Donna Slawinski v. Mary E. Nicholas , 448 N.J. Super. 25 ( 2016 )


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  •                      NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-0710-15T1
    DONNA SLAWINSKI,                                  APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                             December 6, 2016
    v.                                                     APPELLATE DIVISION
    MARY E. NICHOLAS,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    ___________________________________
    Submitted October 17, 2016 – Decided                    December 6, 2016
    Before Judges Fisher, Ostrer and Leone.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New
    Jersey, Chancery Division, Family Part,
    Hudson County, Docket No. FD-09-2217-12.
    Donna Slawinski, appellant pro se (Michael
    J. Evans, on the brief).
    Respondent has not filed a brief.
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    OSTRER, J.A.D.
    In this appeal, we must identify the appropriate standard
    for   reviewing    a   motion     to    modify     a     consent     order    granting
    grandparent    visitation.             The   trial       court      held     that   the
    defendant-mother was empowered to terminate such a consent order
    unilaterally      since   there        was   no    proof      by    the     plaintiff-
    grandmother that visitation was necessary to avoid harm to the
    child.    We conclude the trial court erred.
    Once        a     parent       enters    into        a    consent    order      allowing
    grandparent visitation, a request to modify must be considered
    in accordance with the framework established in Lepis v. Lepis,
    
    83 N.J. 139
    ,        157-59     (1980),       and       applied    to    custody       and
    visitation disputes.                See, e.g., Abouzahr v. Matera-Abouzahr,
    
    361 N.J. Super. 135
    , 152 (App. Div.), certif. denied, 
    178 N.J. 34
    (2003).           That is, the parent must make a prima facie showing
    of changed circumstances as would warrant relief.                                  Once made,
    the court should allow reasonable discovery if warranted and
    conduct a plenary hearing if genuine issues of material fact
    remain.        The     moving       parent,    not       the    non-moving     grandparent,
    bears    the     burden      to     prove    that    there       has    been   a    change   of
    circumstances and that modifying the order would not cause harm
    to the child.          Consequently, we reverse and remand for the court
    to consider defendant's modification motion in light of that
    standard.
    Defendant apparently exercises sole legal and residential
    custody     of       her     daughter,       L.K.    (Lilly).1           The       grandparent
    visitation           order    was     entered       on        January    13,   2015.         In
    1
    Although the order granting sole custody is not in the record,
    the court described it at the hearing on the motion. Also, we
    use a pseudonym to protect the child's privacy.
    2                                     A-0710-15T1
    defendant's certification supporting her motion, she contended
    the    order    was   entered       with    her    consent.        It    provided      that
    plaintiff, the paternal grandmother, would enjoy visitation with
    Lilly, then six years old, on the first weekend of every month
    beginning February 2015 and ending January 2016.                             Pickup would
    occur on Friday, 6:00 p.m., and drop-off on Sunday, 5:00 p.m.
    Visitation could occur in New Jersey or at plaintiff's timeshare
    in    the    Poconos,   but     not    in    Ohio     where    plaintiff         resided.
    Plaintiff was also granted a week of vacation with Lilly in July
    2015.
    Defendant contended she consented because she thought Lilly
    "would like to have contact with the grandmother and that it
    would be a positive experience for her."                   However, she asserted
    that, after four visits, it became clear this was not so.                               She
    said: "The child returns very upset from the visits.                            It takes
    her days to return to her regular mood.                  The child starts to cry
    at    the    mere   mention    of    the    grandmother.       .    .    .     She   seems
    traumatized from the contact."                   Defendant contended Lilly asked
    her not to make her go again.                Defendant stated that Lilly also
    told her pediatrician she did not want to see plaintiff.
    Defendant criticized plaintiff's care of Lilly, alleging
    plaintiff ignored Lilly's hygiene.                  Plaintiff claimed that Lilly
    did    not    bathe   during    her    weekend       visits;       her   hair    was    not
    3                                   A-0710-15T1
    combed; and she once returned without underwear, despite having
    been sent with "a weekend's worth of clothing."                     Defendant also
    complained that Lilly's father was present during the May 2015
    visit,   even     though,    allegedly,        his    "visitation    was    suspended
    pursuant     to   prior     court    order."2         Defendant    stated    she       was
    concerned that the grandparent visitation was "detrimental to
    [Lilly's] mental health" and asked that it be terminated.
    On August 28, 2015, the motion was heard by a judge other
    than the one who entered the January 2015 order.                     Plaintiff did
    not   file   written      opposition      to    the    motion   according        to    our
    record, but counsel appeared on her behalf.                     He contended that
    defendant's       motion     should       be   considered       under      the      Lepis
    framework and there was insufficient evidence to establish a
    prima facie case of changed circumstances.                        He argued expert
    psychological      testimony        was   required      to   support    defendant's
    allegations.
    Defense counsel argued defendant should not bear the burden
    to demonstrate grounds to terminate visitation inasmuch as the
    January 2015 order was entered by consent without any judicial
    findings that the visitation was beneficial.                       Counsel argued,
    2
    The record does not include such an order. Moreover, defendant
    admitted at the hearing that Lilly's father had been granted
    parenting time in New Jersey, but chose not to exercise it.
    Defendant's counsel contended a child support warrant had been
    issued for his arrest.
    4                                     A-0710-15T1
    "[T]here is no burden that my client has to do anything other
    than say this is not working out, I tried."
    The judge agreed.          Since the order was entered by consent,
    the   judge    declared    that     defendant        was   entitled         to   terminate
    visitation       unless     plaintiff              could      demonstrate,           by      a
    preponderance of the evidence, "that denial of visitation would
    result in harm to the child."              As plaintiff had not done so, the
    court entered an order terminating grandparent visitation.
    Notwithstanding       our     general          deference     to       Family        Part
    decisions, see Cesare v. Cesare, 
    154 N.J. 394
    , 413 (1998), we
    are   compelled    to    reverse    when       the    court    does     not      apply     the
    governing legal standards.            Gotlib v. Gotlib, 
    399 N.J. Super. 295
    , 309 (App. Div. 2008).            We owe no special deference to the
    trial judge's legal determinations.                    Manalapan Realty, L.P. v.
    Twp. Comm. of Manalapan, 
    140 N.J. 366
    , 378 (1995).
    Our     courts    highly    value     the       settlement       of     litigation,
    recognizing      that     parties     to       a     dispute     are     usually          best
    positioned to discern the most mutually advantageous outcome.
    Brundage v. Estate of Carambio, 
    195 N.J. 575
    , 601 (2008).                                 This
    policy applies with great force to family disputes, given the
    inter-personal strife and myriad factual issues that complicate
    judicial resolution.        See Konzelman v. Konzelman, 
    158 N.J. 185
    ,
    193 (1999) ("New Jersey has long espoused a policy favoring the
    5                                       A-0710-15T1
    use      of    consensual              agreements            to         resolve      marital
    controversies."); Bisbing v. Bisbing, 
    445 N.J. Super. 207
    , 218
    (App. Div.) (agreement regarding custody), certif. granted, ___
    N.J. ___ (2016).            Absent fraud or unconscionability, our courts
    will     enforce       family-related          agreements          as     they    would     any
    contractual    agreement.              Quinn       v.    Quinn,    
    225 N.J. 34
    ,     45-47
    (2016).
    But our courts' commitment to enforce such agreements is
    tempered by its equitable power to review and modify support and
    custody orders upon a showing of changed circumstances.                                 
    Lepis, supra
    , 83 N.J. at 145-46; see also 
    Quinn, supra
    , 225 N.J. at 46.
    Specifically,          with      respect       to       agreements        between    parents
    regarding     custody           or   parenting           time,     "[a]     party    seeking
    modification       .   .    .   must    meet       the    burden    of    showing    changed
    circumstances and that the agreement is now not in the best
    interests of a child."               
    Abouzahr, supra
    , 361 N.J. Super. at 152;
    see also Hand v. Hand, 
    391 N.J. Super. 102
    , 103 (App. Div.
    2007).     Similarly, a grandparent visitation order entered after
    an    adjudication         is   "subject   to       modification          at   any   time   on
    showing of changed circumstances."                       Mimkon v. Ford, 
    66 N.J. 426
    ,
    437-38 (1975).          We have found in child custody disputes between
    parents that this showing remains the same whether the prior
    arrangement was forged through adjudication or agreement.                                 Todd
    6                                     A-0710-15T1
    v.    Sheridan,     268   N.J.     Super.       387,    398    (App.    Div.   1993)    ("A
    judgment, whether reached by consent or adjudication, embodies a
    best interests determination. . . .                     [A] moving party must bear
    the    threshold       burden     of   showing     changed       circumstances      which
    would affect the welfare of the children.").                           Whether the same
    uniformity of treatment should apply to grandparent visitation
    orders appears to be a matter of first impression.
    We recognize that a parent's fundamental right to raise a
    child    as    he   or    she     sees    fit    encompasses       the     authority    to
    determine visitation by third parties, including grandparents.
    See Moriarty v. Bradt, 
    177 N.J. 84
    , 114-15 (2003), cert. denied,
    
    540 U.S. 1177
    , 
    124 S. Ct. 1408
    , 
    158 L. Ed. 2d 78
    (2004).                               Yet,
    that autonomy gives way to the need to protect the child from
    harm.     
    Id. at 115.
            Thus, "grandparents seeking visitation . . .
    must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that denial of the
    visitation they seek would result in harm to the child."                          
    Id. at 88.
        "If the court agrees that the potential for harm has been
    shown, the presumption in favor of parental decision making will
    be deemed overcome."            
    Id. at 117.
    Still, proof of harm involves a greater showing than simply
    the best interests of the child.                       
    Id. at 116
    (stating that a
    dispute       between     a     "fit     custodial       parent     and    the   child's
    grandparent       is    not   a   contest       between       equals[,]"   consequently
    7                                   A-0710-15T1
    "the best interest standard, which is the tiebreaker between fit
    parents,    is       inapplicable").              Substantively,         it    is    a     "heavy
    burden."     Major v. Maguire, 
    224 N.J. 1
    , 18 (2016); cf. Fawzy v.
    Fawzy,    
    199 N.J. 456
    ,    479     (2009)    ("The     threat     of    harm    is    a
    significantly higher burden than a best-interests analysis.").
    The harm to the grandchild must be "a particular identifiable
    harm,    specific         to    the     child."         Mizrahi    v.   Cannon,       375     N.J.
    Super. 221, 234 (App. Div. 2005).                           It "generally rests on the
    existence       of        an    unusually        close      relationship       between         the
    grandparent and the child, or on traumatic circumstances such as
    a parent's death."               Daniels v. Daniels, 
    381 N.J. Super. 286
    , 294
    (App.    Div.    2005).                By    contrast,       missed     opportunities          for
    creating "happy memories" do not suffice.                             
    Mizrahi, supra
    , 375
    N.J.    Super.       at    234.         Only    after    the     grandparent        vaults     the
    proof-of-harm threshold will the court apply a best-interests
    analysis to resolve disputes over visitation details.                                
    Moriarty, supra
    , 177 N.J. at 117.
    But nothing about a parent's right to autonomy warrants
    allowing a parent to unilaterally modify or terminate a consent
    order on grandparent visitation.                        The parent effectively waives
    that    autonomy      by       entering        into   the    order,     just   as    a     parent
    waives     rights         when        entering    into       any   other      consent       order
    governing custody or visitation.                          Given our respect for the
    8                                      A-0710-15T1
    consensual        resolution         of     family-related      disputes             and    the
    stability     such      agreements         achieve,   modification         of    a    consent
    order      governing        grandparent       visitation       must       be     considered
    according     to      the   same     Lepis     changed      circumstances         framework
    applicable to other custody and visitation orders.
    Other courts that have considered the issue have recognized
    that,      once   a    parent    enters       into    a    consent       order   governing
    grandparent visitation, the parent may not unilaterally withdraw
    or require the grandparent to establish a right to visitation as
    if there had been no order at all.                        See Ingram v. Knipper, 
    72 P.3d 17
    , 22 (Okla. 2003) ("Having agreed to the initial grant of
    visitation with Grandfather, Mother cannot in this subsequent
    proceeding litigate the issue of harm without showing a change
    in circumstances . . . ."); Lovlace v. Copley, 
    418 S.W.3d 1
    , 29
    (Tenn. 2013) ("Having once afforded parents the opportunity to
    rely upon the protection of the presumption of superior rights
    to   the    care,     custody,       and    control   of    their     children        in    the
    initial      grandparent        visitation        proceeding,       no    constitutional
    principle demands that parents again be afforded a presumption
    of   superior         rights    in    a     subsequent      grandparent          visitation
    modification proceeding.").
    Following the procedural guidance set forth in Lepis, a
    party seeking modification must present evidence to establish a
    9                                       A-0710-15T1
    prima    facie       case    of    changed       circumstances           relating     to    the
    visitation.          
    Lepis, supra
    , 83 N.J. at 157; R.K. v. F.K., 
    437 N.J. Super. 58
    , 61-62 (App. Div. 2014).                          But not any change in
    circumstance         will    suffice;      rather,       the     changed    circumstances
    must    be    such    "as    would       warrant       relief"    from     the    provisions
    involved.          
    Lepis, supra
    , 83 N.J. at 157.                      Upon this initial
    showing,       appropriate         discovery         shall     proceed     if     warranted.
    
    Ibid. Our courts have
    long emphasized the need for a thorough
    examination of the merits of the movant's showing.                               See Sheehan
    v. Sheehan, 
    51 N.J. Super. 276
    (App. Div.), certif. denied, 
    28 N.J. 147
       (1958).        Moreover,         the    court     shall    hold    a   plenary
    hearing       if   genuine    issues       of    material      fact      remain.        
    Lepis, supra
    , 83 N.J. at 159.
    The movant's burden within this procedural framework is to
    prove that there has been a change of circumstances and that
    this change warrants revision of the original resolution of the
    matter based on the factors and standards that otherwise govern.
    "The standard that governs an application for modification of a
    property settlement agreement is the same standard that applies
    at the time of the original judgment of divorce."                                  Miller v.
    Miller,       
    160 N.J. 408
    ,    420         (1999)     (considering         alimony
    modification); see also 
    Lepis, supra
    , 83 N.J. at 157-58 (stating
    that once a supported spouse demonstrates an increase in need,
    10                                    A-0710-15T1
    the   court   reviews   the   supporting   spouse's   ability    to   pay);
    Gonzalez-Posse v. Ricciardulli, 
    410 N.J. Super. 340
    , 352 (App.
    Div. 2009).     In a case of visitation or custody involving two
    parents, the court revisits the issue of what is in the best
    interests of the child.         Baures v. Lewis, 
    167 N.J. 91
    , 116
    (2001) ("A motion for a change in custody . . . will be governed
    initially by a changed circumstances inquiry and ultimately by a
    simple best interests analysis.").
    Consistent with this approach, the court should apply the
    standard governing grandparent visitation if the movant-parent
    also succeeds in establishing changed circumstances.            That is to
    say, the court must consider whether or not the modification of
    a grandparent's visitation will cause harm to the child, as
    distinct from considering the best interests of the child.3               If
    the modification will not cause harm, the court must grant the
    modification even if the grandparent could show doing so was
    contrary to the child's best interests.
    When the parent is the movant, the parent bears the burden
    to establish grounds for modification.          See Beck v. Beck, 
    86 N.J. 480
    , 496 n.8 (1981) ("[W]hen seeking joint custody after an
    3
    In this respect, we part company with the conclusion in 
    Ingram, supra
    , 72 P.3d at 22, and 
    Lovlace, supra
    , 418 S.W.3d at 23, that
    a change in circumstances would trigger a best interests
    analysis.
    11                            A-0710-15T1
    initial      custody   determination    has       been   made,    even   a    parent
    enjoying such a relationship must satisfy the same burden of
    proof as applies to anyone seeking to change a custody decree,
    namely, a change of circumstances warranting modification.");
    
    Abouzahr, supra
    , 361 N.J. Super. at 152 (assigning burden to
    show   change    of    circumstances    and   child's      best     interests       to
    "party seeking a modification"); 
    Sheehan, supra
    , 51 N.J. Super.
    at 287 (stating "the party seeking a modification bears the
    burden of proof").
    Thus, in a grandparent visitation case, the parent seeking
    modification bears the burden to prove changed circumstances and
    that   the    child    would   not   suffer   a    particular,     identifiable,
    child-specific harm, see 
    Mizrahi, supra
    , 375 N.J. Super. at 234,
    if modification were ordered.          Given that a grandparent's burden
    to prove harm is more onerous than satisfying a best interests
    test, the parent's burden to prove the absence of harm is less
    onerous than the best interests test.               See 
    Moriarty, supra
    , 177
    N.J. at 113 (noting that a best interests test can be satisfied
    although the child suffers no harm) (citing Watkins v. Nelson,
    
    163 N.J. 235
    , 248 (2000)); cf. Morgan v. Morgan, 
    205 N.J. 50
    ,
    63-65 (2011) (noting that a custodial parent's burden to prove
    good faith and lack of harm in order to remove the child is less
    onerous than a showing of best interests).                       Once the parent
    12                                    A-0710-15T1
    establishes changed circumstances and the absence of harm, the
    court must grant the parent's requested modification.
    We have no difficulty finding that defendant's allegations
    supporting     the     termination      of     visitation     —    that      plaintiff
    neglected     Lilly's       hygiene,    and    Lilly's      visits     caused    great
    emotional distress — suffice as a prima facie showing of changed
    circumstances and suggest the child would not be harmed should
    visitation     terminate.        But    plaintiff     should      be    afforded    the
    opportunity     to     rebut    defendant's        claims     through        competent
    evidence.     For example, plaintiff may counter defendant's claim
    of changed circumstances with evidence, if it exists, that the
    child enjoyed the visits, displayed no signs of discomfort or
    emotional turmoil, and her hygiene was appropriately addressed.
    If the court ultimately finds, upon the conclusion of discovery
    or after a plenary hearing, that defendant has not proved both
    changed circumstances and the absence of harm to the child from
    terminating visitation, then termination is unwarranted, and the
    prior order must remain intact.               On the other hand, if defendant
    satisfies her burden to prove changed circumstances and absence
    of    harm,   then    the    court   must     grant   defendant        her   requested
    relief.
    In conclusion, the trial court erred in granting defendant
    the   power   to     unilaterally      terminate      the   visitation       that   the
    13                                   A-0710-15T1
    consent order granted.     The court also erred in imposing on
    plaintiff the burden to present the same proofs required if
    there had been no consent order at all.    We therefore remand the
    motion to the trial court to apply the standard we have set
    forth.4   We express no views as to the ultimate outcome.
    Reversed and remanded.
    4
    We recognize that the consent order permitted visitation only
    through January 2016. However, we do not deem the dispute moot,
    as the court is empowered to award plaintiff compensatory time
    if it ultimately determines that defendant has not met her
    burden to terminate visitation.
    14                          A-0710-15T1