Court Opinion

ID: 7805342
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-08-31 19:02:18.866111+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:28:51.271069
License: Public Domain

Filed 8/31/22 Marriage of Inna and Roman A. CA2/3
   NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS

California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                         SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                      DIVISION THREE

In re Marriage of INNA and                                B311140
ROMAN A.
                                                          Los Angeles County
INNA A.,                                                  Super. Ct. No. 18CHFL00936

         Appellant,

         v.

ROMAN A.,

         Respondent.

     APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of
Los Angeles County, Michal R. Amerian, Judge. Affirmed.

      Law Offices of Gregory R. Ellis and Gregory R. Ellis
for Appellant.

         No appearance for Respondent.
                     _________________________
       Inna A. challenges the trial court’s final custody and
visitation order awarding her former spouse Roman A. sole
physical custody of their teenaged son and daughter without
providing Inna structured visitation or reunification therapy
with the children. We find no abuse of discretion and affirm.
                          BACKGROUND
1.     Dissolution petition and initial custody dispute
       Inna and Roman were married in January 2004. They
have two children—their son G., born in October 2004, and their
daughter E., born in December 2005. The couple separated in
February 2018. Inna then petitioned for dissolution in May,1
and Roman moved out of the family home.
       Initially, Inna asked the court for sole physical custody
of the children with visitation for Roman. Roman, on the other
hand, sought sole physical custody of G., with visitation for Inna,
and joint physical custody of E. Both agreed to joint legal custody
of the children.
       For the upcoming summer break, the couple agreed to
share physical custody by alternating their custody time every
two weeks. Roman did not have an apartment yet, so the
children spent the night at the family home with Inna during
his custody time. He took the children to various activities
during his two weeks each month that summer, including
the beach, the movies, shopping, and dining out.

1      On August 26, 2019, the court granted dissolution and
bifurcated all other issues, including custody and visitation.
On October 23, 2019, the court entered a judgment of dissolution
as to status only, reserving jurisdiction over all other issues.

                                2
       Roman worked as an Uber driver, which afforded him
a flexible work schedule, and he made more money driving in
the evenings and on weekends. Inna worked full-time. During
the week, she dropped the children off at maternal grandparents’
home and picked them up after work. Roman said the children
would “play[ ] on their phones” all day, and he “often” would
pick them up at their “request” and spend time with them.
       On August 20, 2018, Inna filed a request for order (RFO)
seeking temporary primary physical custody of the children,
then ages 13 and 12. She had been unable to reach a structured
custody agreement with Roman and did not agree with his
request for primary custody of G. Inna also stated that, when
the children are with Roman, “it appears he is restricting their
cell phone use or access, making it very difficult for me to contact
them.”
       In his September 20, 2018 response to the RFO, Roman
asked for primary physical custody of both children with
visitation for Inna. He denied having restricted the children’s
telephone time with their mother, and declared he had
encouraged them to communicate with her. At the end of August,
Roman had rented a two-bedroom apartment, and G. had
been living with him full time ever since.2 He described G.’s
complaints about Inna, and Inna’s “difficulty exercising parental
control over the children.” Roman declared that, although he
encouraged G. to speak to and spend time with Inna, G. had
neither seen nor had much communication with his mother

2       Each child had a bedroom, and Roman slept in the living
room.

                                 3
since he moved in with Roman. Roman asked the court to allow
G. to address the court about his preference to live with him.
       Inna in turn declared Roman called her names in front
of the children, and G. had started to mimic his disrespectful
behavior. She did not know why G. was angry with her; he would
not answer her calls. She wanted to attend counseling with G.
but said Roman would not agree.
       By the October 10, 2018 hearing on Inna’s RFO, the
couple had temporarily agreed to share physical custody of E.
on alternating weeks. G. still refused to see or talk to Inna.
A week before the hearing, he had begun to text message his
concerns to her. The parties agreed Inna would have visitation
with G. on Mondays and Wednesdays from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.,
with Roman to drop G. off at Inna’s and Inna to drive him back
to Roman’s. The court ordered G. to attend therapy sessions—
initially alone and then with Inna or others at the therapist’s
discretion. The court continued the matter for a status
conference on January 9, 2019.
       At the January 9, 2019 status conference, Inna’s counsel
explained G. had begun therapy with an agreed-upon therapist,
Dr. Walton. Roman objected to Dr. Walton conducting joint
therapy sessions between G. and Inna, however, and did not
consent to Dr. Walton providing a report to the court. Roman
believed Dr. Walton was attempting to force G. to participate
in therapy with his mother before he was ready. He filed a
complaint against Dr. Walton with the licensing board.
       The court expressed its frustration: “I’m disappointed
that the therapy option turned out to be not just a dead end,
but almost it seems to have made things worse. That tells me
something about the level of conflict between everybody involved

                               4
for it to ultimately result in a complaint being filed against the
very doctor that the parties had agreed upon. That’s extremely
troubling to me.” Given the level of conflict and the parents’
different perspectives, the court appointed minor’s counsel for G.
under Family Code section 3150.3 Roman’s counsel again asked
the court to hear from G. about why he was upset with Inna
before appointing minor’s counsel. Mother’s counsel objected.
        The court ordered a new visitation schedule for Inna and G.
in the spring: four consecutive Fridays from after school until
Saturday at 9 p.m., starting April 12, 2019, followed by the
second and fourth weekend of each month, from after school
on Friday until Sunday at 8 p.m., starting May 10, 2019.
The court ordered Roman to produce G. for visitation, and
if G. did not follow the schedule, he was required to complete
three therapy sessions.
        With this new schedule, Inna believed G. had become more
comfortable with her and appeared to look forward to his time
with her. The visitation went well until June 21 when G. stopped
appearing for his visits. E. also became more disrespectful and
hostile toward Inna and Inna’s family.
        At a July 22, 2019 hearing, minor’s counsel reported
visitation had been “going okay for a while, and then it kind
of went sideways.” Inna had not seen G. for at least a month.
On July 12, 2019, he refused to come down when Inna arrived
to pick him up. Roman was not home. G. also had not begun
therapy despite the missed visits, as a new therapist had to
be selected. The parties finally chose Dr. Bissada.

3     Undesignated statutory references are to the Family Code.

                                 5
      E. now was saying she didn’t want to see Inna either.
On July 20, she apparently had a complete “ ‘meltdown’ ” at
her mother’s home, yelling and screaming, “ ‘Dad hates you,
we all hate you and I hate you.’ ” The court therefore ordered
both children to begin therapy with Dr. Bissada immediately.
      Roman asked the court for direction. He said neither
G. nor E. wanted to go back to Inna’s, and he could not exactly
“put 13- and 14-year-old kids in [the] car and take them to her.”
The court explained, “I think . . . the best thing to do is to tell
your children that they are expected to go to the visits with their
mother; and that, if they have any question about that, that they
should call” minor’s counsel. The court modified its appointment
of minor’s counsel to include representation of E.
      A few days later, on July 26, 2019, Inna went to pick up the
children from Roman’s; they did not show up. E. texted Inna that
she was not coming; neither G. nor Roman responded to Inna’s
messages. The children also had not begun therapy because
Dr. Bissada would not see them unless there were “ ‘safe harbor’
provisions in place” given Roman’s complaint against Dr. Walton.
2.    Custody evaluation
      On August 26, 2019, Inna filed an ex parte RFO asking
the court to order a private custody evaluation by a clinical
psychologist under Evidence Code section 730. Both children
were refusing to see their mother. Inna contended Roman had
manipulated and intimidated them. The court concluded that,
given G.’s resistance to therapy and the court’s orders, a child
custody evaluation was reasonable. The court granted Inna’s
request and ordered the parties to exchange names of possible
evaluators.

                                 6
       The court appointed Dr. Shirin—one of the evaluators
Roman proposed—to conduct the evaluation. The court directed
the evaluator to focus on “the children’s relationship with both
parents, specifically their refusal to visit with their mother[,] and
allegations their father has alienated them from their mother.”
The parties agreed Dr. Shirin’s report would be admissible and
could be entered in evidence without further foundation, and
waived any potential hearsay objections to the report.
       Dr. Shirin interviewed each family member, between
November 2019 and February 2020; conducted psychological
testing on Inna and Roman; reviewed documents provided by
the parties; and spoke to “collaterals.” Dr. Shirin submitted his
confidential custody evaluation4 to the court on July 30, 2020.5
Dr. Shirin observed that the children idolized Roman and
mimicked his thinking and behavior, including his “verbal
demeaning” of Inna. In Dr. Shirin’s professional opinion, Roman
did not “see how his thinking and behavior has and/or would
alienate his children from their mother” and believed the children
were “free to make up their own mind[s].” He explained Roman
would have to “use the fact his children idolize him to help
facilitate the change in behavior of the children towards their

4     We granted Inna’s request under rule 8.47 of the California
Rules of Court to file under seal the confidential custody
evaluation report and the reporter’s transcript that mentions
aspects of the report. Accordingly, we have minimized our
discussion of the report’s details.
5   Dr. Shirin’s report was delayed due to the onset of the
COVID-19 pandemic.

                                 7
mother.” Dr. Shirin opined, “[I]t is going to be paramount
[Roman] changes from his passive stance to an active participant
to allow the reunification to work.”
       Dr. Shirin recommended joint legal custody of the children
continue; each parent participate in individual psychotherapy
with a therapist trained in high conflict divorce; both parents
enroll and actively participate in a co-parenting class; and the
children enter into “reunification therapy” with a professional
with extensive training in reunification. The goal of “this
reunification” was to reunify the children with Inna and move
toward “a 50/50 [physical] custody situation.”
3.     Trial on custody and visitation
       On November 5, 2020, the court held a trial on custody and
visitation. By then, Inna had not had visitation with her children
in more than a year. G. was 16 years old, and E. was 14, almost
15, years old. They testified over Inna’s objection.
       G. told the court he did not want to go back to Inna’s house
or see her. He thought Inna acted “fake” and lied about “little
things”; had an “attitude” and was “a little demeaning”; treated
him like a “stranger”; argued with him about everything; had
chosen her family over him; and took her “family’s side” over
his and did not believe him. G. did not believe Inna loved him
based on the way she acted; she “[did] not act like a parent
or a mother.”
       When asked about going back to therapy with Inna to
try to heal the relationship, G. said, “No. That’s impossible.”
He essentially told the court he would not go back to therapy,
or visit with Inna, even if ordered to do so—that it would be
“okay” to violate the court’s orders because he was “tired of it”
and “[i]t’s not right.” He told the court the last therapist told

                                8
Inna “everything” G. “[didn’t] like” about her and “some things
that she should fix,” so she had a “whole list” of “things to
improve on.” G. thought Inna should work on improving those
issues and “fix her attitude” “on her own time.”
       When asked why she refused to spend time with Inna,
E. told the court she didn’t “want to deal with her arguments or
her attitude.” She “prefer[red] being comfortable at [her] dad’s
house than wasting [her] time arguing with [Inna] at her house.”
E. did not want to have a relationship with Inna right now.
E. said Inna blamed and judged her and didn’t really show her
affection.
       To be a better parent, E. thought Inna should stop arguing
with her about “every little thing”; spend more time with her;
take time off work and “make it seem like she actually cares
about me more than she does her work”; take her “side”; and
stop talking bad about her in front of relatives. E. believed Inna
had chosen her family over E. because Inna spent more time
talking to her relatives than to her.
       E. also thought therapy was “a waste of [her] time.”
She said, if Inna were willing to listen and change, then she
was willing to tell her mother “what she did wrong” one-on-one.
Unlike her brother, E. did not think it was okay to break rules
or the court’s orders, but said she “just . . . can’t go to her house”
or “deal with her.” She described going to Inna’s as “just a
headache” and a “pain in my butt.” E. was “fed up with [Inna’s]
attitude and the way that she runs everything.” Like G., E.
did not believe Inna loved her; she thought Inna’s expression of
love and affection “didn’t really seem real.” E. described herself
and G. as “really stubborn kids.” In the end, E. said she’d try
to give whatever the court ordered “a chance.”

                                  9
      Both G. and E. said their father encouraged them to go
see their mother and denied having heard him make negative
comments about her. They testified Roman told them they could
decide with whom they wanted to live.
      E. said she blocked her mother’s number from her phone
because she got tired of getting text messages from her. G.,
on the other hand, simply did not respond to Inna’s texts or calls.
Neither child felt he or she needed to be protected from Inna.
      After the children testified, the court heard argument.
Inna’s counsel noted there had been no testimony about abuse,
neglect, or “egregious behavior,” only that “mother argues, and
she has an attitude.” Counsel argued that, because the children
were so against therapy, the court should order intensive
reunification therapy between the children and Inna with
a professional knowledgeable in parent alienation.6 Roman’s
counsel disagreed.
      The court agreed with Dr. Shirin’s observation that
the children took “their cue from father.” The court thus believed
it “important that whatever plan we do going forward, that
[Roman] realizes that his children absolutely do idolize him
and that . . . he is extremely influential over them, not just by
what he says but by what he does. So that if [Roman] conveys
a positive impression of whatever plan the court orders, that

6     The proposed reunification therapy with a parent
alienation specialist would involve intensive all-day sessions
over several days in a row. The children would have no contact
with their father during the entirety of the therapy and would
stay with Inna at night.

                                10
positive opinion of that plan will carry over to the children
and might help break down some of their stubbornness.”
      The court believed “the children consciously or
subconsciously” had “internalized” the conflict between their
parents and “a lot of the bad feeling that father has towards
mother.” The court did not believe Roman “ha[d] alienated
the children in the truest sense of the word,” but believed “that
has occurred.” The court explained, “there were times when I
almost felt like I was listening to a former spouse express their
dissatisfaction with their former significant other and in a way
that didn’t seem age appropriate.”
      The court queried, “[T]he question is how to break down
the children’s feelings of alienation, whether they’re justified
or not. . . . So obviously, we need to break down their resistance
and their stubbornness. [¶] . . . [¶] So I really am, and we all
are counting on [Roman] to set the right tone. . . . I feel like
we almost have one shot at this, and it’s going to take a very
aggressive approach to try and break down these walls that
the children have built up. [¶] And given their age and the
strength of their feelings, that’s why I believe we have one shot,
and we need to take our best shot at repairing this relationship,
or else it’s going to just be on the children’s own timetable,
and I’m not sure that’s healthy for anybody.”
       Roman’s counsel argued G. should not be forced to go to
therapy or see his mother. Instead, counsel believed “the door
should be left open” for G. to choose to participate. Because
the children, especially E., wanted Inna to show them she
had changed, Roman’s counsel suggested the court order Inna
participate in individual therapy, and the therapist could choose

                                 11
to invite one or both children to a session to talk with their
mother.
       Inna’s counsel agreed the children said their father told
them to visit Inna, but noted Roman also had said he “can’t
make them go.” Counsel asserted parents do “have to make
[their children] do things that they may not want to do.” Counsel
argued the adults “need to set the rules, set the boundaries; and
[the children] have to do what the adults say they have to do.”
Counsel thought if the children and Inna were in the intense
therapy she proposed, which was different from any therapy
they had been exposed to earlier, “it m[ight] turn them around.”
       Minor’s counsel didn’t think there had been evidence of
alienation by Roman, but agreed with Inna’s counsel that “all
the blame [was] not necessarily on mother.” For example, E.
had said she went to live with Roman after an argument with
Inna when Inna told E. she could not go to the mall with her
friends. That wasn’t a good reason to refuse to see Inna in
minor’s counsel’s view.
       Minor’s counsel believed if the court ordered therapy, both
children should go. He was unsure about the intensive therapy
Inna’s counsel proposed. He thought the court could order some
therapy between the children and their mother but noted Roman
would have to encourage the children “a lot.” He was skeptical it
would work, but thought “one last attempt at something like that
is probably at least worth a chance, worth a shot.” He believed
any visitation with mother would need to proceed incrementally.
       Minor’s counsel had been unable to pinpoint exactly what
led to the breakdown in the children’s relationship with Inna.
The court thought it “seem[ed] like their resistance [was]
disproportionate for the circumstances.” The court thus could

                                12
understand why Inna blamed Roman—the person with whom
the children were spending their time. The court, however, did
not “see any explicit and overt evidence that father [was] actively
trying to undermine the relationship.” The court noted the
children “obviously, have strong feelings; but it’s just confounding
that it would be this strong under the circumstances.”
       Inna’s counsel noted Dr. Shirin had opined that Roman did
not understand his role in the children’s alienation from mother.
She argued parenting classes and therapy for everyone was
the best course under the circumstances. The court disagreed.
It found the children’s responses credible and did not “get the
sense that they had been programmed.” The court understood
the children were protective of their father but did not believe
“they were trying to contrive an answer that would be protective
of him.”
       Minor’s counsel thought the children had made up their
minds: “It’s almost like the refusal to visit—the stubbornness
has taken on a life of its own.” The court agreed. Counsel did
not think the intensive therapy would work out well. He noted
that, assuming someone could “actually get them there, once
[the children] understand it’s going to be that intensive, after
the first couple hours, I think it’s going to go south real quick.”
He favored a finite number of family therapy sessions between
the children and their mother with the ability for the children
to continue at their option.
       The court agreed with minor’s counsel: whatever feelings
the children had developed against mother due to their parents’
divorce had “really taken on a mind of their own that [was]
disproportionate to the actual evidence of alienation.” The court
did not believe the evidence of alienation by Roman “[was] so

                                13
strong as to warrant the type of intensive almost boot camp like
approach that has been proposed by mother.”
        In the end the court found it was in the best interests of
the children not to force them to spend time with their mother.
The court wanted both parents to attend a 12-session high
conflict parenting course together. The court expected the
parents, by attending the course together, to show their
children that they believed it important for G. and E. to have
a relationship with both parents. The court also ordered Inna
to participate in a minimum of three therapeutic sessions and
that the children then be given the option to join her for future
sessions. The children also could visit her at any time that
was mutually agreeable.
        The court suggested to Inna that, “on a semiregular basis
. . . basically hold out an open hand to [the children] and maybe
invite them to go have dinner on a day or two,” and “not [to] take
offense if they keep on saying no.” The court believed knowing
Inna was there for them, was not abandoning them, and was
not angry with them might make the children feel comfortable
to renew their bonds with her. Inna responded she had been
doing that for the past 15 months, but the children had blocked
her, and there was no channel for her to communicate with them.
She said she had tried setting up dinners through minor’s
counsel, but the children wouldn’t go.
        The court acknowledged Inna’s frustration. The court
explained “the impulse that we have as judges is to fix, do
something. Sometimes the best thing to do is to do nothing
and just let time and space give that.” Inna was distraught.
She lamented, “I’m just trying to—not to lose anymore time
apart, because that’s only going to create much more

                                14
psychological trauma to [the] children. Because that’s all I’m
thinking about is how is the 16-year-old and 15-year-old is [sic]
going to come around, and then it’s 18 years, boom; and we
haven’t seen our mother, and we don’t have to anymore.”
        The court clarified its visitation order: “I think it’s the
structure that they’re bristling at, and I think that—obviously,
it’s a fine line between empowering them too much versus giving
them enough control where they buy into the idea, and that’s
why I’m eliminating the actual structural requirements about
visits.” The court ordered both children to ensure their mother’s
information was unblocked from their phones so she could reach
out to them.
        Inna’s counsel reminded the court Inna had never had
a therapy session with the children—if she had some type of
therapy with them, she at least could say she had done what
she could. Counsel continued, “Doing nothing just seems like
she’s throwing her hands up in the air and giving up.” The court
reiterated, “I just don’t think now is the right time to try that
kind of intensive approach. And if we don’t do it now and we
give this, say, six months, it doesn’t mean that we can’t circle
back and try that intensive approach again. But right now . . .
I think that’s going to be extremely counterproductive.”
        Counsel also believed the court had not considered the
custody evaluation report and had based its orders only on the
children’s testimony. The court responded, “Yes, I am giving
weight to . . . the testimony I received from them this morning.
It’s not that I’m disregarding Dr. Shirin’s report entirely. I think
I’m mindful of the need for the parents to address their own
issues, which is why I’m ordering the 12 high conflict parenting
classes and for them to do it together. But I don’t think that . . .

                                 15
having structure right now is—is in their best interest . . . [¶]
after talking to them.”
       The court stated its goal was “to create an environment
where the children believe that—and where the children
want to go back with mother.” The court made clear it was
not blaming Inna. Rather, the court was “trying to create
psychological space for the children to feel the urge and hopefully
natural instinct to want to return to their mother and have
some form of a relationship to build off of.” The court continued,
“I’m trying to give everyone maximum flexibility. . . . [¶] I’ve
already said why I believe these orders are in the best interest
of the children.”
       Inna asked the court directly, “Do you think [the] children
not spending more time with me or spending any time at all
is good for [the] children?” The court answered, “No. But for
the reasons I already stated, I think that forcing them—given
their age and given their feelings, I feel that forcing them to
do something—to visit with you on a structured schedule is going
to have a counterproductive effect. . . . If I didn’t believe that
they should be with you, I wouldn’t have made the orders that
I’ve been making for over a year and that I’ve been trying to
enforce for over a year. [¶] So yes, in principle, . . . I agree with
you. But now I believe, after hearing from them and reviewing
the report that, in order to accomplish that goal, which I share
with you, that having less strict orders is the way to do that.”
The court agreed with Inna the children needed both parents,
which was why it gave Inna joint legal custody.
       After hearing from all counsel, the court ruled its custody
and visitation order would be a final order under Montenegro v.
Diaz (2001) 26 Cal.4th 249, in the interest of finality and closure.

                                 16
The court’s minute order states: “Court finds it is in the best
interest of the minor children to not force them to spend time
with their mother, so there will not be a structured schedule.”
      On January 8, 2021, the court signed and filed the final
order after hearing. The order awards joint legal custody of
the children to Inna and Roman with physical custody to Roman
and requires Roman to co-parent with Inna. The order also
awards “[r]easonable right of visitation” to Inna with visitation
time to be “arranged by mutual agreement of the parties.” The
order requires both parents “to attend a 12-session high conflict
parenting class together,” requires Inna to begin individual
therapy—a minimum of three sessions, and orders the children
to ensure Inna can contact them telephonically and to unblock
her access to their phone numbers.
      On February 17, 2021, Inna petitioned for a writ of
mandate reversing the final custody order, which we summarily
denied. Inna also timely appealed from the final custody order.7
                           DISCUSSION
      Inna contends the trial court legally erred and abused its
discretion in denying her joint physical custody of the children
and failing to order structured visitation. She also contends
the court abused its discretion in refusing to order the children

7     The January 8, 2021 custody and visitation order is a final
appealable order. (Code Civ. Proc., § 904.1, subd. (a)(14) [appeal
may be taken from “a final order or judgment in a bifurcated
proceeding regarding child custody or visitation rights”].) In
an abundance of caution, Inna also appealed from the March 16,
2021 final judgment on reserved issues. On Inna’s motion, we
consolidated the two appeals for all purposes.

                                17
to attend reunification therapy with her. Inna argues the court’s
final custody order was not in the best interests of the children.
1.     Applicable law and standard of review
       “Under California’s statutory scheme governing child
custody and visitation determinations, the overarching concern
is the best interest of the child.” (Montenegro v. Diaz (2001) 26
Cal.4th 249, 255.) The trial court has “the widest discretion to
choose a parenting plan that is in the best interest of the child.”
(§ 3040, subd. (d) [statute establishes no preference for or against
“joint legal custody, joint physical custody, or sole custody”].)
In making its determination, the court “must look to all the
circumstances bearing on the best interest of the minor child.”
(In re Marriage of Burgess (1996) 13 Cal.4th 25, 31–32 (Burgess).)
Among other factors, the court must consider “[t]he health,
safety, and welfare of the child,” and “[t]he nature and amount
of contact with the parents.” (§ 3011, subd. (a)(1), (3).)
       “[I]t is the public policy of this state to ensure that children
have frequent continuing contact with both parents after the
parents have separated, dissolved their marriage, or ended their
relationship, and to encourage parents to share the rights and
responsibilities of child rearing in order to effect this policy,
except when the contact would not be in the best interests
of the child.” (§ 3020, subd. (b).) Thus, “the court shall grant
reasonable visitation rights to a parent when it is shown that
the visitation would be in the best interest of the child, as defined
in Section 3011, and consistent with Section 3020.” (§ 3100,
subd. (a).)8

8      Inna seems to assert the court had to grant her reasonable
visitation rights unless it found visitation would be detrimental

                                  18
       In making a custody or visitation order, the court also must
“consider, and give due weight to, the wishes of the child” if the
child is of “sufficient age and capacity to reason so as to form
an intelligent preference as to custody or visitation.” (§ 3042,
subd. (a).) And, unless the court finds it is not in the child’s best
interest to do so, it must allow a child aged 14 years or older to
address the court about custody or visitation if the child wishes.
(Id., subd. (c).)
       We review custody and visitation orders under the
deferential abuse of discretion standard. (Burgess, supra,
13 Cal.4th at p. 32.) “The precise measure is whether the trial
court could have reasonably concluded that the order in question
advanced the ‘best interest’ of the child. We are required to
uphold the ruling if it is correct on any basis, regardless of
whether such basis was actually invoked.” (Ibid.; see also
In re Marriage of Connolly (1979) 23 Cal.3d 590, 598 [general test
for abuse of discretion is “whether or not the trial court exceeded
the bounds of reason, all the circumstances before it being
considered”].)
       To the extent Inna challenges the trial court’s factual
findings, we review them for substantial evidence. (Chalmers

to the best interests of the children. Former section 3100,
subdivision (a) did state that. (Former § 3100, subd. (a), enacted
by Stats. 2013, ch. 263, § 1, operative July 1, 2014 [“[T]he court
shall grant reasonable visitation rights to a parent unless it
is shown that the visitation would be detrimental to the best
interest of the child.”]) The current version of the statute was
in effect when the court made its order. (See Stats. 2018, ch. 941,
§ 4, eff. Jan. 1, 2019.)

                                 19
v. Hirschkop (2013) 213 Cal.App.4th 289, 300; In re Marriage
of Fajota (2014) 230 Cal.App.4th 1487, 1497.) “We view the
evidence in the light most favorable to the ruling, giving it the
benefit of every reasonable inference and resolving all conflicts
in support of the judgment. [Citation.] We defer to the trial
court’s credibility resolutions and do not reweigh the evidence.”
(R.M. v. T.A. (2015) 233 Cal.App.4th 760, 780.) Where
substantial evidence supports the ruling, we will not disturb it,
“even if the record can also support a different ruling.” (Ibid.)
2.    The trial court did not abuse its discretion when
      it did not order structured visitation for Inna
      and awarded sole physical custody to Roman
      Inna contends the court abused its discretion in giving
Roman sole physical custody and Inna no enforceable visitation
for several reasons.9 She argues the court based its custody order
on the “difficulty of enforcing” a joint custody or visitation order,
and the children’s “stated intentions to disobey any order”; the
order conflicted with the court’s finding that a relationship with
Inna was in their best interests; substantial evidence did not
support finding no structured visitation or mandated therapy
with Inna was in the children’s best interests; the court
essentially “abdicated its judicial authority to the children”;
and “the court could and should have imposed more substantial
consequences on Roman for the children’s failure to obey the
court’s custody or visitation orders.”

9     For the reasons we conclude the court did not err in
entering its visitation order, we also conclude the court did not
err when it did not award joint physical custody of the children.

                                 20
      a.     The court applied the best interest standard
             in making its custody order
      First, we disagree with counsel’s characterization that the
court made its custody order simply because it would be difficult
to enforce an order requiring structured visitation with Inna.
Based on our review of the record, the court’s decision not to
order the children to participate was made after deliberation
and with the children’s welfare in mind—not a mere acquiescence
to their wishes.
      The court naturally considered the children’s past
resistance and stated intent to disobey the court’s visitation
or therapy orders when deciding what the plan going forward
should be. But, the difficulty in enforcing an order to require
the children to spend time with Inna was not the reason for
removing the structure from the ordered visitation, as Inna
implies. As reflected in the record, the court thoughtfully and
carefully considered whether forcing the children to visit with
Inna on a structured schedule (or go to therapy) would further
the goal of repairing the children’s relationship with their
mother. After the court interviewed the children, considered
the custody report, and heard from the parties and counsel—
including minor’s counsel—the court determined it would not.
      The court noted it had “tried the firm hand approach,”
to no avail. After talking with the children, the court “[didn’t]
believe a firmer hand [was] going to have any better result.” In
the court’s judgment, given its past orders and the children’s ages
and extreme feelings, forcing the children to reengage with Inna
would be “counter-productive.” The court explicitly found having
structured visitation was not in the children’s best interests
“right now.” The court explained to Inna, “[A]fter hearing from

                                21
[the children] and reviewing the report,” having “less strict
orders” was the best way to accomplish the goal of having the
children spend time with her, and thus in the children’s best
interests.
       Nor did the court’s order contradict its finding that
spending time with and having a relationship with their mother
was in the children’s best interests. As Inna notes, “[f]requent
and continuing contact between a child and the noncustodial
parent is good in itself. . . . [because] it facilitates overall
involvement by the noncustodial parent in a child’s life and that
is good for the child.” (Wilson v. Shea (2001) 87 Cal.App.4th 887,
890–891, 894–895 (cited by Inna) [increased visitation necessary
for noncustodial parent where custodial parent moved away and
actively had interfered with noncustodial parent’s relationship
with their child].) That was the goal of the court’s custody
order—“to create an environment where the children . . . want
to go back with mother” and have her in their lives.
       Although it may seem counterintuitive, by “eliminating
the actual structural requirements about visits,” the court was
attempting to increase the chance the children ultimately would
spend time and reunite with Inna, which was decidedly in their
best interests. In other words, by giving these teenagers some
“psychological space,” the court was trying to, in Inna’s words,
“incubate the emotional bonds” between the children and their
mother to preserve the possibility of a relationship. The court’s
findings that the children would suffer harm if they lost their
relationship with their mother, and that it was in the children’s
best interests not to be forced to spend time with her, thus were
not mutually exclusive.

                                22
      b.     The court reasonably could conclude unstructured
             visitation was in the children’s best interests
       Substantial evidence also supports the court’s finding that
unstructured visitation was in the best interests of these two
teenagers at the time. The children’s strong negative feelings
toward their mother, the court observed, were disproportionate
under the circumstances. For example, the impetus for G.’s
moving in with Roman was Inna having taken E.’s side when
they fought over E. using his video game console and E. took
a “swing at [him].” E. refused to return to Inna’s after an
argument about not getting to go to the mall with her friends.
Many of the children’s complaints about Inna—primarily her
“attitude” and tendency to argue with them—did not seem to
warrant their total rejection of her. The court was “confound[ed]”
by the strength of the children’s feelings under the
circumstances.
       The court was cognizant that, to repair the relationship
with Inna, they would have to “break down their resistance
and their stubbornness.” The court made clear throughout
the hearing that after speaking directly with G. and E., it
had determined forcing the teenagers to see Inna (or undergo
therapy) would not do that and thus would not be in their best
interests. The children’s testimony, which the trial court found
credible, brought to full light how deeply rooted the children’s
negative feelings toward Inna were. As minor’s counsel observed,
the children’s stubbornness in their refusal to visit Inna had
“taken on a life of its own”—it was “kind of their thing now.”
       Having interviewed the children itself and observed their
demeanor, the trial court was in the best position to assess
the children’s credibility and state of mind. Considering that

                               23
testimony and the history of the case—and given G. and E. were
16 and almost 15—the court reasonably could find that, if “made”
to visit Inna or to attend therapy, the children would become
only more hostile toward and resentful of their mother, rendering
reunification impossible. That of course would be detrimental
to the children’s well-being.
       Inna notes, as she did below, that the trial court seemed
to have based its orders just “on the children’s testimony and
[did] not pay[ ] much attention to the recommendations of
[the] custody evaluation.” The court was “giving weight to” the
children’s testimony, but it was not “disregarding Dr. Shirin’s
report entirely.” Indeed, the court had again reviewed the report
at the lunch break after the children’s testimony. The court
was aware of the report’s observations and recommendations.
Having weighed the children’s testimony and the report, the
court still did not think “having structure right now [w]as . . . in
[the children’s] best interest.” We will not reweigh that evidence
or substitute our own judgment for that of the trial court.
       Inna also asserts the court’s order was based on speculation
that the children would return to Inna of their own accord. True,
there was no guarantee the children would come around to Inna
under the court’s plan. But, the court didn’t think its order was
a magic bullet. The court had tried to get the children “thinking”
about “why it’s important to have a relationship with both
parents” when it interviewed them. Nevertheless, the court
understood “that’s not going to flip a switch overnight in their
heads.”
       Similarly, we can infer the court did not expect the children
immediately to “buy in” to visiting with Inna when it removed
the structured schedule from the visitation. Even if they didn’t

                                24
however, the court reasonably could conclude that leaving the
visitation unscheduled would be in G.’s and E.’s best interests—
even if that meant they did not make time to see their mother
right away. Based on the record, the court reasonably could find
mandating scheduled visitation would be counter-productive to
the goal of reestablishing the children’s relationship with Inna—
they said as much. We thus can infer an order of unstructured
visitation would, at worst, have a neutral effect, so the children
still would have a better chance of redeveloping a relationship
with Inna than if visitation were forced.
       We note minor’s counsel “appreciated” the court’s order
and thought it “shows that the court is trying to do what the
court believes is best for these children.”
       c.     The court’s order did not exceed the bounds of reason
       Inna argues that by “doing nothing” the court was not
taking the “ ‘very aggressive approach to try and break down
the[ ] walls that the children ha[d] built up’ ” that the court
recognized was necessary, but instead was maintaining the
“status quo of the children not seeing Inna because they choose
not to.”
       First, we disagree that the court’s order did nothing. When
it mentioned “doing nothing,” the court was acknowledging Inna’s
frustration and explaining its decision not to force the children
into structured visitation or therapy. The court explained,
              “[T]hese cases are the trickiest we have. They
              are. They can leave us very frustrated because
              the impulse that we have as judges is to fix,
              do something. Everybody wants us to do
              something. Sometimes the best thing to do is
              to do nothing and just let time and space give

                                25
               that. Because I don’t know what else to try at
               this point. We’ve tried—I feel like we’ve tried
               varying levels of—.”
(Based on the context, we can infer the court was referring
to previously ordered structured visitation and therapy for
the children.)
       Although this approach seems to place reunification on
the children’s timetable—something the court at first did not
seem to support—the court found that having “less strict orders”
was the best way to accomplish the goal of repairing the
children’s relationship with Inna. The court’s decision to
“back off . . . with making heavy-handed orders with these
children” was not “doing nothing,” however.
       By removing the previous order requiring the children
to go to Inna’s based on the imposed schedule, the court was
indeed doing something. For one, the court was making it so
the children no longer would be in a position of disobeying the
court’s orders. The court reasonably could find that itself would
be beneficial to their mental health.
       More importantly, the court was trying to create space
for these teenagers—whose “stubbornness” toward their refusal
to visit had “taken on a life of its own”—to change their minds
about Inna. It was not unreasonable for the court to believe that,
by taking away the children’s constant “need” to refuse Inna,
they would become less focused on their anger toward her. The
children might become more open at that point to accepting an
invitation from Inna, for example, rather than having another

                                26
scheduled visit with her forced on them.10 In this sense, the
court’s order was geared toward breaking down the walls the
children had erected in a step toward repairing their relationship
with Inna.
       Second, the court did not simply maintain the status quo,
although it may have seemed like that to Inna. The court’s order
was not limited to unstructured visitation. The court ordered
Inna and Roman to attend a high conflict co-parenting class
together—as the custody evaluator had recommended—to show
G. and E. that they believed it important for the children to have
a relationship with both parents. And, under the terms of their
joint legal custody, Roman was ordered to co-parent with Inna.
The court also ordered, seemingly from Roman’s counsel’s
suggestion, Inna to participate in therapeutic sessions. After she
completed three—according to the minute order—the children
were to be invited to join her.
       The trial court had “the widest discretion” to choose
a parenting plan that was in the best interests of the children.
(§ 3040, subd. (d).) Although perhaps unorthodox, we cannot say
no court reasonably could have concluded this order advanced
the best interests of the children or that it was outside the
bounds of reason. (Burgess, supra, 13 Cal.4th at p. 32; In re
Marriage of Connolly, supra, 23 Cal.3d at p. 598.)

10   The court also ordered the children to ensure their mother
was not blocked from reaching them on their mobile phones.

                                27
      d.     The court did not abuse its discretion by not
             considering consequences to impose on Roman
             or the children for missed visits
      Inna also contends the court should have considered
imposing consequences on the children and Roman to motivate
them to comply with the visitation order. As for the children,
Inna seems to argue the court should have explored creative
consequences “for the children’s recalcitrance” before it removed
the structured schedule from the visitation order. From what
we can tell, Inna did not ask the court to impose a particular
consequence on the children. She has thus forfeited the issue.
(Munro v. Regents of University of California (1989) 215
Cal.App.3d 977, 988 [party may not raise on appeal issues
not raised in trial court].)
      As for Roman, it is unclear if Inna is arguing the court
should have imposed consequences on him for the children’s past
failure to obey the court’s visitation orders or to prevent future
missed visits with Inna. As the parent, Roman could have
imposed greater restrictions on the children if they did not visit
Inna when scheduled.11 At the hearing, the trial court told
Roman everyone would be “counting on” him “to set the right
tone” for the children. But at this stage, the court having
determined forced time with their mother was not in the

11    G. testified Roman took phone or computer privileges away
when G. refused to visit Inna. At some point, Roman said he
could not “make” the children go, however. As Inna had not
had visitation with the children for 15 months, and counsel
represents another 15 months have passed, we can infer Roman
has not imposed meaningful consequences on the children.

                                28
children’s best interests, we cannot say it was an abuse of
discretion not to order Roman to produce the children. For the
reasons we have discussed, the trial court reasonably could infer
forcing the children to spend time with Inna to avoid penalizing
their father would cause the children to resent Inna even more
than they already did and further harm their relationship,
undermining the purpose of the visitation.
       e.    The court did not abdicate its responsibility
       Inna argues the court essentially abdicated its
responsibility to decide custody issues by leaving it up to the
children whether to visit Inna or not. The court’s visitation order
gave Inna reasonable visitation rights to be “arranged by mutual
agreement of the parties.” As Inna notes, because Roman would
not “make” the children visit her unless they wanted to, the
children essentially could decide whether to spend time with
Inna or not.
       We agree that is in essence the effect of the trial court’s
order. We find no error, however. The trial court determined
forced visitation was not in the best interests of these teenagers.
In making its order the court understood there was a “fine line
between empowering [the children] too much versus giving
them enough control where they buy into the idea” of having
a relationship with Inna. That was precisely why the court was
“eliminating the actual structural requirements about visits”
—to give the children some control to foster an environment
where the children would recognize the importance of having
a relationship with Inna.
       The authorities on which Inna relies, primarily juvenile
dependency cases and authorities from other jurisdictions, are
inapplicable or distinguishable. In dependency proceedings,

                                29
the juvenile court is statutorily required to provide visitation
to parents as part of their reunification services when their child
is removed; the court therefore must retain control over whether
visitation occurs. (Welf. & Inst. Code, §§ 361.5, subd. (a), 362.1,
subd. (a)(1); e.g., In re Hunter S. (2006) 142 Cal.App.4th 1497,
1505 (cited by Inna) [juvenile court cannot “impermissibly
delegate” to child’s therapist or third party “unlimited discretion
to determine whether visitation is to occur”; and child may not
“be allowed to control whether visitation occurs”].) That is not
the case here.
       The other cases Inna cites are distinguishable and
nonbinding. In Matter of Miosky v. Miosky (N.Y.App.Div. 2006)
33 A.D.3d 1163, 1166–1167, the trial court erred in ordering
visitation subject to a 15-year-old’s wishes where the record
indicated visitation was in the child’s best interest, and the
custodial father had willfully interfered with the mother’s right
to visitation. Here, the court specifically found Roman had not
overtly alienated the children or intentionally sabotaged the
relationship.
       In Morgan v. Morgan (N.C.App. 1974) 202 S.E.2d 356, 358,
the court’s order apparently granted father specific visitation
rights but then stated, “ ‘That said visitations shall be subject
to the consent of [the mother] and shall be discretionary with’ ”
the child, who was 14 years old. The court concluded it was error
“to allow the minor to dictate, at will . . . whether the judgment
of the court is to be honored.” (Ibid.) In other words, the order
there included a specific schedule that the child could bypass.
The court here purposefully removed the structural requirement.
In McFadden v. McFadden (Mo.App. 1974) 509 S.W.2d 795, 800,
the court found it “unwise to accord children the authority and

                                30
power to determine when they are to be placed in the temporary
custody of” the noncustodial parent. There the noncustodial
parent lived out of state and had visitation time for a two-week
period between July 1 and September 1 each year and her sons
could elect when and where she was to pick them up.
       Finally, Inna contends that because the order in effect
gave her no enforceable right to visitation, the court was required
to make a finding of detriment to the children arising from
the visitation. We agree there were no allegations or evidence
of abuse, neglect, or other egregious behavior on Inna’s part.
The trial judge specifically told Inna that it was “not blaming
her” for anything.
       We do not agree the court had to find detriment on Inna’s
part before it could order unstructured visitation, however. As
required by section 3100, the court found not forcing the children
to spend time with their mother was in their best interests. The
court reasonably could conclude that, at that time, forcing the
children to visit Inna could irrevocably damage their relationship
with her—not because of anything Inna was doing but because
of the children’s entrenched negative feelings toward her.
       The situation here is thus distinguishable from the cases
on which Inna relies. (See, e.g., Messer v. Messer (1968) 259
Cal.App.2d 507, 509–510 [error to allow mother to visit young
daughter “only ‘at the discretion of the [father],’ ” where there
was no evidence mother’s visits were detrimental]; Camacho
v. Camacho (1985) 173 Cal.App.3d 214, 219 [error to condition
right to visit child on payment of child support and indefinite
counseling, and as there was no finding of detriment, it would
be error to totally deprive parent of visitation].)

                                31
       We recognize that leaving Inna’s ability to visit with the
children to a time mutually agreeable to all parties could result
in the children opting not to visit Inna at all—they said as much
to the court.12 But, as the court explained to Inna, “I want the
same thing you want. . . . I’m just trying to find a different way
to get there.” We cannot say the court’s “way,” considering the
circumstances, “exceeded the bounds of reason.” (In re Marriage
of Connolly, supra, 23 Cal.3d at p. 598.)
3.     The court did not abuse its discretion by not ordering
       the children to participate in reunification therapy
       Inna’s opening brief notes that, “on January 24, 2022,
the trial court ordered the children and parents into therapy
with the goal of reunifying Inna and the children, with Roman
to use his ‘best efforts’ to see that the children attend.” We asked
counsel to provide supplemental briefing as to whether this issue
was moot. (See, e.g., Santa Monica Baykeeper v. City of Malibu
(2011) 193 Cal.App.4th 1538, 1541 [concluding part of appeal
moot based on postappeal events].) Counsel filed a supplemental
letter brief on May 27, 2022, arguing Inna’s challenge to the
court’s failure to order reunification therapy is not moot on
the ground “ ‘material question[s] remain[ ] for the court’s
determination.’ ” (Quoting id. at p. 1548.) Counsel notes the
therapy the court ordered post-appeal is not the same as what
Inna requested at trial and on appeal, and does not include

12    That in fact appears to have occurred based on the
representation in the opening brief that Inna still has not spent
any time with the children.

                                 32
the type of enforcement mechanism she has argued on appeal is
necessary. As of May 27, 2022, a joint session had not occurred.
       We agree material questions remain and exercise our
discretion to consider the merits. In doing so, we conclude
the trial court did not abuse its discretion when it did not order
the children to participate with Inna in the intense reunification/
alienation therapy that she had proposed.
       As with the trial court’s ruling on visitation, Inna again
contends the trial court’s refusal to order the children to
participate in therapy was not in their best interests, but merely
satisfied their wishes not to attend therapy and focused on
the difficulty of enforcement. We do not agree.
       To be sure, G. flat out told the court he would disobey
any order to go to therapy, and E. said she would have to think
about it. Both made clear they did not want to go. But, the
court didn’t deny Inna’s request for intensive reunification
therapy simply because her children didn’t want to and said
they wouldn’t participate, but after finding it would not be
in their best interests.
       Based on the record, as with the visitation issue, the
court reasonably could conclude that ordering the children
to participate in the proposed therapy would serve further to
entrench the children’s negative feelings toward Inna, rather
than help the children and parent reunify. After interviewing
the children, the court believed the evidence of alienation was
not “so strong as to warrant the type of intensive almost boot
camp like approach” that Inna’s counsel proposed. In the court’s
judgment, based on G.’s testimony, the intensive therapy counsel
had in mind “is just going to have a bad result” and would be
“very counterproductive.”

                                33
       More importantly, minor’s counsel—who was “charged
with” representing the children’s “best interests” (§ 3151,
subd. (a))—did not think the proposed intensive therapy would
go well. He said that once his clients understood how intensive
the therapy was going to be, “it’s going to go south real quick.”
       After talking with the children, the court agreed with
minor’s counsel that whatever feelings the children had
developed against mother due to the divorce had “really taken
on a mind of their own that [was] disproportionate to the actual
evidence of alienation.” The court reasonably could conclude the
children would feel greater resentment toward Inna if forced into
the therapy, and given the evidence of alienation did not warrant
the need for that type of therapy, the court reasonably could find
it was not in their best interests.
       Inna asserts the court “seemed to misconstrue the effect
of alienation.” She refers to the court’s colloquy with her trial
counsel where the court found the children credible and didn’t
get the sense they “had been programmed,” and Inna’s counsel
noted the children would not necessarily be aware of the effects
of parental alienation.
       We can infer the court fully understood the potential effects
of parental alienation. The court read and considered the custody
evaluation report and even reviewed it again after the children’s
testimony. Indeed, the court appeared to agree somewhat with
the report’s conclusion that Roman was unaware how he might
be affecting his children’s withdrawal from Inna. Although
the court did not find any evidence Roman had overtly alienated
the children from their mother, it believed the children appeared
to have internalized the conflict between their parents and their
father’s negative feelings toward Inna. The court was “conscious

                                34
of . . . how much the children t[ook] their lead from their father
and how much they idolize[d] him,” which it found “very telling.”
         Based on the children’s testimony, which the court found
credible, it concluded there was no evidence of actual alienation
by Roman—e.g., that he spoke negatively about Inna to the
children, or was actively trying to undermine their relationship.13
Having directly questioned the children and observed their
demeanor, the court did not find they had been “programmed.”
Deferring to the court’s credibility findings, substantial evidence
supports its finding that the evidence of alienation (or lack
thereof) in this case did not support requiring the children
to undergo intensive reunification/alienation therapy.
         Although we are concerned by what appears to be the
children’s internalization of their father’s negative feelings
toward their mother, we cannot say the court could not
reasonably have concluded its order was in the best interests
of the children. Neither the court nor minor’s counsel believed
this type of intensive therapy would—at that time—be beneficial
to the children and likely would work to further alienate them
from Inna. Accordingly, we find the court did not abuse its
discretion.
         We recognize post-appeal events indicate the court’s
custody and visitation order has not worked as the court
had hoped that it would. The children’s rejection of Inna,
and Roman’s apparent acquiescence in their refusal to have
a relationship with her, are troubling. Nevertheless, we cannot

13    When the court asked, G. said their father encouraged
them to visit Inna “all the time” to the point of being “annoying.”
E. testified similarly.

                                35
say the trial court’s custody and visitation order lacked a
reasonable basis given the circumstances at the time.
                           DISPOSITION
      The January 8, 2021 order is affirmed. As respondent did
not participate in this appeal, no costs are awarded.

    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS

                                   EGERTON, J.

We concur:

             EDMON, P. J.

             KIM, J.*

*     Judge of the Los Angeles County Superior Court, assigned
by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the
California Constitution.

                              36