Court Opinion

ID: 4317444
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-10-02 17:01:59.793478+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:54:23.244162
License: Public Domain

NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION.
  UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL
                  AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.

                                      IN THE
              ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
                                 DIVISION ONE

                               In re the Matter of:

                   CURTIS COGHILL, Petitioner/Appellant,

                                         v.

                  BREANNA MOWRY, Respondent/Appellee.

                            No. 1 CA-CV 18-0038 FC
                                 FILED 10-2-2018

            Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
                            No. FC2016-008210
                   The Honorable Dewain D. Fox, Judge

                       REVERSED AND REMANDED

                                    COUNSEL

Gary J. Frank, P.C., Phoenix
By Gary J. Frank

and

Stanley David Murray, Scottsdale

Co-counsel for Petitioner/Appellant
                           COGHILL v. MOWRY
                           Decision of the Court

                      MEMORANDUM DECISION

Judge Jon W. Thompson delivered the decision of the Court, in which
Presiding Judge Jennifer M. Perkins and Judge Lawrence F. Winthrop
joined.

T H O M P S O N, Judge:

¶1            Appellant Curtis Coghill appeals from the trial court’s order
denying his petition to establish grandparent visitation. For the following
reasons, we reverse and remand to the trial court for further proceedings
consistent with this decision.

               FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2             Breanna Mowry (mother) gave birth to her daughter Kierra in
January 2013. Curtis Coghill (Curtis) is the father of Joel Coghill (Joel), who
died in August 2013. Mother listed Joel as Kierra’s father on Kierra’s birth
certificate, and mother and Joel held Joel out as Kierra’s father. The two
were not married, and in May 2013 mother and Joel separated and Joel
moved in with Curtis. Joel continued to take care of Kierra during the day
in Curtis’s home, sometimes with Curtis’s assistance.

¶3            After Joel’s death, mother applied for and began receiving
social security survivor’s benefits for Kierra. Curtis set up a bank account
to provide financial assistance for Kierra, and in August 2014 mother and
Kierra moved in to Curtis’s home, rent free. Mother was attending school
and working, and Curtis often took care of Kierra. He picked her up from
preschool and frequently watched Kierra at night and on the weekends.
Curtis fed Kierra, clothed her, bathed her, did her laundry, read to her, took
care of her when she was sick, took her to family celebrations, and played
with her. Mother and Kierra lived with Curtis for over a year and a half
until they moved out in April 2016.

¶4           In March 2016, Curtis and mother got into an argument about
her boyfriend (now husband) Bruce who was not welcome in Curtis’s
home. Mother threatened to keep Curtis from seeing Kierra. In June 2016,
mother brought Kierra over to visit Curtis for several hours, and warned
him not to post anything about the visit on Facebook because she did not
want Bruce to find out that she had brought Kierra to see Curtis. After this

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                            COGHILL v. MOWRY
                            Decision of the Court

visit, mother and Kierra had no further contact with Curtis. In her
deposition, mother stated that Bruce was a factor in her decision to cut
Kierra off from Curtis and the Coghill family.

¶5            In September 2016, Curtis filed a petition to establish
grandparent visitation with Kierra. In her response, mother alleged, among
other things, that Joel was not Kierra’s father, that Curtis had a drinking
problem and had made unwanted romantic advances toward her, and that
Curtis had spoken to Kierra about Joel being in heaven against her express
wishes. Mother requested an order of protection and a court-ordered DNA
test. The trial court denied mother’s request for a DNA test, finding that
she had not established good cause to order the testing and that her request
was untimely.

¶6             After a bench trial, the trial court first found that Kierra’s birth
certificate with Joel’s name on it established his paternity “with the force
and effect of a superior court judgment,” and therefore Curtis was Kierra’s
paternal grandfather. See Gutierrez v. Fox, 242 Ariz. 259 (App. 2017).
Second, the court found that one of Kierra’s legal parents was deceased, she
was born out of wedlock, and her legal parents were not married at the time
the visitation petition was filed. These findings established the threshold
requirement of the third-party visitation statute. See Ariz. Rev. Stat. (A.R.S.)
§ 25-409(C)(1), (2). The court then considered all of the factors enumerated
in A.R.S. § 25-409(E), which provides:

               E. In deciding whether to grant visitation to a
               third party, the court shall give special weight
               to the legal parents’ opinion of what serves their
               child’s best interests and consider all relevant
               factors including:

               1. The historical relationship, if any, between
               the child and the person seeking visitation.

               2. The motivation of the requesting party
               seeking visitation.

               3. The motivation of the person objecting to the
               visitation.

               4. The quantity of visitation time requested and
               the potential adverse impact that visitation will
               have on the child’s customary activities.

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             5. If one or both of the child’s parents are
             deceased, the benefit in maintaining an
             extended family relationship.

As to factor one, the court found that Kierra, who was four at the time of
the hearing, had lived with Curtis (along with mother) for over a year and
a half, and that mother admitted at trial that Curtis “did a lot” for Kierra
and often cared for her, including taking care of her overnight and for an
extended period when she went out of town. Further, the court found that
mother admitted that Curtis and Kierra had a good relationship. As to the
second statutory factor, the court found that Curtis’s motivation in seeking
visitation with Kierra was that he loved and cared for her, that he believed
she saw him as her grandfather and caretaker and was concerned that she
would feel abandoned by his removal from her life. As to the third factor,
regarding mother’s motivation in denying Curtis visitation, the court
found:

             Mother failed to present credible evidence that:
             (i) [Curtis] made “flirtatious or romantic-type
             statements” to her while she lived in [Curtis’s]
             home; (ii) [Curtis] purchased inappropriate
             attire for her; or (iii) the child was traumatized
             by [Curtis’s] statements regarding Father being
             in Heaven and looking down on her. Moreover,
             the Court does not believe any of Mother’s
             excuses for denying [Curtis] visitation with the
             child. Mother’s true motive in denying [Curtis]
             visitation with the child is that she remarried,
             her new husband does not like [Curtis] and she
             wants her new husband to take on the role of
             the child’s father.

As to factor four, the court found that “Mother did not present any credible
evidence that the time requested by [Curtis] would interfere with or cause
an adverse impact on the child’s customary activities.” 1 Finally, with
regard to the fifth statutory factor, the trial court found:

1Curtis sought visitation with Kierra as follows: 1) one weekend per month,
2) one weekend day per month, 3) one week during Kierra’s summer
vacation each year, and 4) visitation including an overnight on December
24 or December 25.

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                           COGHILL v. MOWRY
                           Decision of the Court

              Father is deceased. Following Father’s death,
              [Curtis] was actively involved in the child’s life
              until Mother stopped all contact on June 11,
              2016. Prior to termination of contact, [Kierra]
              regularly interacted with Father’s family
              through [Curtis]. If [Curtis] is denied visitation,
              [Kierra] will have no contact with Father’s
              family. [Kierra] will benefit from maintaining
              contact with Father’s family.

Despite these findings, the trial court denied Curtis’s petition for
grandparent visitation, concluding that he did not meet his “substantial
burden” of showing that “denial of visitation would clearly and
substantially impair [Kierra’s best] interests” to rebut Mother’s opinion on
visitation, which the court gave “robust deference” to as required by
Goodman v. Forsen, 239 Ariz. 110 (App. 2016), disavowed by In re Marriage of
Friedman and Roels, 244 Ariz. 111 (2018).

¶7            Curtis filed a motion for new trial, which the trial court
denied. Curtis timely appealed. We have jurisdiction pursuant to Arizona
A.R.S. § 12-2101(A)(2).

                               DISCUSSION

¶8             We review a trial court’s decision to grant or deny visitation
under an abuse of discretion standard. McGovern v. McGovern, 201 Ariz.
172, 175, ¶ 6 (App. 2001) (citations omitted).

¶9             Mother has failed to file an answering brief in this matter.
“[A] failure to file an answering brief is equivalent to a confession of error
by appellee.” Welch v. United Mut. Benefit Ass’n, 48 Ariz. 173, 174 (1936)
(citations omitted). We may reverse and remand for this reason alone. Id.
at 175. Moreover, in reaching its decision, the trial court relied on an
opinion of this court which is no longer good law. Goodman, 239 Ariz. 110,
disavowed by In re Marriage of Friedman and Roel, 244 Ariz. 111 (2018). In
Marriage of Friedman and Roels, our supreme court rejected Goodman’s
“broader interpretation of ‘special weight’,” and held that a nonparent need
not be subject to “a heightened burden of proof beyond that required under
Troxel and McGovern.” Friedman, 244 Ariz. at 116-17, ¶¶ 19, 20. In light of
Friedman, we reverse and remand to the trial court to reconsider whether
grandparent visitation with Curtis is in Kierra’s best interests.

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                          COGHILL v. MOWRY
                          Decision of the Court

                              CONCLUSION

¶10            For the foregoing reasons, we reverse and remand to the trial
court for further proceedings consistent with this decision.

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

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