Lora Alexa Burnham v. Michael Bruce Burnham ( 2020 )


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  •                                 FIRST DIVISION
    BARNES, P. J.,
    GOBEIL and PIPKIN, JJ.
    NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be
    physically received in our clerk’s office within ten
    days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed.
    https://www.gaappeals.us/rules
    DEADLINES ARE NO LONGER TOLLED IN THIS
    COURT. ALL FILINGS MUST BE SUBMITTED WITHIN
    THE TIMES SET BY OUR COURT RULES.
    November 2, 2020
    In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
    A20A1243. BURNHAM v. BURNHAM.
    GOBEIL, Judge.
    Lora Alexa Burnham (“Alexa”) appeals from the trial court’s order granting her
    ex-husband Michael Bruce Burnham’s (“Bruce’s”) petition to modify custody of their
    two children. In a single enumeration of error, Alexa contends that the trial court
    erred in finding that there had been a material change in circumstances affecting the
    children’s best interests to warrant a change in custody. For the reasons that follow,
    we affirm the trial court’s order.
    “When considering a ruling on a material change in circumstances, this Court
    views the evidence in the record in the light most favorable to the trial court’s order
    and will affirm the trial court’s decision if there is any evidence to support it.” Lowry
    v. Winenger, 
    340 Ga. App. 382
    , 382 (797 SE2d 230) (2017) (citation and punctuation
    omitted). “This Court is mindful that ‘the Solomonic task’ of assigning the custody
    of children lies squarely upon the shoulders of the judge who can see and hear the
    parties and their witnesses, observe their demeanor and attitudes, and assess their
    credibility.” Gordy v. Gordy, 
    246 Ga. App. 802
    , 803 (1) (542 SE2d 536) (2000)
    (citation and punctuation omitted).
    So viewed, the evidence shows that Alexa and Bruce were divorced in June
    2016. They have two children together, a son, born in 2007, and a daughter, born in
    2010. As part of their divorce, the parties entered into a separation agreement that laid
    out most of the details of the divorce. Neither party was represented during the
    divorce, and the parties downloaded the separation documents from the website
    “Legal Zoom.” The separation agreement was incorporated into the final judgment
    and decree of divorce.
    The separation agreement awarded the parties joint legal custody, with Alexa
    having primary physical custody of the children and Bruce having visitation from
    Wednesday afternoon to Sunday afternoon on the first and third weekends of each
    month, as laid out in a separate parenting plan. Bruce agreed to pay $1,746 in child
    support per month. Alexa was awarded the marital home, which was located in
    Palmetto, Coweta County, Georgia. Under a heading titled “Miscellaneous
    2
    Agreements,” the parties “agree[d] to live within one-hundred twenty (120) miles of
    the current home address of [the marital home] until minor children are of age
    eighteen (18) unless either party and/or their spouse relocates due to employment”
    (the “relocation provision”).
    In November 2017, Alexa informed Bruce that she intended to move from
    Coweta County to a new residence located in Marietta, Cobb County, Georgia.1 Based
    on the intended move, Bruce filed a complaint to modify child custody, parenting
    time, and child support, asserting that the move would constitute a material change
    in circumstances warranting a change in custody. Bruce did not allege that Alexa had
    violated the relocation provision, nor did he reference the relocation provision in his
    petition. Alexa filed her own petition for modification of visitation, explaining that
    her upcoming move would “necessitate a modification in the current visitation
    schedule.” She also requested a finding of contempt against Bruce, alleging that he
    was $2,351.42 in child support arrears.2 The trial court consolidated the petitions, and
    the case proceeded to an evidentiary hearing.
    1
    The parties do not dispute that Alexa’s new home is located within 120 miles
    of the marital home.
    2
    Bruce later admitted to the arrearage, and agreed to pay $200 per month to
    Alexa towards the amount owed.
    3
    Alexa testified that she had already begun her move to Marietta at the time of
    the hearing; however, the school year had not yet started for the children and she was
    not yet living in the new house full time. Alexa was engaged and would living in the
    new home with her fiancé and his son, who lived with them part time. She explained
    that both her and her fiancé’s jobs were the impetus behind the move. At the time of
    the hearing, Bruce lived in Fayette County with his current wife and her three
    children. Since filing his motion to modify, Bruce had contracted to purchase a home
    located within his and Alexa’s children’s school district in Coweta County, which
    would allow the children to remain at the same school if Bruce was awarded custody.
    Witnesses testified that the children have a good relationship with their step-siblings,
    and Alexa testified that the children treat her fiancé’s son as a brother.
    Both Alexa and Bruce testified that their separation was amicable, and they co-
    parented well in the year after the divorce. The two were “flexible’ with Bruce’s
    visitation schedule, allowing him much more time with the children than dictated by
    the parenting plan. Bruce estimated that the children spent almost 50% of their time
    with him. Sometime in 2017, however, the relationship between the parties changed,
    and communication between the parties became difficult. Alexa attributed the change
    to Bruce’s new wife, while Bruce believed it was due to his approaching Alexa to ask
    4
    to reduce the amount of child support he paid to her. Alexa began to strictly enforce
    the terms of the parenting plan.
    Witnesses testified about the details of the children’s lives. The children had
    lived in Coweta County their whole lives, and once Alexa’s move was complete, it
    would require the children to change school districts and churches. The children’s
    youth minister testified that the children were regular attendees of their Coweta
    County church, and the son had just begun volunteering with younger children with
    his step-mother. The move would also affect the children’s contact with friends and
    other family members, and their extracurricular activities. For example, Bruce’s
    mother testified that she was used to spending a lot of time with the children under
    the current custody arrangement, getting to see them on the weeks that Bruce has
    visitation, and she was concerned that she would not have the same involvement with
    them after the move. Alexa also acknowledged that the move would necessarily alter
    the time that the children would spend with Bruce. Bruce’s “weekends” with the
    children began on Wednesdays under the current parenting plan, and it would not be
    feasible to transport the children so far during the school week.
    Additionally, because of behavioral changes Alexa and Bruce had noticed in
    their son since divorcing, the boy had been seeing a psychologist for more than a year
    5
    to help him cope with his parent’s divorce. The psychologist testified at the
    evidentiary hearing that the boy had “mixed feelings” about Alexa’s planned move,
    based mostly on changes in how often he would see his father and the friends from
    his old school. When asked if he was concerned about moving with his mother, the
    son testified that was scared to move, but expressed that “change is good, right?”
    Because the son had expressed to his psychologist that he did not want to be asked
    to choose between his parents, the court did not inquire further into the boy’s desires.
    After the hearing, the trial court issued a final order granting Bruce’s petition.
    Specifically, the court found that it was in the best interests of the children to remain
    in Coweta County, and thus transferred primary physical custody of the children from
    Alexa to Bruce. Alexa appealed from the original order. We vacated the trial court’s
    order because it failed to consider the threshold question of a material change in
    circumstances before moving on to the issue of what was in the children’s best
    interest, and we remanded for further proceedings. Burnham v. Burnham, 
    350 Ga. App. 348
    , 348-350 (829 SE2d 425) (2019).
    Subsequently, the trial court issued a second final order, explicitly finding that
    there were four material changes in circumstances justifying the change in custody,
    namely: (1) the significant reduction in visitation and parenting time that the children
    6
    had with Bruce since 2017; (2) Alexa’s relocation to Marietta; (3) Bruce buying a
    home within the children’s school district in Coweta County, which would allow
    them to remain in the same school district; and (4) the son’s enrollment in counseling
    after he exhibited behavioral changes related to the divorce. The court then found that
    it was in the children’s best interest for primary physical custody to be awarded to
    Bruce noting first that the children are bonded to both parents equally, and both
    parents are capable of handling primary custody. The court went on to conclude that
    continuity for the children is important, and having them continue to reside in Coweta
    County would not disrupt their school, church, extracurricular activities, friendships,
    and relationships with their step-families and other family members. Thus, the court
    awarded primary custody to Bruce, and the recalculation of child support indicated
    that Alexa would pay Bruce $669 per month in child support.
    Alexa filed a motion for new trial, which was denied following a hearing. This
    appeal followed.
    In her sole enumeration of error, Alexa contends that the trial court erred in
    finding a material change in circumstances affecting the children’s best interests to
    justify changing custody. Specifically, she argues that the separation agreement,
    executed by the parties and incorporated into the divorce decree, contemplated that
    7
    the parties would live within 120 miles of the marital home in Palmetto, Georgia and
    precluded such a finding. She states: “by the express terms of the Separation
    Agreement . . . [the parties] contemplated that the Parenting Plan and custodial
    arrangement would remain in effect for so long as both parties reside within one
    hundred (120) miles of [the marital home].” Thus, she is asking this Court to interpret
    this provision as a waiver by Bruce to his right to ask for a modification of custody
    unless Alexa moved more than 120 miles from their marital home. We do not agree
    that the provision can be interpreted as Alexa contends.
    “Once an award of child custody has been made, when the non-custodial parent
    seeks to change that arrangement, the trial court must determine whether there has
    been a material change in circumstances affecting the welfare of the child.” Lowry,
    340 Ga. App. at 384 (1). The trial court then determines “whether the child’s best
    interests will be served by a change in custody.” Id. at 384-385 (1). “Whether
    particular circumstances warrant a change in custody is a fact question determined
    under the unique situation in each individual case,” and we “will not interfere with
    a trial court’s decision unless the evidence shows a clear abuse of discretion, and
    where there is any evidence to support the trial court’s finding, we will not find there
    was an abuse of discretion.” Id. at 385 (1) (citations and punctuation omitted).
    8
    Here, there is evidence to support the trial court’s finding of a material change
    in circumstances to warrant a change in custody. Relocation of one parent does not
    alone constitute a material change in circumstances. Mahan v. McRae, 
    241 Ga. App. 109
    , 112 (522 SE2d 772) (1999). Instead, “[w]hen exercising its discretion in
    relocation cases, as in all child custody cases, the trial court must consider the best
    interests of the child[ren] and cannot apply a bright-line test.” Bodne v. Bodne, 
    277 Ga. 445
    , 446 (588 SE2d 728) (2003).
    Rather than focusing exclusively on Alexa’s relocation, the trial court in this
    case correctly considered multiple factors affecting the children, including their living
    arrangements, the time spent with their father, their participation in church and other
    extracurricular activities, their individual relationships with their parents, step-
    parents, step-siblings, other family members, and their friendships. See Lewis v.
    Lewis, 
    252 Ga. App. 539
    , 541-542 (2) (557 SE2d 40) (2001) (upholding a trial court
    order modifying custody based on a 72-mile move by the mother that would affect the
    practicality of the parties’ visitation arrangement and change the children’s school
    district and activity schedules). Some of these aspects of their lives already had
    changed since the time of the original custody agreement, such as the amount of time
    spent with their father, and several more would change as a result of Alexa’s
    9
    relocation, such as the extracurricular activities they could participate in and the
    church they would attend. See Lowry, 340 Ga. App. at 386 (2) (a trial court is
    permitted to look forward to potential future impacts on the children when
    determining whether a material change in circumstances has occurred). As the trial
    court noted in its order, the material changes found by a court do not have to be for
    the worse to trigger a change in custody. Weickert v. Weickert, 
    268 Ga. App. 624
    , 627
    (1) (602 SE2d 337) (2004).
    Additionally, the Burnhams’ son had already experienced behavioral changes
    since the time of the separation agreement, which required counseling, and there was
    testimony that he was nervous about the change that would come with the move. See
    Fox v. Korucu, 
    315 Ga. App. 851
    , 855 (729 SE2d 16) (2012) (holding that an
    affidavit submitted by a parent stating that the child was unhappy and stressed about
    attending current school was evidence of a change materially affecting the child); .
    Thus, we find that the trial court’s finding of a material change in circumstances was
    not based on Alexa’s relocation alone, but rather on the court’s assessment of
    multiple factors in the children’s lives. And the trial court’s finding was supported by
    some evidence and was not an abuse of its discretion. See Lowry, 340 Ga. App. at
    384-384 (1) (where some evidence showed “numerous changes in [a] child’s living,
    10
    extracurricular, and school arrangements since the parties’ divorce,” and some impact
    from those changes, we “will not interfere with the trial judge’s finding” of a material
    change in circumstances affecting the child) (citation and punctuation omitted).
    Next, we disagree with Alexa’s contention that the express terms of the
    separation agreement amount to a waiver by Bruce to not seek a change in custody
    unless Alexa relocated more than 120 miles from the marital home. Divorcing
    spouses are generally free to waive both statutory and constitutional rights in their
    divorce agreements. See Daniel v. Daniel, 
    250 Ga. 849
    , 850-852 (2) (301 SE2d 643)
    (1983) (affirming the enforcement of a waiver of the right to seek modification of
    alimony). See also OCGA § 19-9-5 (a) (divorcing parents may include in their
    separation agreement “any and all issues concerning custody of the child”).
    “Settlement agreements in divorce cases must be construed in the same manner and
    under the same rules as all other contractual agreements.” Jones v. Jones, 
    280 Ga. 712
    , 714 (1) (632 SE2d 121) (2006) (citation and punctuation omitted). As such,
    divorcing parents are free to waive many rights in a separation agreement, unless
    prohibited by statute or public policy, but any waiver provision “must be cast in very
    clear waiver language.” 
    Id. at 714-715
     (1) (affirming a parent’s contractual waiver of
    11
    his right to seek a downward modification of child support) (citation and punctuation
    omitted).
    The relocation provision at issue here did not include “very clear waiver
    language.” Jones, 
    280 Ga. at 714
     (1). For example, it did not include the word
    “waive” or “waiver,” nor did set forth any specific right being waived. Rather, the
    provision was found in a “Miscellaneous Agreements” section of the separation
    agreement, among various other agreements between the parties,3 none of which
    related to the legal or physical custody of the children. Nothing in the provision
    connects it to the parties’ agreements concerning custody of the children in any way.
    See Jones, 
    280 Ga. at 714
     (1) (stating that a waiver of the right to seek a downward
    modification of child support must specifically refer “to the right of modification”).
    Thus, we do not find that the relocation provision amounts to a waiver by either party
    of his or her right to seek a modification in child custody based on the relocation of
    the other party within 120 miles of the marital home.
    3
    Other agreements in this section concern business expenses paid by Bruce
    from joint accounts before the finalization of the divorce, how the parents would
    introduce future romantic partners to the children, how the proceeds of the sale of the
    marital home would be distributed, that the parties will provide tax information to
    each other, and how they will split the cost of potential mediation.
    12
    Additionally, to the extent that Bruce’s intent or conduct with respect to
    entering into the relocation provision is relevant, despite Alexa’s assertions to the
    contrary, Bruce did not admit that the parties intended this provision to preclude a
    potential change in custody based on the parties’ living arrangements. At the hearing
    on the modification petition, when asked about this provision by Alexa’s attorney,
    Bruce stated that “it was part of the Legal Zoom paperwork” and he believed it to be
    “commonplace” language. These answers do not show any specific intent behind the
    provision, and Alexa points to no other actions by Bruce that would allow this Court
    to infer that he intentionally waived his rights regarding the custody arrangements of
    his children. Thus, Bruce’s limited testimony on this issue did not establish a clear or
    unequivocal waiver that was not otherwise present in text of the separation
    agreement. See BCM Constr. Group, LLC v. Williams, 
    353 Ga. App. 811
    , 815 (1)
    (840 SE2d 51) (2020) (waiver of a contractual right may be shown by conduct, but
    “the attendant facts, taken together, must amount to an intentional relinquishment of
    a known right, in order that a waiver may exist”) (citation and punctuation omitted);
    Salinas v. Atlanta Gas Light Co., 
    347 Ga. App. 480
    , 486 (2) (819 SE2d 903) (2018)
    (“implied waiver” may be shown by a party’s “decisive, unequivocal conduct
    reasonably inferring the intent to waive”) (citation and punctuation omitted).
    13
    Accordingly, for all of the reasons explained above, we affirm the trial court’s
    order in this case.4
    Judgment affirmed. Barnes, P. J., and Pipkin, J., concur.
    4
    Because we conclude that the relocation provision does not constitute a
    waiver of Bruce’s right to seek a modification of custody based in part on Alexa’s
    relocation, we need not address the parties’ remaining arguments concerning whether
    divorcing parents in a separation agreement may waive the right to seek a
    modification of custody under specific circumstances, or whether such waivers
    violate this State’s public policy.
    14
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A20A1243

Filed Date: 11/17/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021