Court Opinion

ID: 9351050
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-12-29 14:05:34.680684+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:58:02.704359
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

                                        2022-NCCOA-902

                                         No. COA22-433

                                    Filed 29 December 2022

     Wake County, No. 10 CVD 20375

     ROBERT RICHARD KOZEC, JR., Plaintiff,

                   v.

     KRISTEN ANNE MURPHY, Defendant.

             Appeal by Plaintiff from order entered 12 October 2021 by Judge J. Brian

     Ratledge in Wake County District Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 16 November

     2022.

             Manning, Fulton & Skinner, P.A., by Michael S. Harrell, for plaintiff-
             appellant.

             Schiller & Schiller, PLLC, by David G. Schiller, for defendant-appellee.

             MURPHY, Judge.

¶1           In its hearing on Mother’s motion to modify a permanent child custody order,

     the trial court abused its discretion by not first reviewing various child protective

     services documents, already submitted along with an affidavit as a part of the sealed

     court file pursuant to a prior N.C.G.S. § 7B-302(a1) order, before denying Father’s

     request to enter the documents as part of his evidence. Further, based upon the

     statements of the trial court and arguments by counsel, it is unclear as to whether
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     the trial court’s exclusion of these documents was limited to an authentication basis

     or extended to exclusion under either North Carolina Rule of Evidence 803(8) or

     902(4). We vacate and remand for the trial court to hold a new hearing on Mother’s

     motion to modify permanent child custody that affords both parties the opportunity

     to present argument on the documents’ admissibility in conjunction with the trial

     court’s simultaneous review of the documents.

                                       BACKGROUND

¶2         This case arises out of the trial court’s 12 October 2021 Order Modifying

     Permanent Child Custody (“the Order”) of the minor children of Plaintiff-Appellant

     Robert Kozec (“Father”) and Defendant-Appellee Kristen Murphy (“Mother”).

¶3         The parties were never married but are the parents of two children, of whom

     Mother was provided legal and physical custody and of whom Father was granted

     visitation by a permanent custody order entered 6 February 2013. On 3 November

     2016, Mother filed a motion to modify custody and sought emergency suspension of

     all contact between Father and the children. The trial court entered a Temporary

     Emergency Custody Order on 7 December 2016, suspending Father’s visitation and

     ordering he have no contact with the children. On 13 June 2017, Father filed a

     Petition for Writ of Certiorari requesting that we review this order, which a panel of

     this Court allowed on 5 July 2017; the panel in an unpublished opinion subsequently

     vacated the order because it constituted a custody modification that “d[id] not make
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     the substantial change of circumstances and its effect upon the children clear.” See

     Kozec v. Murphy (“Kozec I”), 261 N.C. App. 115, 2018 WL 3978150, *1-*3 (Aug. 21,

     2018) (unpublished) (citation and marks omitted).

¶4         On 22 August 2018, one day after we filed the decision in Kozec I but more than

     a week before the mandate of our decision issued, Mother filed an Ex Parte Motion

     for Emergency Custody, seeking to suspend Father’s visitation with the minor

     children and prevent him from having any communication with them, based on

     various allegations of changed circumstances that created an imminent risk of

     physical harm to the minor children if Father was allowed to continue visiting and

     communicating with them.      Mother’s 22 August 2018 motion relied heavily on

     allegations made by a therapist, Ms. Mary Jernigan, who had started seeing the

     children approximately two months prior and who initiated child protective services

     investigations in both Wake and Johnston counties after those two months. That

     same day, the trial court entered an ex parte emergency custody order, but it did not

     have jurisdiction over the matter until Kozec I’s mandate issued, resulting in us

     vacating the 22 August 2018 emergency order on 29 August 2018. On 10 September

     2018, the trial court entered an ex parte emergency order, and Mother’s 22 August

     2018 motion to modify child custody was set for a “return hearing” on 18 September

     2018. Mother filed an Amended Motion to Modify Custody on 17 September 2018,

     which contained some of the same allegations included in her 2016 motion seeking
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                                        Opinion of the Court

     emergency custody, in addition to allegations regarding matters occurring since entry

     of the 2016 order that we vacated in Kozec I. After the return hearing, the trial court

     entered a Temporary Custody Order and Notice of Hearing on 30 October 2018,

     awarding sole legal and physical custody to Mother.

¶5         On 3 April 2019, the trial court entered an Order and Preliminary Injunction

     that allowed the parties’ counsel, but not the parties, to access the children’s medical

     and mental health records that were ordered to be made available on the “[eleventh]

     [f]loor of the Wake County Courthouse in the Family Court Office.” The parties’

     counsel were permitted to “review those records but [could] not make copies, take

     photographs or otherwise reproduce the records and remove them from the Wake

     County Courthouse.” However, when the attorney serving as Father’s counsel was

     permitted to withdraw from representing Father, he informed the trial court that

     Father would need access to certain records “to adequately prepare for a pending

     [o]rder to [s]how [c]ause to be heard at a later date.” The trial court entered a

     Protective Order on 21 August 2019, which concluded that “allowing [Father] access

     to the children’s private treatment records is ill-advised and not in their best interest”

     and ordered that Father could choose to call the children’s therapists as fact witnesses

     who would be constrained by a limiting instruction so as to prevent the specific

     divulging of the confidential treatment information of the minor children.

¶6         On 27 December 2019, the trial court entered a Temporary Order for Child
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     Custody (Review Hearing), concluding “[t]he terms of the Temporary Custody Order

     entered [30 October 2018] shall remain in full force and effect and shall not be

     modified. [Mother] shall retain sole legal and physical custody.”

¶7         Mother’s motion to modify permanent child custody was heard on 14 and 15

     June 2021. During the modification hearing, the trial court denied Father’s motion

     to admit several Wake County Child Protective Services records (“the CPS Records”),

     including investigations and assessments conducted by the agency relating to the

     parties’ minor children. CPS Records were subpoenaed by Mother and the documents

     were placed under seal by the trial court’s Amended Protective Order entered 5

     February 2018. Under the Amended Protective Order, the trial court ordered the CPS

     Records to be provided to the parties’ counsel for their review.      Subject to the

     provisions of N.C.G.S. § 7B-302(a1), the trial court classified the CPS Records as

     “relevant and necessary to the trial in this matter and [as being] unavailable from

     any other source” such that their disclosure to counsel was permitted. By its 5

     February 2018 order, the trial court placed significant limits on counsel’s review and

     copying of the documents.

¶8         After denying, without consideration of the “relevant” sealed documents,

     Father’s motion to admit the CPS Records into evidence during the 14 and 15 June

     2021 hearing, the trial court announced its ruling on Mother’s motion to modify,

     which it later memorialized in the Order entered 12 October 2021. The Order, inter
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       alia, finds as fact that Father sexually abused his own children, decrees that Mother

       shall have sole legal and physical custody, and bars Father from having contact with

       the minor children. Father timely appeals the Order.

                                             ANALYSIS

¶9           Father urges us to “vacate and reverse [the Order] and remand for a new trial

       where all the relevant evidence (including the evidence previously and erroneously

       excluded) is considered by the trial court before determining if a modification of the

       permanent custody order is warranted.”         Father argues the trial court erred in

       excluding the CPS Records he attempted to offer into evidence and the findings of

       fact in the Order were, as a result of the documents’ exclusion, made under a

       misapprehension of law that requires us to vacate the Order.

¶ 10         “‘A trial court may order the modification of an existing child custody order if

       the [trial] court determines that there has been a substantial change of circumstances

       affecting the child’s welfare and that modification is in the child’s best interests.’”

       Peeler v. Joseph, 263 N.C. App. 198, 201 (2018) (quoting Spoon v. Spoon, 233 N.C.

       App. 38, 41 (2014) (citation omitted)). “Our court reviews a trial court’s decision to

       modify an existing custody order for[] ‘(1) whether the trial court’s findings of fact are

       supported by substantial evidence[] and (2) whether those findings of fact support its

       conclusions of law.’” Id. “[W]hether changed circumstances exist is a conclusion of

       law” that we review de novo. Thomas v. Thomas, 233 N.C. App. 736, 739 (2014)
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       (citation omitted); see also Peeler, 263 N.C. App. at 201. “[C]ourts must consider and

       weigh all evidence of changed circumstances which [a]ffect or will affect the best

       interests of the child, both changed circumstances which will have salutary effects

       upon the child and those which will have adverse effects upon the child.” Hibshman

       v. Hibshman, 212 N.C. App. 113, 121 (2011) (citation and marks omitted).

¶ 11          However, “[t]he dispositive issue here—the trial court preventing [Father]

       from presenting certain evidence—is an evidentiary issue.” Cash v. Cash, 284 N.C.

       App. 1, 2022-NCCOA-403, ¶ 14. Although Father identifies a potential conflict in our

       caselaw as to whether a de novo or an abuse of discretion standard applies to

       evidentiary issues, we apply the more onerous standard and consider whether the

       trial court abused its discretion by excluding the CPS Records.1 “A trial court abuses

       its discretion when it acts under a misapprehension of law.” Id. (citations omitted).

¶ 12          As to the documents at the heart of the dispositive issue raised by this appeal,

       at the modification hearing, the trial court denied Father’s motion to admit the CPS

       Records on the basis that Father did not have “any[one] to come and . . . authenticate

       or, as [Mother’s counsel] aptly put it, cross-examine maybe what is or isn’t in the

              1 In State v. Clemons, 274 N.C. App. 401, 409-12 (2020) (citations omitted), we
       discussed the conflict in the context of our review of a “decision regarding authentication”
       and stated, “[b]ased on . . . our extensive caselaw explicitly applying de novo review on issues
       of authentication, we conduct de novo review of whether the evidence at issue here was
       properly authenticated.” However, in this case, we do not make a determination about which
       standard of review should apply because the result would be the same under either standard.
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       report.” This basis was erroneous as it appears it was rooted in a misapprehension

       of law that child protective services records must be authenticated by live witness

       testimony even where they may qualify as public records under Rule 902(4). Under

       Rule 902(4), “[e]xtrinsic evidence of authenticity as a condition precedent to

       admissibility is not required” for the following records:

                    (4) Certified Copies of Public Records.—A copy of an official
                    record or report or entry therein, or of a document
                    authorized by law to be recorded or filed and actually
                    recorded or filed in a public office, including data
                    compilations in any form, certified as correct by the
                    custodian or other person authorized to make the
                    certification by certificate complying with paragraph (1),
                    (2), or (3) or complying with any law of the United States
                    or of this State.

       N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 902(4) (2021); see id. § 8C-1, Rule 1005 (2021) (“The contents of

       an official record, or of a document authorized to be recorded or filed and actually

       recorded or filed, including data compilations in any form, if otherwise admissible,

       may be proved by copy, certified as correct in accordance with Rule 902 . . . .”). We

       therefore hold that a trial court acts under a misapprehension of law and abuses its

       discretion where it excludes documents on the basis that there is no live witness

       present to authenticate them without first determining whether they fall under Rule

       902(4).

¶ 13         Here, even when Father’s counsel reiterated during the hearing that the

       documents were CPS Records embraced under Rule 902(4) and do not require
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       authentication by live witness testimony, the trial court noted its past understanding

       was that child protective services records and other public records require that

       “somebody . . . authenticate[] the[] records or [say,] ‘[y]eah, this is what it says to be.’”

       The trial court, in finishing with Father’s counsel’s argument, characterized the

       origin of its reasoning: “So it’s not your argument, okay, that’s the policy.”           By

       excluding the CPS Records based on this apparent policy without first determining

       they were not records that may be authenticated by certification under Rule 902(4),

       the trial court acted under a misapprehension of law.

¶ 14          Mother’s initial response—that Father allegedly did not have the affidavit to

       present to the trial court during the hearing because he did not subpoena the CPS

       Records—does not alter our conclusion. Mother contends “the [trial] court [] did not

       actually have the authenticating affidavit before it” and “[Father] should not now be

       heard to complain that the trial judge would not admit evidence that the trial judge

       did not have before him based upon an authenticating affidavit that was also not

       before him.” We are not convinced. Pursuant to the non-traditional offer of proof

       employed by the trial court here, the authenticating affidavit certifying the CPS

       Records as public records is properly before us on appeal. Based on when the affidavit

       was signed and when Wake County Child Protective Services was ordered to produce

       the CPS Records pursuant to the Amended Protective Order entered 5 February 2018,

       the Record demonstrates the affidavit was supplied with the CPS Records and existed
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       long before the June 2021 hearing on Mother’s motion. There was no indication at

       the hearing that Father did not have the affidavit to present to the trial court nor

       that the decision excluding the CPS Records was due to Father lacking the affidavit.

       Indeed, as our holding emphasizes, supra ¶¶ 12-13, the trial court did not consider

       the affidavit at all because it believed live witness testimony was necessary to

       authenticate the CPS Records and did not review the sealed documents.

¶ 15         As to the prejudice to Father from the exclusion of the CPS Records, such

       prejudice may be relevant in our analysis if we were determining whether the trial

       court correctly applied the law that it did not misapprehend. But our inquiry in the

       case sub judice is focused on a misapprehension of law that is the basis of the trial

       court’s exclusion of evidence. Where a trial court acts under a misapprehension of

       law in excluding evidence, it commits an abuse of discretion, and this abuse of

       discretion must be remedied by vacating and remanding for the parties to have a full

       opportunity to be heard upon trial court’s corrected apprehension of the applicable

       law. See, e.g., Cash, 2022-NCCOA-403 at ¶¶ 15-27. We hold that such an abuse of

       discretion occurred here with the trial court’s erroneous requirement that the CPS

       Records must be authenticated by live witness testimony even if the documents

       qualified as public records under Rule 902(4). However, this is not the end our

       inquiry on appeal.

¶ 16         Mirroring his contentions below regarding the admissibility of the documents,
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       Father argues the CPS Records should been considered by the trial court as they are

       embraced by the public records exception to the hearsay rule provided by Rule 803(8).

       The trial court had indicated it was skeptical of Father’s assertions that the CPS

       Records fell under the hearsay exception in Rule 803(8) and qualified as public

       records that may be authenticated by certification under Rule 902(4). See N.C.G.S. §

       8C-1, Rule 803(8) (2021); N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 902(4) (2021).         The trial court

       ultimately did not contain a stated rationale in its written order excluding the CPS

       Records, which stated, “[Father], in his case in chief, moved for admission of the [CPS

       Records], which had been previously subpoenaed by [Mother] for a prior hearing in

       this matter. . . . [Mother] objected to the introduction of these records, and the Court

       sustained [Mother’s] objection.” As such, given that the Record is unclear as to

       whether the trial court excluded the CPS Records as hearsay not falling under Rule

       803(8) or as not constituting certified public records that can be authenticated by

       affidavit under Rule 902(4), we remand for Mother and Father to have the

       opportunity to present argument on these issues.

¶ 17         The trial court misapprehended the law and abused its discretion by excluding

       the CPS Records. Additionally, as it is unclear from the hearing transcript whether

       the trial court ultimately excluded the CPS Records solely on this basis or also on the

       bases that the records do not constitute public records under either Rule 803(8) or

       Rule 902(4), we remand for both parties to have full opportunity to present argument
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                                        Opinion of the Court

       as to the documents’ admissibility, along with the trial court’s simultaneous review,

       under these or any of our other Rules of Evidence. Because we vacate and remand

       on this issue, we need not reach Father’s other argument on appeal.

                                         CONCLUSION

¶ 18         As its exclusion of the CPS Records was based on the misapprehension of law

       that public records—such as relevant child protective services records in a child

       custody modification proceeding—must be authenticated by live witness testimony,

       the trial court abused its discretion in excluding these records. We therefore vacate

       the Order and remand for the trial court to consider the admissibility of the CPS

       Records under North Carolina Rules of Evidence 803(8) and 902(4) as well as any

       other relevant evidence rules. On remand, the trial court should hold a new hearing

       on Mother’s motion to modify the child custody order and both parties shall have the

       opportunity to present argument on the documents’ admissibility.

             VACATED AND REMANDED.

             Judges DIETZ and COLLINS concur.