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Capehart v. Mitchell
Onyema Anene Farrey, Atlanta, for Appellant.
Chad Hill Greer Greer, Denise Danielle VanLanduyt, Decatur, Melinda Cole Pillow, Atlanta, for Appellee.
Christopher Capehart appeals from the trial court's order setting aside a final child custody modification order. As detailed below, the order is not directly appealable under OCGA § 5-6-34 (a) because the case remains pending below and the issues raised in this appeal do not concern child custody. And Capehart did not follow the procedures for an interlocutory appeal set forth in OCGA § 5-6-34 (b). For these reasons, we lack appellate jurisdiction and so we dismiss the appeal. But we deny appellee Mayah Mitchell's request for frivolous appeal sanctions.
This appeal is part of an ongoing child custody dispute between former spouses. Capehart and his former wife, Mayah Mitchell, divorced in April 2014. Immediately thereafter Capehart petitioned to modify the custodial arrangement that had been established in the divorce decree for their two children, who were then both minors1 . In his petition, Capehart alleged that Mayah Mitchell's new husband, Todd Mitchell, had abused one of the children. Capehart also obtained a temporary protective order against Todd Mitchell.
The trial court entered a series of interim consent orders that, among other things, awarded Mayah Mitchell visitation with the children but barred Todd Mitchell from being around them. The first of the interim orders also permitted Todd Mitchell to intervene in the custody modification action.
The modification action progressed, and in late 2016 Capehart and Mayah Mitchell entered into a mediated settlement agreement giving Capehart sole physical custody and control over major decisions regarding the children, giving Mayah Mitchell visitation, and prohibiting the children from being in Mayah Mitchell's house or otherwise around Todd Mitchell. Todd Mitchell did not sign the mediated settlement agreement.
Capehart moved the trial court to make the mediated settlement agreement the order of the court, and on March 28, 2017, the trial court entered an order (hereinafter, "the March 2017 order") adopting that agreement. The March 2017 order modified the earlier custodial arrangement to award Capehart sole legal and physical custody of the children and to give Mayah Mitchell visitation outside Todd Mitchell's presence. The March 2017 order identified Todd Mitchell as an intervening party in the case.
In a February 2019 motion to set aside under OCGA § 9-11-60 (d), as well as in another proceeding not before us today,2 Mayah Mitchell sought relief from the March 2017 order. In the subject motion to set aside, Mayah Mitchel contended that (1) the trial court lacked jurisdiction over Todd Mitchell, who was named as an intervening party in that order, because Todd Mitchell had no standing to intervene in the case; and (2) Todd Mitchell did not sign the mediated settlement agreement that the trial court incorporated into the March 2017 order. On January 16, 2020, the trial court entered the order from which Christopher Capehart now appeals. The trial court granted the motion to set aside the March 2017 order on the ground that Todd Mitchell lacked standing in and so was not a proper party to the 2014 custody modification action.
In both her appellate brief and a motion to dismiss, Mayah Mitchell argues that we lack jurisdiction over this appeal. She is correct.
Capehart brought this case as a direct appeal. But the effect of the order on appeal, which sets aside the March 2017 order, is that the case remains pending below because the trial court now must enter a new ruling on Capehart's 2014 petition to modify custody. See Epstiner v. Spears , 340 Ga. App. 199, 202 (1), 796 S.E.2d 919 (2017) (). So the order on appeal is interlocutory. Consequently, to obtain appellate review Capehart was required to follow the interlocutory appeal procedures set out in OCGA § 5-6-34 (b) unless this ruling fell within one of the categories of rulings subject to direct appeal under OCGA § 5-6-34 (a).
Capehart argues that this ruling falls under OCGA § 5-6-34 (a) (11), which permits direct appellate review of "[a]ll judgments or orders in child custody cases awarding, refusing to change, or modifying child custody or holding or declining to hold persons in contempt of such child custody judgment or orders[.]" But our Supreme Court held in Voyles v. Voyles , 301 Ga. 44, 799 S.E.2d 160 (2017), that a judgment or order is not directly appealable under OCGA § 5-6-34 (a) (11) unless the case also involves "custody [as] an issue on appeal." Id. at 47, 799 S.E.2d 160. The Court in Voyles held that an appeal from the denial of a motion to set aside an order that, among other things, denied a father's request to modify custody, was not directly appealable under OCGA § 5-6-34 (a) (11) because the appellant did not "directly challenge[ ] on appeal the court's substantive ruling refusing to change custody." Voyles , 301 Ga. at 47, 799 S.E.2d 160. Instead, the father in Voyles sought to set...
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