Erik A. Lenning v. Wendy K. Short ( 2014 )


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  •  Pursuant to Ind.Appellate Rule 65(D), this
    Memorandum Decision shall not be
    regarded as precedent or cited before any
    court except for the purpose of establishing
    Aug 22 2014, 6:19 am
    the defense of res judicata, collateral
    estoppel, or the law of the case.
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT:                           ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:
    BRYAN LEE CIYOU                                    MAUREEN E. GADDY
    LORI B. SCHMELTZER                                 Gaddy & Gaddy
    Ciyou & Dixon, P.C.                                Indianapolis, Indiana
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    ERIK A. LENNING,                                   )
    )
    Appellant/Respondent,                       )
    )
    vs.                                 )       No. 49A02-1312-DR-1009
    )
    WENDY K. SHORT                                     )
    )
    Appellee/Petitioner.                        )
    APPEAL FROM THE MARION SUPERIOR COURT
    The Honorable Victoria M. Ransberger, Magistrate
    Cause No. 49D01-0206-DR-001016
    August 22, 2014
    MEMORANDUM DECISION - NOT FOR PUBLICATION
    VAIDIK, Chief Judge
    Case Summary
    After more than ten years of litigation, the Marion Superior Court dissolved the
    marriage of Erik A. Lenning (“Father”) and Wendy K. Short (“Mother”) and granted sole
    legal and physical custody of the parties’ two children to Mother. Father appeals, arguing
    that the trial court abused its discretion by granting Mother sole custody. Concluding that
    the trial court did not abuse its discretion, we affirm.
    Facts and Procedural History
    Mother and Father were married in 2000 and their son B.L. was born in late 2000.
    The parties separated in 2002 and filed for dissolution a short time later.
    When dissolution proceedings began, Father was incarcerated and Mother had a
    protective order against him. In July 2002 the trial court entered preliminary orders
    granting Mother custody of B.L. and awarding Father supervised parenting time. After
    nearly three years in delays, a final hearing was set for July 2005. But Mother and Father
    reconciled in early 2005, and their second child, D.L., was born. The reconciliation was
    short-lived, and the parties separated again. Around this time, Father alleged that Mother
    was abusing drugs, and in December 2005, Mother tested positive for cocaine. As a
    result, the trial court granted Father temporary custody of B.L. Because D.L.’s paternity
    had not been established,1 D.L. remained in Mother’s care, and Mother completed a drug-
    rehabilitation program. In 2008, after years of additional litigation and continuances
    1
    It appears there was some dispute about D.L.’s paternity; genetic testing was ordered in early
    2006. Appellant’s App. p. 6 (CCS).
    2
    sought by both parties—D.L.’s paternity was established during this time—the parties
    agreed that Father would have temporary custody of both children.
    In 2009 Father filed notice of his intent to relocate to Michigan. Mother
    challenged Father’s relocation, but the trial court ultimately permitted Father to relocate
    with the children, and the court granted Mother parenting time. At this point, Father
    began to interfere with Mother’s relationship with the children by limiting Mother’s
    contact with the children. In 2012 Mother sought temporary custody of the children.
    After a number of continuances, hearings were set for 2013, and a custody evaluation was
    ordered.2 Because the parties were still married, these hearings also served as final
    hearings in the ongoing dissolution matter.
    At the first hearing, Dr. John Ehrmann, who had recently performed a custody
    evaluation, testified at length about the acrimonious relationship between Mother and
    Father and the children’s well-being. Dr. Ehrmann began by addressing Father’s
    interference with Mother’s relationship with the children, saying that Father would
    frequently ignore Mother’s phone calls. Tr. p. 25. When Mother reached the children on
    the phone, they would be punished for speaking to her. Id. at 42. On other occasions,
    Mother would make plans with Father to travel to Michigan, but once she arrived, Father
    would not let her see the children. Id. Father reported to Dr. Ehrmann that “in his
    opinion [Mother] didn’t need to talk with the children, didn’t need to see the children and
    [] he would be particularly pleased if she, in essence, ceased to exist and was not going to
    2
    This was the third custody evaluation ordered in this case.
    3
    be a part of their lives.” Id. at 27. To this end, Father told the children that Mother was
    dead. Id. at 43, 56. Father also instructed the children to call Mother by other names.
    Despite Father’s interference, Mother continued to send cards and gifts to the
    children, many of which were refused by Father. Id. at 27-28. The children reported that
    they “rarely heard from their mother, she rarely called, they rarely received things from
    her and . . . anything they didn’t receive from her, their father th[rew] away.” Id. at 28.
    Yet on occasion, Father would contact Mother and ask for financial help. In response to
    one such request, Mother sent Father $1000 for his heating bill. Id. at 29.
    Dr. Ehrmann described meeting with the children over the course of several
    months, and testified that he was increasingly troubled by their behavior:
    [T]hey are caught in the middle of as much conflict as I’ve seen in . . . a
    long time. That is extremely difficult for children. It’s very confusing, it’s
    unsettling. Uh, when I saw the boys in the last month twice, their anxiety
    and apprehension about what’s going on in Michigan has increased
    significantly, they were tearful, they were afraid, they were upset and they
    were pleading with me not to have to go back.
    Id. at 48. The doctor explained that pre-teen B.L. reported an incident in which, after he
    wet his bed, Father “hit him so hard in the face, it knocked him to the floor and his ear
    was ringing and he couldn’t hear for a while.” Id. at 57. After this incident, B.L. was
    forced to sleep on the floor because “he didn’t deserve a bed.” Id. B.L. said that he was
    afraid Father might kill him. Id. at 58. B.L. also told Dr. Ehrmann that he “really get[s]
    in trouble with [Father] if [Mother] calls,” and that he was afraid to talk to Mother on the
    phone” because Father “gets mad at me and he screams ‘[Mother’s] a f****** liar and a
    b****.’” Id. at 61. When talking about the future, both boys began “rocking back and
    4
    forth on the couch, starting to cry, begging me not to go back [to Michigan]—pleading
    literally.” Id. at 59.
    Dr. Ehrmann ultimately recommended that Mother have primary custody of the
    children:
    I felt that this was a very, very clear-cut case. I was very concerned about
    Father’s attitude about Mother and his continuing refusal to include Mother
    in the lives of his children. Um, and [I] felt that there were other factors
    here that led me to endorse Mother as the most appropriate choice as a . . .
    primary custodial parent.
    Id. at 49. Dr. Ehrmann recommended that Father have parenting time with the children.
    At the conclusion of the first hearing, based on the doctor’s testimony, the trial court
    decided to place the children with Mother until the next hearing, and the court granted
    Father parenting time. A few weeks after the first hearing, the trial court learned that
    Michigan child-protective services had begun investigating Father. After speaking with
    counsel by phone, the trial court required Father’s parenting time to be supervised.
    Appellant’s App. p. 28 (CCS). Father’s counsel later requested that the supervised
    parenting time take place at Kids’ Voice. Id.
    At the next hearing six months later, Dr. Ehrmann told the court that the boys were
    improving, saying that they had settled in very comfortably, though they had some
    ongoing nightmares. Id. at 396. Their relationship with Father was strained—both boys
    had reported to Dr. Ehrmann that Father called them, but “he is often angry, [and] yells at
    them, [and] sometimes uses bad language . . . .” Id. They also reported being afraid that
    Father would kidnap them. Id. at 397. The children told the doctor that they were happy
    5
    living with Mother and did not want to return to Michigan. Id. at 397. They had not seen
    Father since they began living with Mother.
    Mother and Father also testified. Mother admitted that she tested positive for
    cocaine in 2002, but she provided evidence of regular drug screens showing no other
    drug use. Id. at 315. She confirmed Dr. Ehrmann’s testimony about Father’s interference
    with her relationship with the children, saying that Father thwarted her attempts to see the
    boys and would berate her when she called them on the phone. Id. at 324-26. Mother
    also talked about the children’s progress since coming to live with her. She had enrolled
    the children in school and counseling, and both children were seeing a physician for
    bedwetting, which had greatly improved. Id. at 339-42. Mother testified that she had
    arranged to pay the fees necessary to begin Father’s supervised visitation at Kids’ Voice.
    Id. at 329-30. Father testified that he did not know about Mother’s offer to pay the initial
    costs of supervised visitation. He denied many of Dr. Ehrmann’s statements about his
    attitude toward Mother and expressed concern about her ability to care for the children.
    The trial court took the matter under advisement. In December 2013 the trial court
    issued its decree of dissolution. After setting forth the entire case history, the court
    granted Mother sole physical and legal custody of the children, holding in relevant part:
    14. After careful consideration and hours of testimony with review of all
    the custody and [guardian ad litem] reports, the Court finds that it is in the
    best interests of the minor children, [B.L.] and [D.L.], that sole custody is
    granted to Mother. These parties cannot work together or make decisions
    together. Father has attempted to alienate the children by telling them that
    [Mother] is dead, failing to list her on any school documents, failing to
    allow her parenting time in Michigan, and failing to keep her informed of
    virtually anything regarding the children. When Father was confronted
    regarding telling the children that Mother was dead, he told the children to
    6
    call [] Mother by her first name . . . and refer to Father’s girlfriend as
    ‘mom.’
    15. The evaluation by Dr. Ehrmann is chilling in the description of the
    boys’ fear of [] Father, the treatment of the children at the hands of Father,
    and the absolute conviction expressed by Dr. Ehrmann that the children
    should not be returned to Father.
    16. Father was ordered to have supervised parenting time at Kids’ Voice
    following the first day of trial in April 2013. He failed to complete the
    intake and has not made any effort to see his children in months. Father
    wants this court to believe that because the [Michigan child-protective
    services] investigation of his home and alleged physical abuse of the boys
    was unsubstantiated, he should have the boys back in his care.
    17. The actions by Father towards his minor children have endangered the
    minor children’s health and have significantly endangered their emotional
    development. Granting Father unsupervised parenting time pursuant to the
    Indiana Parenting Time Guidelines would continue to endanger the minor
    children’s health and significantly endanger their emotional development.
    Based on the above, the Court grants Father [supervised] parenting time
    subject to the following conditions . . . .
    Appellant’s App. p. 35-36. Father was ordered to pay $108 per week in child support.
    Id. at 37. The trial court also divided the parties’ marital property and dissolved the
    marriage. Id. at 39.
    Father now appeals.
    Discussion and Decision
    Father contends that the trial court applied the wrong legal standard in determining
    custody. He also argues that the court abused its discretion by awarding Mother
    sole custody of the children.
    A trial court’s custody determination is afforded considerable deference as it is the
    trial court that sees the parties, observes their conduct and demeanor, and hears their
    testimony. Trost-Steffen v. Steffen, 
    772 N.E.2d 500
    , 509 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002), trans.
    7
    denied. We do not reweigh the evidence, determine the credibility of witnesses, or
    substitute our judgment for that of the trial court. 
    Id.
     We will not reverse the trial court’s
    custody determination unless it is clearly against the logic and effect of the facts and
    circumstances before the court or the reasonable inferences drawn therefrom. 
    Id.
    I. Applicable Standard
    The trial court concluded that this was an initial custody determination. Father
    contends that this was error. He argues that the court should have applied the custody-
    modification standard because “the children effectively had a permanent custody
    determination years prior . . . .” Appellant’s Br. p. 21.
    The difference between the two standards is significant. In an initial custody
    determination, there is no presumption for either parent, and the trial court’s
    determination is based on the best interests of the child. 
    Id.
     In a custody-modification
    case, the party seeking to modify custody bears the burden of demonstrating that the
    existing custody should be altered. Apter v. Ross, 
    781 N.E.2d 744
    , 758 (Ind. Ct. App.
    2003), trans. denied.
    Although this litigation has lasted more than ten years, during that time, only
    temporary custody orders have been entered. Thus, the trial court properly applied the
    initial-custody-determination standard. When making an initial custody determination, a
    trial court must consider all evidence dating back to the child’s birth in determining what
    custody arrangement would be in the children’s best interests. Hughes v. Rogusta, 
    830 N.E.2d 898
    , 902 (Ind. Ct. App. 2005). Father contends that if the initial-custody-
    determination standard applies, the trial court applied it incorrectly by considering only
    8
    recent events, particularly those after 2009. The trial court indeed stated at the hearings
    that it was “more concerned about what’s been happening since . . . 2009,” Tr. p. 84, and
    its final order indicates that it considered that time frame at length. But the final order
    also reflects the court’s consideration of the entire case history, including the years that
    Father had temporary custody of the children. The court did not err in emphasizing recent
    events; Father moved to Michigan in 2009 and after the move, he began to interfere with
    Mother’s relationship with the children. Given the importance of these events and their
    troublesome effect on the children, it was simply not unreasonable for the trial court to
    find this time period to be particularly relevant to its analysis. We find no error here.
    II. Custody Determination
    Father also contends that the trial court erred by granting sole custody to Mother.3
    He claims that the children’s best interests are served by placement with him.
    When making a custody determination, the trial court must consider a number of
    factors, including the child’s age, the wishes of the parents, the child’s wishes, the
    relationship the child has with his or her parents, sibling(s), and others, the child’s
    adjustment to home, school, and community, the mental and physical health of all
    involved, any evidence of domestic or family violence, and any evidence that the child
    has been cared for by a de facto custodian. See 
    Ind. Code § 31-17-2-8
    .
    The record supports the trial court’s conclusion that the children’s interests are
    best served by granting Mother sole custody. For years, when the children were young,
    3
    Father also argues that four of the trial court’s findings—findings 14, 15, 16, and 17—are not
    supported by the evidence. Having thoroughly reviewed Father’s claims, it is clear that these findings are
    supported by the evidence. Father’s claims to the contrary are merely requests for this Court to reweigh
    the evidence, which we may not do. See Trost-Steffen, 
    772 N.E.2d at 509
    .
    9
    Father had custody of them, and Mother exercised regular parenting time. After 2005,
    Mother’s parenting time was supervised because of a positive drug test. Father and the
    boys moved to Michigan in 2009, and Father began to limit Mother’s contact with the
    children—Father would ignore Mother’s phone calls, and when Mother reached the
    children on the phone, they would be punished for speaking to her. On many occasions,
    Mother traveled to Michigan to see the children, but once she arrived, Father would not
    let her see them. Father reported to Dr. Ehrmann that “in his opinion [Mother] didn’t
    need to talk with the children, didn’t need to see the children and [] he would be
    particularly pleased if she, in essence, ceased to exist and was not going to be a part of
    their lives.” Father told the children that Mother was dead, and other occasions he
    encouraged the children to call Mother by other names. Despite this, Mother continued
    to send cards and gifts to the children. Father refused or threw away many of these items.
    At the time of the hearings, Dr. Ehrmann expressed concern about the children’s
    emotional health, describing them as anxious and apprehensive. Both boys begged Dr.
    Ehrmann not to return to Michigan. B.L., the parties’ older son, described an incident in
    which Father struck him, knocking him to the floor. B.L. told Dr. Ehrmann that he was
    afraid Father might kill him. Dr. Ehrmann ultimately recommended that Mother have
    primary custody of the children, and after the first hearing, the trial court decided to place
    the children with Mother until the next hearing. The boys had improved by the time of
    the next hearing, six months later, and they had settled in comfortably with Mother.
    Their relationship with Father was strained—both boys reported that when Father called
    them, “he is often angry, [and] yells at them, [and] sometimes uses bad language . . . .”
    10
    The children—now thirteen and eight—told the doctor that they were happy living with
    Mother and did not want to return to Michigan.
    Though Father had custody of the children for many years, he had, over time,
    attempted to sever the bond between Mother and the children. The children had become
    emotionally distraught; they expressed their fear of Father and their desire to live with
    Mother, and Dr. Ehrmann expressed serious concern about their wellbeing in Father’s
    care. In the face of this evidence, Father argues that the children are adjusted to their
    home, school, and community in Michigan, and he claims that he is better equipped to
    care for the boys. He also argues that Mother has acted erratically over the years and
    reminds the court of Mother’s single positive drug test in 2005. Father’s arguments are
    an invitation to reweigh the evidence, which we may not do. See Trost-Steffen, 
    772 N.E.2d at 509
    . We cannot say, in light of all the evidence presented, that the trial court
    erred in granting Mother sole custody of the children.
    Affirmed.
    FRIEDLANDER, J., and MAY, J., concur.
    11
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 49A02-1312-DR-1009

Filed Date: 8/22/2014

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021