Tomlinson v. Weatherford ( 2017 )


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  •  1      IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    2 Opinion Number:
    3 Filing Date: APRIL 19, 2017
    4 Nos. 34,610 & 35,853 (Consolidated)
    5 CARRIE J. TOMLINSON,
    6       Petitioner-Appellant,
    7 v.
    8 DANA M. WEATHERFORD,
    9       Respondent-Appellee.
    10 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF GRANT COUNTY
    11 Henry R. Quintero, District Judge
    12 Caren I. Friedman
    13 Santa Fe, NM
    14 New Mexico Legal Group, P.C.
    15 Jessica C. Roth
    16 Albuquerque, NM
    17 for Appellant
    18 Lopez, Dietzel, Perkins, & Wallace, P.C.
    19 Cathryn L. Wallace
    20 Silver City, NM
    21 for Appellee
    1                                         OPINION
    2 ZAMORA, Judge.
    3   {1}   In this domestic relations case, the level of animosity between the parties, their
    4 deliberate actions and inactions, and the delays in the judicial system have
    5 complicated the situation to the point that the Child (R.W.) has been lost in the
    6 process. Petitioner Carrie Tomlinson (Petitioner) appeals the district court’s decision
    7 to decline jurisdiction over her action to determine parentage, child custody, and
    8 timesharing with regard to a child born to her former partner, Dana Weatherford
    9 (Respondent). Petitioner argues that the district court applied the incorrect standard
    10 in determining jurisdiction and challenges several of the district court’s findings.
    11 Petitioner also argues that the district court violated her right to due process by failing
    12 to address her requests for interim visitation and that the district court’s ruling
    13 violated her right to equal protection.
    14   {2}   While this appeal was pending, Petitioner filed a motion for review of the
    15 district court’s action on an application for stay and for injunction pending appeal as
    16 well as a petition for writ of error, or in the alternative, motion for review. Petitioner
    17 requested this Court to review the district court’s order denying her motion to stay the
    18 enforcement of its judgment pending appeal and order visitation and communication
    19 between herself and R.W. She also requested the appointment of a guardian ad litem.
    1 On September 9, 2015, this Court issued an order directing the district court to hold
    2 a hearing on Petitioner’s motion and the issue of whether to order visitation and
    3 communication between Petitioner and R.W. within twenty-one days of the order.
    4 Alternatively, if the district court decided to appoint a guardian ad litem (GAL), the
    5 district court was required to determine an expedited time frame for the GAL to
    6 complete his or her work and then hold a hearing to address the visitation and
    7 communication issues. It was not until December 3, 2015, that the district court held
    8 the hearing to appoint the GAL. He identified and appointed the GAL without input
    9 from the parties. Petitioner alleges that the GAL relied on a “sham” bonding study
    10 when making the recommendation with respect to her request for visitation and
    11 communication with R.W. According to Petitioner, the district court accepted the
    12 GAL’s recommendation, even though the study considered only the degree of
    13 bonding between Respondent and R.W., and Petitioner was not given the opportunity
    14 to examine the GAL about her recommendations or any bias she might have. For the
    15 reasons that follow, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.
    16 BACKGROUND
    17   {3}   Petitioner and Respondent were in a domestic relationship and decided to have
    18 and raise a child together. Respondent was artificially inseminated by an anonymous
    19 donor and gave birth to R.W., in Oklahoma in April 2007. In June 2007 an Oklahoma
    2
    1 district court appointed Petitioner and Respondent co-guardians of R.W., pursuant to
    2 their joint request. In September 2008, the couple and R.W. moved from Oklahoma
    3 to New Mexico. From the time of R.W.’s birth until May 2009, she lived with
    4 Petitioner and Respondent. In 2009 Petitioner left the home but continued to share
    5 parenting responsibilities with Respondent until September 2012, when Respondent
    6 cut off contact between R.W. and Petitioner.
    7   {4}   Subsequently, Respondent sought an order of protection from domestic
    8 violence based on alleged harassment by Petitioner. The district court determined that
    9 no domestic violence had occurred. However, the parties stipulated to mutual
    10 restraint. On May 20, 2013, Petitioner initiated this action to establish parentage and
    11 determine custody and timesharing with regard to R.W.
    12   {5}   Shortly after the petition was filed, Respondent left the state with R.W.
    13 Respondent could not be located and was not served with process before she left the
    14 state. By July 2013 Respondent established residency in Oklahoma. In August 2013
    15 Respondent filed an objection to the district court’s jurisdiction over the case.
    16   {6}   In December 2013 the district court held a hearing on the issue of jurisdiction.
    17 During that hearing, Respondent informed the district court that a hearing was
    18 scheduled the same month in Oklahoma pertaining to the order granting co-
    19 guardianship that was entered in Oklahoma in 2007.
    3
    1   {7}   Apparently, Respondent had filed a change of venue in the guardianship case.
    2 Both Petitioner and the district court were under the impression that Respondent
    3 intended to have the guardianship revoked. The district court conferred with the
    4 Oklahoma court, then stayed proceedings in the present case, pending a final decision
    5 in the Oklahoma guardianship. However, after the stay in this case was issued,
    6 Respondent did not pursue revocation of the guardianship in Oklahoma.
    7 Approximately eleven months after the stay in this case was issued, the Oklahoma
    8 court terminated the guardianship over Petitioner’s objection.
    9   {8}   After the termination of the guardianship, Petitioner again moved to determine
    10 parentage and timesharing in this case. Respondent once again objected to the district
    11 court’s jurisdiction, arguing that New Mexico was an inconvenient forum and that it
    12 would not be in the best interests of R.W. for the district court to exercise its
    13 jurisdiction over Petitioner’s claim. The district court determined that it was in the
    14 best interests of R.W. that “any disputes be brought and heard in Oklahoma.”
    15 DISCUSSION
    16   {9}   On appeal, Petitioner argues that (1) New Mexico has jurisdiction over the
    17 action pursuant to the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (the
    18 Act), NMSA 1978, §§ 40-10A-101 to -403 (2001); (2) the district court erred in
    19 making findings on the merits of her parentage and child custody claim because the
    4
    1 sole issue before the court was subject matter jurisdiction; (3) the district court denied
    2 her the opportunity to maintain her relationship with R.W. and violated due process
    3 by failing to address her repeated requests for interim visitation; and (4) the district
    4 court’s rulings violated equal protection. We will address these arguments in turn. We
    5 first consider the question of jurisdiction under the Act.
    6 The District Court Has Jurisdiction Under the Act
    7   {10}   In analyzing Petitioner’s argument, it is helpful to examine the historical
    8 background of the Act. In New Mexico jurisdiction over child custody disputes is
    9 governed by the Act. Prior to the enactment of the Act in 2001, child custody disputes
    10 were governed by the Child Custody Jurisdiction Act (CCJA), NMSA 1978, §§ 40-
    11 10-1 to -24 (1981, as amended through 1989) (repealed 2001).
    12   {11}   The CCJA provided four independent bases for jurisdiction. New Mexico had
    13 jurisdiction if: (1) it was the child’s home state—the state where the child had lived
    14 during the six months immediately preceding the commencement of the custody
    15 proceedings; (2) assuming jurisdiction would be in the child’s best interests because
    16 the child and at least one parent had significant connections with New Mexico; (3)
    17 emergency circumstances required the exercise of jurisdiction to protect the child; or
    18 (4) there was no home state or another state that had declined jurisdiction. See § 40-
    19 10-4(A).
    5
    1   {12}   These four bases of jurisdiction were not given any order of priority. As a
    2 result, it was possible for states to have concurrent jurisdiction, which in some cases
    3 resulted in simultaneous child custody proceedings in different states. See Unif. Child
    4 Custody Jurisdiction Act § 6 cmt. (Am. Law Inst. & Unif. Law Comm’n 1968); Unif.
    5 Child Custody Jurisdiction & Enf’t Act (UCCJEA) § 206 cmt. (Am. Law Inst. &
    6 Unif. Law Comm’n 1997). There was also confusion concerning the “best interests”
    7 language of the CCJA. See UCCJEA § 201 cmt. 2. The phrase “tended to create
    8 confusion between the jurisdictional issue and the substantive custody
    9 determination.” 
    Id. 10 {13}
      In order to clarify the jurisdictional standards in child custody matters and to
    11 harmonize the CCJA with the federal Parental Kidnapping Prevention Act, 28 U.S.C.
    12 § 1738A (2006), which prioritizes home state jurisdiction, Congress enacted the Act.
    13 See UCCJEA References & Annot. (prefatory note). The Act eliminates the “best
    14 interests” language, because it tended to be confusing and because it is not necessary
    15 for the jurisdictional issue. See UCCJEA § 201 cmt. The Act also prioritizes home
    16 state jurisdiction, which has largely resolved the problem of simultaneous
    17 proceedings. UCCJEA § 206 cmt.
    18   {14}   Under the Act, the child’s home state is prioritized such that a court in the
    19 home state has exclusive “jurisdiction to make an initial child[]custody determination
    6
    1 unless it declines to exercise that jurisdiction on the ground that another state is a
    2 more appropriate forum.” Malissa C. v. Matthew Wayne H., 2008-NMCA-128, ¶ 25,
    3 
    145 N.M. 22
    , 
    193 P.3d 569
    ; see § 40-10A-201(a). In other words, where there is a
    4 home state, “there can be no exercise of significant connection jurisdiction in an
    5 initial child custody determination and, therefore, no simultaneous proceedings.”
    6 UCCJEA § 206 cmt.
    7   {15}   In the present case, Petitioner argues that the district court erred in declining
    8 jurisdiction over the child custody dispute because New Mexico was the home state
    9 when the petition was filed and because the district court did not consider the
    10 required factors in determining whether it could decline jurisdiction under the Act.
    11 See § 40-10A-207(b). When reviewing a district court’s jurisdictional determination,
    12 we review the factual findings for sufficiency of the evidence. See Malissa C.,
    13 2008-NMCA-128, ¶ 20. We review de novo the district court’s application of the law
    14 to the facts so found. See State ex rel. Children, Youth & Families Dep’t v. Donna J.,
    15 2006-NMCA-023, ¶ 11, 
    139 N.M. 131
    , 
    129 P.3d 167
    .
    16   {16}   As noted, because the Act prioritizes home state jurisdiction in child custody
    17 disputes, the first step in resolving the jurisdictional question is to identify the child’s
    18 home state. The Act, like the CCJA, defines the “home state” as “the state in which
    19 a child lived with a parent or a person acting as a parent for at least six consecutive
    7
    1 months immediately before the commencement of a child custody proceeding.”
    2 Section 40-10A-102(7). The parties in this case do not dispute that R.W. and
    3 Respondent lived in New Mexico from September 2008 until after the petition was
    4 filed on May 20, 2013. Therefore, at the time the petition was filed, New Mexico was
    5 R.W.’s home state, and the district court had jurisdiction to make the initial child
    6 custody determination.
    7   {17}   Respondent argues that the district court could properly decline jurisdiction
    8 based on the 2007 guardianship proceeding in Oklahoma, which Respondent
    9 characterizes as a “simultaneous proceeding” for jurisdictional purposes. We are not
    10 persuaded. First, we note that the Oklahoma guardianship proceedings commenced
    11 in May 2007 when Petitioner and Respondent filed a joint petition for co-
    12 guardianship of R.W. In June 2007 after a hearing on the parties’ joint petition, the
    13 Oklahoma district court entered an order appointing them as co-guardians of R.W.
    14 There appear to have been no unresolved issues before the Oklahoma court, and there
    15 was no further activity in that case prior to the commencement of the proceedings in
    16 this case in 2013. Thus, it appears that the Oklahoma guardianship was not pending
    17 when the petition was filed in this case. Respondent does not identify anything in the
    18 record showing otherwise.
    8
    1   {18}   Second, even if the guardianship in Oklahoma was ongoing, New Mexico was
    2 R.W.’s home state and New Mexico had priority jurisdiction under the Act. See
    3 Garcia v. Gutierrez, 2009-NMSC-044, ¶ 13, 
    147 N.M. 105
    , 
    217 P.3d 591
    (“If one
    4 state can be established as the home state, and a child custody action is filed first in
    5 that state, any other states which have passed a similar statute must stay their
    6 proceedings, or decline to exercise jurisdiction.” (internal quotation marks omitted));
    7 see also UCCJEA § 206 cmt. (“Under this Act, the simultaneous proceedings problem
    8 will arise only when there is no home [s]tate[.]”); § 40-10A-206 (regarding
    9 simultaneous proceedings).
    10   {19}   We disagree with Respondent’s suggestion that Oklahoma should be
    11 considered R.W.’s home state because the Oklahoma guardianship commenced in
    12 2007, prior to the commencement of these proceedings, and because Respondent had
    13 returned to Oklahoma with R.W. prior to the hearing on jurisdiction in this case. The
    14 facts relevant to jurisdiction under the Act are those that existed at the time the
    15 petition was filed. See § 40-10A-201(a)(1). Those facts established that New Mexico
    16 was R.W.’s home state, conferring jurisdiction to make the initial determination upon
    17 the district court. See §§ 40-10A-201, -207, -208; Malissa C., 2008-NMCA-128, ¶ 25.
    18 Declining jurisdiction would only have been appropriate here if, under the specific
    19 provisions of the Act, the district court determined that another state was a more
    9
    1 appropriate forum. See §§ 40-10A-201(a), -207, -208(a)(2); Malissa C.,
    2 2008-NMCA-128, ¶ 25.
    3   {20}   The Act provides that a court of this state that has jurisdiction to make a child
    4 custody determination may decline to exercise its jurisdiction “if it determines that
    5 it is an inconvenient forum under the circumstances and that a court of another state
    6 is a more appropriate forum.” Section 40-10A-207(a). The court must consider
    7 whether it is an inconvenient forum and whether it is appropriate for a court of
    8 another state to exercise jurisdiction. See § 40-10A-207(b).
    9   {21}   Before determining whether New Mexico is an inconvenient forum, the district
    10 court is required to consider all relevant factors including:
    11                (1) whether domestic violence has occurred and is likely to
    12          continue in the future and which state could best protect the parties and
    13          the child;
    14                (2) the length of time the child’s home state is or recently was
    15          another state;
    16                 (3) the distance between the court in this state and the court in
    17          the state that would assume jurisdiction;
    18                (4) the relative financial circumstances of the parties with
    19          respect to travel arrangements;
    20               (5) any agreement of the parties as to which state should
    21          assume jurisdiction;
    10
    1                (6) the nature and location of the evidence required to resolve
    2          the pending custody litigation, including testimony of the child;
    3                (7) the ability of the court of each state to decide the custody
    4          issue expeditiously and the procedures necessary to present the
    5          evidence; and
    6                (8) whether another state has a closer connection with the child
    7          or with the child and one or more of the parties, including whether the
    8          court of the other state is more familiar with the facts and issues in the
    9          pending litigation.
    10 
    Id. 11 {22}
      Under Section 40-10A-208(a), the district court may decline to exercise
    12 jurisdiction if “a person seeking to invoke its jurisdiction has engaged in unjustifiable
    13 conduct.” Unjustifiable conduct such as “parents, or their surrogates, acting in a
    14 reprehensible manner, such as removing, secreting, retaining, or restraining the
    15 child.” UCCJEA § 208 cmt. This section of the Act “ensures that abducting parents
    16 will not receive an advantage for their unjustifiable conduct.” 
    Id. 17 {23}
      We conclude that the district court erred in finding that it was in the “best
    18 interests” of R.W. that “any disputes be brought and heard in Oklahoma.” Because
    19 the district court had home state jurisdiction, it was error to defer to another state
    20 court that did not have jurisdiction substantially in conformity with the Act without
    21 setting out findings that show the basis on which the district court concluded that it
    11
    1 is an inconvenient forum and that the court of the other state is a more appropriate
    2 forum.
    3   {24}   Even in circumstances where a court justifiably declines jurisdiction, under the
    4 Act, that court is nevertheless required to “stay the case and direct the parties to file
    5 in the [s]tate that has been found to be the more convenient forum[,]” which the
    6 district court in this case did not do. UCCJEA § 207 cmt.; see § 40-10A-207(c). The
    7 court should not simply dismiss the action, leaving the case in limbo as the district
    8 court did in this case, by not following through with a determination that a court of
    9 another state is the more appropriate forum. See § 40-10A-207(C); UCCJEA § 207
    10 cmt.
    11   {25}   The legal basis for the district court’s decision is not clear. Its order cites
    12 neither Sections 40-10A-207 nor 208. Indeed the order includes no conclusions of
    13 law but only findings of fact, which appear to be based largely on Barnae v. Barnae,
    14 1997-NMCA-077, 
    123 N.M. 583
    , 
    943 P.2d 1036
    . While Barnae is factually similar
    15 to the present case, the jurisdictional question in Barnae relied on the prior statute not
    16 in force here, and whose requirements for establishing jurisdiction are materially
    17 different from those set forth in the Act. Compare Barnae, 1997-NMCA-077, ¶ 15,
    18 with § 40-10A-201, and § 40-10A-202. Thus, Barnae’s analyses and rationales are
    19 neither precedential or instructive to the extent that they are not viable nor consistent
    12
    1 with the Act’s jurisdiction provision. And although Respondent mentioned the
    2 relevant provisions below, she makes no mention of them here, and so is deemed to
    3 have abandoned the applicability of either section on appeal.
    4 Superfluous Findings
    5   {26}   Petitioner challenges several of the findings set forth in the district court’s
    6 order. Petitioner argues that the district court erred in resolving factual discrepancies
    7 in favor of Respondent’s version of the facts and that the district court erred in
    8 making factual findings pertaining to the merits of her parentage and child custody
    9 claim.
    10   {27}   At the December 11, 2013 hearing, the district court heard the parties’
    11 arguments with regard to jurisdiction, acknowledging that the question of jurisdiction
    12 needed to be resolved before it considered the merits of Petitioner’s claim. The parties
    13 stipulated that the question of jurisdiction would be decided on the pleadings and the
    14 existing record. In its order declining jurisdiction, several findings made by the
    15 district court were immaterial to the question of jurisdiction, and some of those
    16 findings appear to go directly to the issues of parentage and child custody.
    17   {28}   Petitioner challenges the various findings entered by the district court.
    18 However, all of the challenged findings are immaterial to the question of jurisdiction.
    19 We consider the immaterial findings mere surplusage, which may be disregarded. See
    13
    1 Rosen v. Lantis, 1997-NMCA-033, ¶ 21, 
    123 N.M. 231
    , 
    938 P.2d 729
    (“[F]indings
    2 without legal consequence may be treated as surplusage and disregarded in that action
    3 and in subsequent litigation.”); see also Tome Land & Improvement Co. v. Silva,
    4 1973-NMSC-120, ¶ 18, 
    86 N.M. 87
    , 
    519 P.2d 1024
    (ignoring as surplusage an
    5 erroneous finding that was clearly immaterial and irrelevant). Accordingly, we need
    6 not address Petitioner’s contention that the findings are not supported by the
    7 pleadings or the record.
    8 Petitioner’s Requests for Visitation and Contact
    9   {29}   In May 2013 when the petition to determine parentage and child custody was
    10 filed, Petitioner moved for interim visitation and contact with R.W. The district court
    11 did not rule on Petitioner’s motion, and in August 2013 Petitioner again requested
    12 that the court address the issue of visitation. However, it appears from the record
    13 before us that while the district court addressed other issues in the case, this particular
    14 issue was not addressed. By the time the district court entered its March 2015 order,
    15 Petitioner had not had contact with R.W. for over two years.
    16   {30}   The extended time that it took for the remanded interim visitation and
    17 communication proceedings in the district court to be addressed, ultimately rendered
    18 those issues raised in connection with the petition for writ of error moot. See
    19 Crutchfield v. N.M. Dep’t of Taxation & Revenue, 2005-NMCA-022, ¶ 36, 
    137 N.M. 14
     1 26, 
    106 P.3d 1273
    (“A reviewing court generally does not decide . . . moot
    2 questions.”). We do note that assuming without deciding that the allegations in the
    3 petition are true, we specifically note that the procedures followed by the district
    4 court, the psychologist, and the GAL do not appear to have been in compliance with
    5 requisite procedures that would ensure a just decision.
    6   {31}   Petitioner argues that by initially failing to rule on her requests for visitation
    7 and contact with R.W., the district court deprived her of her right to the care and
    8 custody of R.W., which implicates her fundamental liberty interests, protected by the
    9 Due Process Clauses of the federal and state constitutions. Petitioner also makes a
    10 broad assertion that the district court’s decision violates equal protection. We
    11 understand Petitioner to argue that the district court’s decision to decline jurisdiction
    12 in this case is a result of her status as a same-sex parent. Respondent does not address
    13 Petitioner’s constitutional arguments.
    14   {32}   Notwithstanding Petitioner’s constitutional arguments and Respondent’s failure
    15 to respond to those arguments, we need not address them. As we noted earlier, the
    16 district court acknowledged that the question of jurisdiction needed to be resolved
    17 before it could consider the merits of Petitioner’s claims, and we agree.
    18   {33}   Because we have concluded that the district court had jurisdiction over this
    19 action pursuant to the Act, on remand the district court will need to address whether
    15
    1 Petitioner has standing to establish parentage as an interested party under the Uniform
    2 Parentage Act (UPA). See NMSA 1978, §§ 40-11A-201 to -204 (2009); Chatterjee
    3 v. King, 2012-NMSC-019, ¶¶ 48-49, 
    280 P.3d 283
    . If Petitioner is found to have
    4 standing, it would then be appropriate for the district court to address the merits of
    5 Petitioner’s petition for determination of parentage, custody, timesharing, and child
    6 support as well as Petitioner’s motions for interim visitation and custody.
    7   {34}   The district court must remain cognizant and vigilant of the requirements for
    8 appointment of a GAL on behalf of R.W., and the necessity that the GAL “provide
    9 independent services to protect the child’s bests interests without being bound by the
    10 child’s or either party’s directive or objectives.” Rule 1-053.3(C) NMRA. In
    11 addition, the district court must also ensure that any bonding study with respect to
    12 R.W. be properly conducted with full participation of all interested parties in this
    13 case, including Petitioner and Respondent.
    14 CONCLUSION
    15   {35}   We consider the disposition of the issues in this case to require, for effective
    16 review, findings of fact and conclusions of law, as well as a thorough dispositional
    17 order. We reverse the district court’s March 12, 2015 order for lack of such findings
    18 of fact and conclusions of law, and in addition for clarity on the resolution of the
    19 issues relating to jurisdiction. We discourage findings of fact stating what the parties
    16
    1 argue. What the parties argue are not facts that can support conclusions of law. See
    2 Chan v. Montoya, 2011-NMCA-072, ¶ 9, 
    150 N.M. 44
    , 
    256 P.3d 987
    (“It is not our
    3 practice to rely on assertions of counsel unaccompanied by support in the record. The
    4 mere assertions and arguments of counsel are not evidence.” (internal quotation
    5 marks and citation omitted)). The court is instructed to state findings of fact and
    6 conclusions of law that directly and explicitly support the grant or denial of
    7 jurisdiction over: (1) the subject matter of initial child custody under Section 40-10A-
    8 201 of the Act and any grounds to decline to exercise jurisdiction under Section 40-
    9 10A-207(a), including whether another state is a more appropriate forum; and (2) the
    10 subject matter of parentage under the UPA and any effect of that determination on
    11 issues of visitation and custody.
    12   {36}   IT IS SO ORDERED.
    13
    14                                         M. MONICA ZAMORA, Judge
    15 WE CONCUR:
    16
    17 LINDA M. VANZI, Chief Judge
    18
    19 JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge
    17