court concluded that even voluntary release of
records was insufficient to effect an implied waiver. Id. at 47–48. Danielson
does not support the result here—it illustrates the proper skepticism
Arizona courts have displayed with respect to such claims.

¶60            In re Marriage of Gove, 117 Ariz. 324 (App. 1977), contains
language that best fits the majority’s position. The court there noted that
“[i]n seeking custody of the children appellant placed her mental condition
at issue.” Id. at 328. But like all the other cases the majority cites, Gove did
not find an implied waiver of privilege. Instead, Gove held that the superior
court could rightly have ordered an independent mental examination. Id.
I have no quarrel with the actual holding of Gove, but it does not address,
much less support, the implied waiver theory at issue in this case.5

¶61            The majority cites Styers v. Superior Court (Styers), 161 Ariz.
477, 478 (App. 1989), as support for its reassuring (if hollow) statement that
its opinion does not effect a wholesale waiver of mental health privileges in
family cases. Supra ¶ 26. Styers correctly noted that “[o]ne may
acknowledge the fact of treatment without consenting to the disclosure of
its confidential details.” Id. at 479. But even if the majority were to embrace
Styers in its entirety, it would do nothing to blunt the destruction of the
privilege, because that case—unlike the majority of family cases—did not
involve children. A fair reading of the majority’s holding in this case would
be that the privilege is waived whenever legal decision-making or

5     The Amundsen article upon which the majority relies misinterprets
Gove and is not authoritative.

                                       17
                          J.F. v. HON. COMO/C.F.
                             Swann, J., dissenting
parenting time is at issue, but not when the case merely concerns property.
Under this view, the exception to the privilege swallows the rule.

¶62           Here, we are concerned with alcohol abuse. But this opinion
will control a broad spectrum of future cases. Take, for example, a victim
of sexual abuse who has sought mental health treatment. Should that
victim then find herself party to a divorce case, she will now be forced to
reveal her privileged communications to her soon-to-be-ex-husband merely
because she asserts her fundamental constitutional right to parent. To the
extent we have any power to weigh relative harm, we should not
countenance such a result. There is no law to support the majority’s
opinion, and it therefore should not stand.

III. THE REASONS THE MAJORITY OFFERS FOR ITS CONCLUSION
ARE FLAWED.

¶63            Apart from the authority it cites, the majority offers four
reasons for its decision, which I address in turn.

¶64            First, the majority notes that Father has not submitted
transcripts from the hearing in the superior court. Supra ¶¶ 31–32. It then
reasons that because we do not know what evidence was adduced before
the superior court, Father should lose. Id. I disagree for two reasons. First,
we have before us a purely legal question. There is nothing in the majority
opinion to suggest that anything said in superior court constituted a
waiver—rather, it is the bare fact that Father had the temerity to ask to see
his children that gives rise to waiver under the majority’s view. See Blazek
v. Superior Court (Segrave), 177 Ariz. 535, 536 (App. 1994) (holding that the
existence of a privilege is a question of law). A transcript is not necessary
to decide this issue. Second, even if the transcript might shed light on the
issues in this case, it is the burden of the party seeking to invade the
privilege to produce evidence of waiver. The absence of a transcript should
not work to Father’s disadvantage in this case.

¶65            Second, the majority relies heavily on Father’s requests for
parenting time as evidence that he placed his mental health at issue. Supra
¶ 41. To be clear: I agree that Father’s mental health is at issue, as in every
case involving parenting time. But this does not translate to a waiver, any
more than a criminal defendant waives constitutional rights by pleading
not guilty and placing his conduct and mental state at issue. To be sure,
Father’s insistence on the privilege may weigh against his position on the
merits in this case. But the privilege does not disappear merely because he
is party to a dissolution action. As stated in Samaritan Found. v. Goodfarb,
176 Ariz. 497, 506 (1993), “an uncertain privilege is tantamount to no

                                      18
                          J.F. v. HON. COMO/C.F.
                             Swann, J., dissenting
privilege at all. Unless the privilege is known to exist at the time the
communication is made, it will not promote candor.” The majority’s
opinion achieves what the Samaritan court decried—it ensures that no
parent will feel secure when his or her communications to a therapist are
made.

¶66            In Jaffee v. Redmond, 518 U.S. 1, 11 (1996), the Supreme Court
recognized that the psychotherapist privilege serves important public
interests. This principle is not the reason for my dissent, nor should it play
into the result in this case. We are bound by law in reaching our decisions.
We do not sit as arbiters of public policy, weighing policies’ relative
importance and crafting results to serve our preferred outcome. But even
if we were to weigh the policy implications of competing results, the
balance would not favor the majority. Jaffee offers a powerful rejoinder to
the policy-based reasoning of the majority opinion:

       We reject the balancing component of the privilege
       implemented by that court and a small number of States.
       Making the promise of confidentiality contingent upon a trial
       judge’s later evaluation of the relative importance of the
       patient’s interest in privacy and the evidentiary need for
       disclosure would eviscerate the effectiveness of the privilege.

Id. at 17 (footnote omitted).

¶67            Third, the majority reasons that Father’s request for parenting
time is “inconsistent with observance” of the privilege. Supra ¶ 34. As I
have noted, Father’s assertion of the privilege may well cause harm to his
case on the merits. But it is difficult to imagine a clearer signal than the
majority’s own language that the psychotherapist privilege has been
effectively vitiated.

¶68            Fourth and finally, the majority points out that a lesser
standard is necessary to prompt limited in camera review than wholesale
disclosure. Supra ¶¶ 38–40. While true in some contexts, an in camera
review is unwarranted here. The product of such a review could be a
filtering of irrelevant information, but nothing in the records themselves
would shed light on the question of whether Father has waived the
privilege.

                                     19
                          J.F. v. HON. COMO/C.F.
                             Swann, J., dissenting
¶69            And while the majority takes comfort in the court’s ability to
carefully craft protective orders and limit disclosure, I do not.6 This is a rare
case, because both parties are represented by capable counsel. The vast
majority of family court litigants in Arizona have no lawyer at all, and pro
per litigants are unlikely to reap the benefit of a carefully written protective
order that limits the scope of disclosure. The effect of the majority’s opinion
will be to require courts to order that mental health records be released, and
the prospects for wholesale disclosure in such cases are too great to permit
the prospect of a protective order to serve as a reason for invading the
privilege. Whatever its intent, the effect of the majority opinion is to cast
aside the privilege in every family case involving children.

                                CONCLUSION

¶70           For the foregoing reasons, I cannot join in the majority
opinion. Applying the statutory and caselaw as written, there are no
circumstances in this case that constitute express or implied waiver of the
privilege. The holding in this case functionally casts aside the privilege for
communications that have already occurred, and communications yet to
occur, for every parent who finds himself or herself in the unwanted
position of having to litigate for the right to parent their children.

                         AMY M. WOOD • Clerk of the Court
                         FILED:    JT

6      Indeed, the majority takes it upon itself to reduce the timeframe of
disclosure from five years to one year, but never explains its reasoning. If
the privilege is waived, it is waived. The court’s exercise of discretion is as
puzzling as its “remand”—a remedy available on appeal, not special action.

                                         20