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FF v. Ee
Christopher Hammond, Cooperstown, for appellant.
Paul J. Connolly, Delmar, for respondent.
Andrea J. Mooney, Ithaca, attorney for the child.
Before: Egan Jr., J.P., Clark, Devine, Pritzker and Colangelo, JJ.
Appeal from an order of the Family Court of Chemung County (Rich Jr., J.), entered March 11, 2019, which, among other things, granted petitioner's application, in a proceeding pursuant to Family Ct Act article 6, to modify a prior order of visitation.
Petitioner (hereinafter the father) and respondent (hereinafter the mother) have been involved in ongoing custody and visitation proceedings regarding their child (born in 2011). In 2012, after the parties separated, they had joint legal custody of the child with primary residence with the mother and weekday parenting time with the father until 2014, when the father was afforded alternate weekends with the child to accommodate his work schedule. In 2017, following a fact-finding hearing, Family Court modified custody and visitation by awarding the mother sole legal and primary physical custody, with supervised parenting time with the father at a parent resource center as the parties could agree, based upon a finding that the father had committed acts of domestic violence against the child and the mother. That order, affirmed by this Court ( Matter of Jillian EE. v. Kane FF., 165 A.D.3d 1407, 86 N.Y.S.3d 262 [2018], lv denied 32 N.Y.3d 912, 93 N.Y.S.3d 258, 117 N.E.3d 817 [2019] ), required the father to engage in domestic violence classes which, upon completion, the court indicated would constitute a change in circumstances so as to permit a petition for additional parenting time. In June 2017, the location of the one-hour supervised visits was moved to a parent resource center in the City of Corning, Steuben County during a set two-hour period on alternate Saturdays.
In December 2017, the father petitioned to modify the June 2017 order to remove the requirement that his visitation be supervised, based primarily upon his completion of anger management counseling. During the pendency of that petition, Family Court temporarily modified the parenting schedule by adding full-day visitation on alternating Saturdays to be supervised by a woman with whom the father had another child (hereinafter the former girlfriend), which took place at the former girlfriend's home. Following a fact-finding hearing in June 2018 and a Lincoln1 hearing, the matter was adjourned several times to accommodate counseling requests. The court issued a decision in November 2018 continuing the existing parenting time schedule, including the requirement that the father's visitation be supervised by the former girlfriend (or an agreed-upon supervisor), but discontinued the requirement that it occur on alternating Saturdays at the Corning resource center. The court declined to award unsupervised visitation citing, among other factors, the father's failure to complete, as court ordered, a domestic violence class, finding that the anger management counseling he completed was inadequate to address the problems that led to the supervision requirement.
In a December 2018 order, Family Court permitted the father to have supervised overnight visitation on alternating weekends and, in the opposite week, on Sundays. The court again ordered the father to attend domestic violence counseling and to provide a report to the court, and adjourned the matter to March 2019. At that appearance and in the ensuing March 11, 2019 order, Family Court, among other things, granted the father's modification petition and awarded him unsupervised parenting time based upon the July 2018 testimony and the non-testimonial representations at that appearance that the supervised visitation was going well.2 The mother appeals.
We agree with the mother's contentions, with which the attorney for the child agrees, that Family Court erred in granting the father unsupervised parenting time.3 In seeking to modify the court's 2017 orders requiring that parenting time be supervised, the father was required to "show a change in circumstances since entry thereof warranting an inquiry into the child's best interests" ( Matter of Ellen TT. v. Parvaz UU., 178 A.D.3d 1294, 1294, 116 N.Y.S.3d 733 [2019] [internal quotation marks and citations omitted] ). In 2017, following a fact-finding hearing, the court modified the preexisting joint legal custody and visitation order by requiring the father's visitation to be supervised, based upon its finding that the father had committed acts of domestic violence against the mother and the child. At that hearing, the mother and the former girlfriend testified to the father's domestic violence, and evidence was submitted documenting bruising found on the child's legs after visitations with the father, factors we noted in affirming the court's order requiring that his parenting time be supervised (Matter of Jillian EE. v. Kane FF., 165 A.D.3d at 1499, 86 N.Y.S.3d 262). At the July 2018 hearing on the father's petition seeking the removal of the supervision condition, the father, the former girlfriend and the parent resource center supervisor testified that the supervised visits were going well and that the father had consistently attended them and engaged with the child. The court recognized the father's "significant efforts" and "positive interaction" during consistent visitations. However, the court found that the father had failed to comply with the court-ordered requirement that he complete domestic violence counseling and that the six anger management counseling sessions were inadequate to satisfy this condition. To that end, the court expressly found that the testimony from the father's anger management counselor that unsupervised visits should resume "lacks credibility" and that his recommendation was "reckless." This conclusion was based upon, among other things, the counselor's failure to speak to the child or the mother or to view the photographs documenting the abuse, the counselor's decision to credit the father's persistent denials that the abuse had occurred notwithstanding the court's finding to the contrary, and the court's take-away that the father had not derived ...
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