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Rustad v. Baumgartner
Joshua Nyberg, Fargo, ND, for plaintiff, appellant, and cross-appellee.
Jennifer M. Gooss, Beulah, ND, for defendant, appellee, and cross-appellant.
[¶1] Trevor Rustad appealed from an amended judgment modifying a previous parenting plan. Mary Baumgartner cross-appealed from an order denying her motion to modify parenting time. We affirm.
[¶2] The parties to this action have two minor children together, L.J.B., born in 2017, and L.B.R., born in 2015. The district court awarded primary residential responsibility to Baumgartner and parenting time to Rustad. The court’s parenting plan provided:
[¶3] In Rustad v. Baumgartner , 2018 ND 268, ¶ 10, 920 N.W.2d 465, we remanded for the district court to reconsider the parenting plan. We concluded there was no evidence in the record indicating that giving Rustad more parenting time would physically or emotionally harm the children. Id. at ¶ 9. To the contrary, we noted the district court "affirmatively found the absence of such risks" and concluded the parenting time schedule could not reasonably be expected to maintain a parent-child relationship between Rustad and the children. Id. at ¶ 10. We stated, "The court’s highly restrictive weekend visitation is compounded by its failure to grant extended summer visitation, which it left to Baumgartner’s discretion." Id. at ¶ 9.
[¶4] On remand the district court did not modify section a of the parenting plan. The court did modify section b to provide:
Once the children are three (3) years old, Trevor shall have parenting time every other weekend from Thursday at 6:00 p.m. until Sunday at 4:00pm. Trevor shall exercise his parenting time wherever Trevor deems appropriate.
Because of the change to section b, the court removed section c of the original parenting plan. The court also awarded Rustad additional summer parenting time:
[¶5] After the district court issued its amended parenting plan, both parties moved the court for reconsideration. Additionally, Baumgartner made a motion to modify parenting time and requested an evidentiary hearing. Baumgartner argued the amended parenting plan was not in the best interests of the children because it would require them to miss a day of school every other week when Rustad exercised his parenting time. Baumgartner contended the children reaching school age constituted a material change in circumstances not considered by the district court. After holding a hearing, the district court determined Baumgartner failed to establish a material change in circumstances had occurred and denied her motion.
[¶6] Rustad argues the district court did not adhere to this Court’s mandate on remand. Rustad’s argument involves the law of the case doctrine and, more specifically, the mandate rule.
Generally, the law of the case is defined as the principle that if an appellate court has passed on a legal question and remanded the case to the court below for further proceedings, the legal question thus determined by the appellate court will not be differently determined on a subsequent appeal in the same case where the facts remain the same. In other words, the law of the case doctrine applies when an appellate court has decided a legal question and remanded to the district court for further proceedings, and a party cannot on a second appeal relitigate issues which were resolved by the Court in the first appeal or which would have been resolved had they been properly presented in the first appeal. The mandate rule, a more specific application of law of the case, requires the trial court to follow pronouncements of an appellate court on legal issues in subsequent proceedings of the case and to carry the appellate court’s mandate into effect according to its terms.... and we retain the authority to decide whether the district court scrupulously and fully carried out our mandate’s terms.
Carlson v. Workforce Safety & Ins. , 2012 ND 203, ¶ 16, 821 N.W.2d 760 (citations and quotations omitted).
[¶7] We remanded the case for the district court to reconsider its parenting plan, specifically addressing Rustad’s weekend and summer parenting time. On remand the district court awarded Rustad two more days of additional parenting time every other weekend, and allowed Rustad to exercise his weekend parenting time outside of Glasgow, MT. The district court also awarded Rustad two weeks of summer parenting time until the children begin school, and six weeks of summer parenting time after the children begin school. The amended parenting plan provides Rustad considerably more parenting time and more flexibility in exercising his parenting time than the original parenting plan. The district court carried out the terms of our mandate.
[¶8] Baumgartner argues the district court erred in denying her motion to modify the parenting plan because a material change in circumstances had occurred since we remanded to the district court. We have explained our standard for reviewing a district court’s decision to modify parenting time:
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