921 N.E.2d 127
No. 08-P-1762.Appeals Court of Massachusetts. Plymouth.October 8, 2009.
February 11, 2010.
Present: RAPOZA, C.J., DUFFLY, CYPHER, JJ.
Divorce and Separation, Child custody, Modification of judgment. Minor, Custody. Parent and Child, Custody.
A probate judge hearing a complaint for modification of a divorce judgment, in which a mother sought permission to remove the parties’ four children from Massachusetts to New Hampshire, properly denied the father’s motion to dismiss, brought on the ground that mother’s complaint failed specifically to reference G.L. c. 208, § 30, the statute governing removal from the Commonwealth of children of divorced parents, where the complaint stated clearly that the mother was requesting permission to remove the children from the Commonwealth, and the judge could thus properly treat the complaint as one seeking relief under § 30. [257-259]
In proceedings arising from a complaint for modification of a divorce judgment, in which a mother sought permission to remove the parties’ four children from Massachusetts to New Hampshire, the judge’s findings amply supported her conclusions that the mother had established good, sincere reasons for wanting to remove to New Hampshire (despite the mother’s place of employment remaining in Massachusetts) and that the collective interests of the father, the mother, and the children supported removal of the children from the Commonwealth. [259-262]
COMPLAINT for divorce filed in the Plymouth Division of the Probate and Family Court Department on November 14, 2003.
A complaint for modification, filed on June 21, 2005, and a motion to dismiss, filed on December 27, 2005, were heard by Lisa A. Roberts, J.
David P. Sorrenti for the father.
Penny Nasios for the mother.
DUFFLY, J.
Within days of the entry of a judgment of divorce nisi, Suzanne Hope Tammaro (the mother) filed a complaint for modification in which she sought to modify the divorce judgment to permit removal of the parties’ four children from Massachusetts
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to New Hampshire. The trial judge granted the requested relief after a trial, and the defendant father, Kevin Francis O’Brien, appeals. We affirm.
Background facts and proceedings. By a judgment of divorce nisi, entered on June 15, 2005, the parties were ordered to comply with the terms of a separation agreement of the same date which provided that the mother was to have physical custody of the four minor children; the parties were to share legal custody.[1] The agreement and judgment set out a “comprehensive physical parenting plan” and also provided for the appointment of a parenting coordinator to assist the parties in resolving parenting issues.[2] On June 21, 2005, the mother filed the within complaint for modification.[3]
At the time of the divorce and the filing of the mother’s complaint for modification, both parties resided in Brockton, about three miles apart. The mother lived in an apartment with the
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children while the father resided in the former marital home. The mother, a consultant in the health care industry, had worked from home since the birth of the triplets and had several clients, including Holy Family Hospital in Methuen (part of Caritas Christi Health Care [Caritas]) and other hospitals located north and west of Boston and in New Hampshire. Although the mother’s work as a consultant provided her with flexibility in dealing with the children’s schedules, she at times was required to work early morning or late evening hours to complete her work. As a consultant, the mother also had no paid sick or vacation time, health insurance, or retirement benefits.
The father’s job as a scout with a major league baseball team required that he travel extensively throughout the country between February and late September or October each year. The father also owns a business through which he organizes, markets, and runs youth baseball and basketball camps during his off-season at different locations in Massachusetts.
In early 2005, several months before the parties’ divorce, the mother began discussions with an executive at Caritas concerning the possibility of full-time employment at Holy Family Hospital. At the same time, she began to search for a suitable house to buy north or west of Boston, in which to reside with the children after the divorce. She sought a house that would be within reasonable commuting distance from Methuen, which she considered an “appropriate area” whether she continued her consulting work or worked full time at Holy Family Hospital.[4] The mother testified, credibly the judge found, that she was unable to find a house that met her criteria, including price, despite searching in numerous towns in the Methuen area.
In early April, 2005, the mother saw an advertisement for houses being built in Deny, New Hampshire, that met her criteria. After viewing the site and a model home, and conducting additional research concerning schools and public safety in the area, she signed a purchase and sale agreement on April 7 for a house in the construction stage. Shortly thereafter, the mother informed
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the father that she was considering the purchase of a new house just over the border in New Hampshire. The father informed her that he would not consent to having the children removed from Massachusetts.[5]
On June 3, 2005, the mother was offered a lucrative position, with full benefits, as vice-president for systems communications for Caritas and director of communications for Holy Family Hospital. Although the mother knew that she would be accepting the employment offer from Caritas prior to the time she signed the divorce agreement on June 15, 2005, she did not formally accept the offer until June 27, 2005. Since July, 2005, the mother’s primary work site has been in Methuen. However, her other responsibilities with Caritas require her to oversee hospitals in Brockton and Fall River.
On these facts, and others we shall discuss, the judge allowed the mother to remove the children from Massachusetts to Derry, New Hampshire.
Discussion. The father argues that the judge (1) lacked the authority to permit removal of the children on a complaint for modification and thus should have granted his motion to dismiss; and (2) failed to fully and fairly weigh the factors for removal. See Yannas v Frondistou-Yannas, 395 Mass. 704, 710-712 (1985).[6]
1. Motion to dismiss. Prior to trial, the father moved, unsuccessfully, to dismiss the mother’s complaint on the ground that the mother had filed a complaint for modification under G.L. c. 208, § 28, as amended by St. 1985, c. 490, § 1 (which requires a showing of a “material and substantial change” in circumstances),
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rather than a complaint for removal under G.L. c. 208, § 30 (which allows removal of children out of the Commonwealth “upon cause shown” and implicates the so-called “real advantage” standard [see note 9, infra]). The father argues that because the complaint for modification failed specifically to reference G.L. c. 208, § 30, the judge was without authority to grant removal.
“The removal from the Commonwealth of children of divorced parents is governed generally by G.L. c. 208, § 30.” Pizzino v. Miller, 67 Mass. App. Ct. 865, 869 (2006). See Rosenthal v. Maney, 51 Mass. App. Ct. 257, 265 (2001). It has long been held that the court’s authority to prohibit or permit removal of children from the Commonwealth by a parent, whether or not divorced, may be found in statutes generally granting our courts the authority to decide the welfare of children. See, e.g., Briggs v. Briggs, 319 Mass. 149, 153
(1946) (noting that “the judge had the power under G. L. [Ter. Ed.] c. 209, § 37 [care and custody of children of separated parents], and c. 208, § 30, to insert a provision in the original decree prohibiting the removal of the son from the Commonwealth without the consent of his father or the court”), citing Marshall v. Marshall, 236 Mass. 248
(1920), and Gallup v. Gallup, 271 Mass. 252 (1930). See also, e.g. Welker v. Welker, 325 Mass. 738, 744, 746 (1950) (Superior Court’s jurisdiction to permit or prohibit removal of child from Commonwealth is found in G. L. [Ter. Ed.] c. 208, § 28, and G. L. [Ter. Ed.] c. 209, § 37). As these early decisions reflect, whether the issue is custody or removal of children, resolution of either requires a judge to determine the interests and well-being of the children.
Numerous decisions reflect that removal cases in Massachusetts have been initiated through complaints for modification. See, e.g., Hersey v Hersey, 271 Mass. 545, 547 (1930); Mason v. Coleman, 447 Mass. 177, 180-181
(2006); Pizzino v. Miller, supra at 867. Although “a request for modification of custody is distinct from a request to relocate,”Rosenthal v. Maney, supra at 261, the issues are closely related. Where removal is sought, a judge will be called upon to consider the children’s well-being in light of any change in visitation that might result if a move to a distant location is permitted. As long as the complaint for modification provides notice to the opposing party of the relief sought,
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it is an appropriate vehicle for requesting removal of children from Massachusetts.
The father’s motion to dismiss was properly denied. Although the complaint here does not specifically invoke G.L. c. 208, § 30, it states clearly that the mother was requesting permission to remove the children from the Commonwealth.[7] The judge could properly treat the complaint as one seeking relief under § 30. Compare Usen v. Usen, 359 Mass. 453, 454
(1971). Cf. Randall v. Randall, 17 Mass. App. Ct. 24, 28 n. 4 (1983).[8]
2. The Yannas factors. The standard governing the removal of children from the Commonwealth is set out in Yannas v. Frondistou-Yannas, 395 Mass. at 710-712.[9] See Rosenthal v. Maney, 51 Mass. App. Ct. at 265-272; Wakefield v. Hegarty, 67 Mass. App. Ct. 772, 775-778 (2006). To the extent the father argues that the mother failed to articulate a “good, sincere reason for wanting to remove to another jurisdiction,” Yannas v. Frondistou-Yannas, supra at 711, and that the court’s subsidiary findings fail to support such a reason, we disagree.
The judge found specifically that the mother had demonstrated good, sincere reasons for the proposed move to Deny. The mother’s new employment position, which the judge found
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presented a “positive change” for the mother “professionally and financially,” has a primary work site in Methuen, which is at least ninety minutes (or more) from Brockton. “Although[, the judge found,] it is not inconceivable that [the m]other could find suitable housing close in the Methuen MA area that meets all of her [housing] criteria and is in her price range,” the judge specifically found that “she has made a sincere, and good faith, albeit unsuccessful, effort to do so.”[10] In the judge’s view:
“The move [the mother] proposes to the Derry House, approximately 10 miles over the border in New Hampshire, is not unreasonable, and has a `real advantage’ for her. The reduction in [the m]other’s commuting time from home to work [will] reduce her stress, and enable her to plan her work time more efficiently. It will permit her to spend more time with the children before they go to school, to be more easily accessible to meet the needs of the children that arise during the workday, and, by permitting her to perform more of her work at work, will create more time for her with the children in the evening.”
The judge rejected expressly the father’s position, advanced at trial, that the mother’s goal in planning the move was motivated by a desire to limit or deprive the father of contact with the children. The judge also noted that Derry was not substantially farther from Brockton than other towns within Massachusetts to which the father had suggested the mother might consider moving.[11]
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There was no error in the judge’s finding that the mother had established good, sincere reasons for wanting to remove to New Hampshire. That the mother’s place of employment remains in Massachusetts does not, in the circumstances, require a different result.
Having determined that the mother had established a good reason for the proposed move, the judge, in deciding the best interests of the children, considered collectively the interests of the father, the mother, and the children. While it is true, as the father asserts, that the judge considered at length the interests of the mother in the removal, she did not ignore the interests of the children or the father. The judge stated that she “ha[d] considered the effect of the proposed move on the emotional, physical, and developmental needs of the children, including whether the quality of the children’s lives may be improved by the change (including any improvement flowing from an improvement in the quality of [the m]other’s life).” Among other things, the judge noted that the proposed move to Derry would put the children in a new home on a one-acre lot in a quiet neighborhood, close to a new elementary school. In addition, the judge found that “[h]aving their primary care parent so much closer to home and school — approximately 20 minutes rather than approximately 90 minutes — will be beneficial for the children, as well as for the [the m]other.” The judge also took into account continuing visitation by the father with the children.[12] The court’s findings amply support its judgment permitting the mother
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to remove the children from the Commonwealth to Deny, New Hampshire.[13] ,[14]
Judgment affirmed.
In his brief, the father represents that, after the children were removed to New Hampshire, the divorce judgment was modified to grant him shared legal and physical custody of the children. See Braun v. Braun, 68 Mass. App. Ct. 846, 853-854 (2007) (discussing the obligations of parties to keep this court apprised of subsequent orders that may affect issues pending on an appeal). We have reviewed the judge’s decision, dated August 14, 2007, contained in the parties’ appendix to a related appeal, see Tammaro v. O’Brien, 75 Mass. App. Ct. 1115 (2009), and note that, as to the father’s requested change in physical custody, the judge there found: “Since the parties’ divorce, the children have resided primarily with [the m]other . . . . The Court declines to change the physical custody arrangement.”
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