Friday, January 25, 2008

Arizona Domestic Relations Committee - Hursh v. Potzka

During my December 4, 2002 hearing for relocation, custody and parenting time, the biological father from a extremely brief encounter, (Ted Potzka), requested joint custody. This is a man who I had not seen from the time I was 11 weeks pregnant in Oct. 1999, until the court ordered hearing to establish child support in March of 2001. Up to that point, he was a virtual stranger to me, and to my child. I had been sole custodian since my son's birth in April of 2000, over 2-3/4 years. The Judge (Maria del Mar Verdin) applied a "presumption of joint custody" and granted the father's request going against the dispute assessment report that she herself had ordered. The report stated I should retain sole custody and be allowed to relocate.

Most experts agree that legal presumptions creating a "one size fits all" custody solution are inappropriate and are harmful to children in many cases. Custodial arrangements must be tailored to the specific needs and circumstances of parents and children in individual cases.Past rulings related to joint legal custody in Maryland do not support a rebuttable presumtion for joint legal custody. In fact, they emphatically oppose it. In Taylor v. Taylor [306 MD.290] (1986) the court ruled as follows:

"Questions of whether to award joint custody is not considered in a vacuum but as part of an overall consideration of a custody dispute.Blind hope that a joint custody agreement will succeed, or that forcing the responsibility of joint decision making upon warring parents will bring peace, is not acceptable, when determining whether to grant joint custody.Generally, parents should be willing to undertake joint custody or it should not be ordered."

I had joint custody with my ex-husband and it worked wonderfully. Joint custody was chosen by us, not forced upon us. He left the parenting to me, so it was joint custody basically in name only and, he allowed me, as primary residential parent, to make all day to day decisions involved in raising a child, without interference, unlike Mr. Potzka. While it worked great for us, it does not work for everyone. My current situation is quite different. Here is a man who,out of revenge for being ordered to pay child support, filed for joint custody. Not out of a desire to be in his child's life, because he was and is certainly entitled to that, but out of a desire to lower his child support and make our life miserable with constant court intervention.What the joint custody ruling has done in my case has been to allow the biological father to continue litigating this matter for the last 5 years taking up tax payer dollars and my limited funds.

Rather than ease tensions between us and allow us each to enjoy our child, joint legal custody has done the opposite, and opened the door for the next issue called "the friendly parent rule". i.e., ARS statute 25-403(A)(6) and (D) (1 and 2).Margaret K. Dore an attorney in Washington State, published the following in the Washington State Bar Association, Family Law Section Newsletter, Fall 2001, Entitled, "The Friendly Parent Rule, Anything but Friendly.

'"Under the friendly parent concept, primary custody is awarded to the parent most likely to foster the child's relationship with the other parent, i.e., the "friendly parent". The parent not awarded custody is thereby determined to be less friendly or "unfriendly""."In practice, trial courts use friendly parent provisions to punish parents for perceived "bad behavior", i.e., making allegations about the other parent, withholding access to the child or being uncooperative. Parents who engage in such conduct are in effect punished with loss of custody. The interests of the child are rendered secondary."

In my case, the parent that has never been invovled in the day to day care of the minor child, wasn't around for the first entire year of the child's life, and spent very limited time with him during the second year of his life (all while attempting to harass me into lowering his child support, even offering to go away if I would do so) is now given the opportunity to attempt to take away our child from the parent that has been this child's primary caretaker and nurterer for nearly 8 years. The father has tried to become sole custodian and has attempted this twice now, just recently "losing" again a week ago (2008). The friendly parend concept rewards manipulative litigation tactics, which his latest attorney attempted to use, however, she should have known better than to attempt these nasty tactics.

Now, three recent Court of Appeals decisions have clearly rejected the friendly parent concept: Custody of Nunn, 103 Wn. App. 871, 14 P.3d 175 (2000) (reversible error to find the mother unfit due to her failure to foster a good relationship between the child and the deceased father's family). Lawrence v. Lawrence, 105 Wn. App. 683, 20 P.3d 972 (2001), and In Re Parentage of Schroeder ___ Wn. App. ____, 22 P.3d 1281 (2001). Indeed, Lawrence expressly holds that "use of the friendly parent concept in a custody determination would be an abuse of discretion." Lawrence, 20 P.3d at 974. Lawrence is the first reported decision in the United States and Canada to both identify the concept by name, and reject it.A similar holding is found in Schuster v. Schuster, 90 Wn.2d 626, 630, 585 P.2d 130 (1978) ("custody of the child is not to be used as a reward or punishment for the conduct of the parents").

Approximately 25 years ago, unwed fathers had no legal rights but now claim the same rights as wed fathers. The pendulum has swung so far in the opposite direction, that children are being uprooted from their one stable home environment, all for the best interests of the non-custodial parent, who is typically the father. Father's rights have crept into what should be "best interests of the child". Splitting a child in two like a piece of property is not looking out for our children's best interests...its looking out for father's rights and their best interests. The politics of adult rights has no business injecting itself into this issue as a compelling consideration to the interests of a child.

I believe Arizona Family Court Judges, evaluators and parenting coordinators should be required to read "The Custody Wars: Why Children are Losing the Legal Battle and What We Can Do About It" by Mary Ann Mason, Ph.D., JD, NY, Basic Books, 1999. The People making life altering decisions should be trained to take each contested custody case on a case-by-case basis and not force joint custody on every single parent, or divorcing parents. You cannot lump together all custody determinations believing that every family is a cookie cutter situation, and that joint custody is a workable solution for every family that steps through the courthouse doors. It lacks stability and consistency. Young children form a sense of identity from their family base and, notwithstanding the fiction, joint custody does not give the child a "whole family", nor does it approximate a two-parent intact home. The child, in fact, is central and permanent to no home, which only reinforces the trauma of the divorce or other split. It would be far better for the child to have one stable, one-parent "intact" home and for the other parent to visit in a complimentary way, rather than create the conflict of a competing "home."

The friendly parent rule needs to be abolished here in Arizona so attorneys and vengeful parties stop attempting to use it. It is putting custodial parents, typically the mothers, in jeopardy by punishing the parent rather than meeting the needs of the child. It is being improperly used by fathers, judges and custody evaluators (as in my case with Dr. Marlene Joy of Scottsdale). They are emotionally and financially draining the custodial parent and destabilizing children's lives all under the guise of "best interests of the child".

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Interesting viewpoint on the "friendly parent" provision. Never heard of anyone using it to try and change custody.

Also interesting viewpoint on the presumption of joint custody. Something for you to think about, however. The lack of a presumption is more troublesome than the presence of one, for the following reason: it enables a badly behaved parent to strip the other parent (usually the father, here in Arizona), of their participation in the life of their child.

That participation is a right, not a privilege. In cases such as you describe, where the other parent is unfit, it is usually fairly easy to demonstrate.

From what I've seen, the presumption of joint custody will eliminate litigation in situations where the parents both want to participate.

Your belief that a father wishes to have presumption of joint parenting so as to reduce their child support is disingenuous and cynical. In my divorce case, I simply wanted my children (hers and mine) 1/2 time, so I could continue to be a significant part of their lives. It had nothing to do with child support. At the time, I didn't even know how child support was calculated, let alone that having parenting time would reduce it for me. Under existing Arizona statute, all my ex-wife had to do was "disagree" with my request for equal parenting time. That, my friend, was unacceptable, and remains so to this day, and I was determined to be an entirely fit, and capable parent.

Anonymous said...

Ursula:

I am Timothy. I've been reading through your frustration regarding custody evaluations.

My divorce case was the exact mirror or your custody case, except the mother was the pain in the side litigant. No settlement, no good faith, just a knock down, drag out, never ending fight, finally leading to the assignment of a custody evaluator (Dr. David McPhee).

After that experience, I've come to the realization that the court system has gone way to far outside of its intended authority. They are now attempting to determine the "quality" of a parent, and delegating that task to folks such as Dr. Joy, or Dr. McPhee.

As the custody evaluator then resides outside of the scope of evidence, without cross-examination, and considered to be the "last word", as you know, the battle then becomes "convincing the custody evaluator that I am right, and the other parent is a bozo." Do I have that right?

So, I've come to realize that there really is no place for these folks in the court room. The judge should listen politely to both sides, and decide according to statute. If a parent cannot produce evidence of unfitness of the other parent, then there is no unfitness. A specially enthroned, legally untouchable, professional (very expensive) psychologist, has no place in the court room.

I am of the opinion that the State should mandate, by statute, that a custody evaluation is required only in a case were domestic violence is proven, and if proven, that person can then determine a parenting time plan for the guilty party. Outside of that duty, these people should be deleted from our court system.

I've been seeking support for this concept of restoring the judge to be the final decision maker, and eliminating the enabling of the custody evaluator (read this as the judge shirking their responsibility), and in turn eliminating the custody evaluator from nearly all custody determinations.

Can I have your support on that point? Would you be willing to work with me to see that this concept is implemented in statute?

I can be reached at email address timothy.frank@toast.net.

Good luck, Ursula (your name is on your letter to Dr. McPhee, otherwise I'd have to call you Ms. Hursh), and let me know if you think we might be able to work together.

I am a member of one organized lobby group here in Arizona (Arizona Father's Rights), and an informat legislative lobby group. Please don't let that put you off, Arizona Father's Rights, in fact, is rather generic; we try to help all, man or woman, through the insanity of the current system.

Timothy Frank

Mike Steel said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Eddie Gomez said...

The crazy old whore and complete asshole of a mother with the big mouth lost her kid to the biological father because the court ruled that the mother is a mentally ill unfit parent.....go figure after reading all of her mindless drivel posted on the net. At least the boy is with a mentally stable loving parent now. I hope the crazy sociopath mother got a long needed stay in an insane asylum, is now more couch time, and has had her meds changed. Now the mom can call me a woman hating alcoholic and a friend of Ted even though I don't drink and don't even know the man. Crazy behavior from an insane woman is to be expected. At least their son is living in a good loving home now with a sane parent.