DOLORES J. ENTRESS,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
KEVIN M. ENTRESS,
Defendant-Respondent.
DOLORES J. ENTRESS,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
KEVIN M. ENTRESS,
Defendant-Respondent.
Submitted February 7, 2005 Decided March 22, 2005
Before Judges Petrella, Lintner and Parker.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
Jersey, Chancery Division, Family Part,
Atlantic County, FM-01-898-02.
Adinolfi and Spevak, attorneys for
appellant (Nan S. Famular, of counsel;
Dawn Stern, on the brief).
Mairone, Biel, Zlotnick & Feinberg,
attorneys for respondent (Mark Biel, of
counsel; Jacqueline M. Hawkins, on the
brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
PARKER, J.A.D.
In these consolidated cases, plaintiff appeals from five post-judgment orders entered by the
Family Part in Atlantic County. The orders, entered on October 6, 2003, January
9, January 30, February 4 and April 8, 2004, reflect an escalating dispute
between the parties regarding custody and visitation, culminating in the April 8, 2004
order, summarily changing custody from plaintiff to defendant. We reverse all five orders
and remand for a plenary hearing.
The parties were married on April 12, 1992 and had two children, Keenan,
born August 24, 1993, and Jarret, born November 24, 1997. A final judgment
of divorce was entered on June 16, 2003, to which a transcript of
proceedings of January 13, 2003, was appended. The transcript recorded the parties property
settlement agreement that was placed on the record but never reduced to a
formal written agreement.
See footnote 1
In the transcript of the January 13, 2003 proceeding, defendants attorney placed on
the record the terms and conditions of the agreement, including custody and parenting
provisions. Plaintiff was designated the parent of primary residential custody and defendant was
to have parenting time on alternate weekends as per the times set forth
in the pendente lite order which, for the record, begin at [8:30 a.m.]
. . . on Saturday . . . . [to 7:00 p.m.] .
. . on Sundays. The record indicates that defendant also had the children
on Wednesday nights.
In September 2003, barely three months after the judgment of divorce was entered,
defendant moved to extend his parenting time. In an order entered on October
6, 2003, the judge granted defendants motion and appointed Dov Hammer, Psy.D., as
an expert
to conduct a custody evaluation and to identify the emotional & psychological needs
of each child; assess the abilities of each party to provide for and
meet those needs; and to recommend a Parenting Plan, as described in Rule
5:8-5, designed to best insure that the childrens needs will be met. In
addition to or as part of the investigation described below, the expert shall
(a) review the pleadings and other documents on file with the court or
submitted by either party in this matter; and (b) interview the parties and
the children, if of appropriate age, whose custody is the subject of this
litigation.
The order further provided:
If the Plaintiff fails to comply with the Courts Orders regarding Dr. Hammer,
by failing to make or attend scheduled appointments, or by failing in any
fashion to cooperate in good faith with the evaluation process, the Court will
entertain a motion, on short notice, to place a hold on her support
payments.
Finally, the order modified defendants parenting time, allowing him to begin his weekend
visits at 7:00 p.m. on Fridays, rather than 8:30 a.m. on Saturdays. This
order modifying the parties agreement was entered in the absence of an evidentiary
hearing.
In December 2003, defendant moved to enforce the October 6 order,
See footnote 2
and on
January 9, 2004, an order was entered finding plaintiff in violation of the
October 6 order. The court awarded counsel fees to defendant in the amount
of $3,110 and reduced defendants support obligation by half as a sanction against
plaintiff, based on the judges determination that plaintiff violated the October 6 order.
The January 9 order further directed plaintiff to appear on January 30, 2004
and show cause why future support payments should not be reduced or suspended
until she has complied with the existing court orders. Plaintiff was not present
for the January 9, 2004 proceeding and the order modifying support and assessing
sanctions was entered in the absence of an evidentiary hearing.
On January 30, 2004, defendant and his attorney were back in court but,
again, plaintiff was not present and nothing in the record indicates that plaintiff
ever received timely notice of the January 30 proceeding.
On January 17, 2004, Dr. Hammer had written a letter to the judge
complaining that he had been frustrated by the inability to reach Mrs. Entress
and/or secure appointments with her once contact is initiated. He further indicated that,
[e]ssentially, Mrs. Entress appears to be either confused by current circumstances or deliberately
oppositional to Court orders, instruction and/or the evaluative process but noted that he
was not yet in a position to assess whether or not the above-described
confusion is deliberate. In a letter dated January 27, 2004, the trial judge
wrote to plaintiff and defendants counsel, stating:
In review of Dr. Hammers letter, I have decided to require Ms. Entress,
the plaintiff, to show cause, on January 30th, 2004 at 9:00 a.m., or
as soon thereafter as the case may be reached, why the Court should
not enter an Order consistent with Dr. Hammers recommendations.
Nothing in the record indicates that plaintiff actually received the January 27 letter
in time to appear on January 30. Nevertheless, on January 30, solely on
the basis of Dr. Hammers unsworn, uncross-examined statements in his January 17 letter,
the trial judge again modified the parenting schedule in favor of defendant, continued
the fifty-percent reduction in support as a sanction against plaintiff and appointed Dr.
Janice Colton as the childrens therapist. The order stated, Until further Order of
the Court, any monies deducted for support [by the Probation Department] shall not
be disbursed to Plaintiff and shall be withheld pending further Order of this
Court. This order, too, was entered without an evidentiary hearing.
On February 4, 2004, the judge entered another order based on the unsworn,
uncross-examined statements of Dr. Hammer, who represented that the childrens therapist, Dr. Colton,
reported that the children had not been appearing consistently for their therapy sessions.
Without an evidentiary hearing or even a direct communication from Dr. Colton, the
court adopted Dr. Hammers statements as true and ordered defendant to pick up
the children from school and transport them to their therapy sessions.
On March 15, 2004, plaintiff filed a notice of appeal for the orders
entered on October 6, 2003, January 9, January 30 and February 4, 2004.
Notwithstanding the pending appeal, and again without an evidentiary hearing, on April 8,
2004, the court proceeded sua sponte to implement Dr. Hammers recommendations submitted in
a letter dated March 22, 2004 to transfer temporary custody of the children
to the Defendant so [Dr. Hammers] custody evaluation can be completed and the
childrens Court-ordered therapy can be implemented.
See footnote 3
Included in the April 8, 2004 order
was a provision stating:
The trial Court will retain jurisdiction to enforce the Final Judgment in this
case during the pending appeal for the reasons stated on the record. The
Court considers todays proceeding and this order to be in the nature of
enforcement and within the exception contained in Rule 2:9-1 which allow[s] the Court
to fashion enforcement remedies, including specifically those listed in Rule 5:3-7.
The judge stated on the record that he has found several times that
the plaintiff has deliberately frustrated the defendants rights and denied the children their
right to have a relationship with their father, and to have frequent and
continuing contact with them, as is their right under the statute.
See footnote 4
On April 16, plaintiff filed a motion for leave to appeal the April
8 order. The motion was granted and that appeal was consolidated with the
initial appeal. Plaintiff argues that (1) the trial court erred in changing custody
without the benefit of a trial or plenary hearing; and (2) the trial
court lacked authority pursuant to R. 2:9-1 to enter the April 8, 2004
order.
We are dismayed by the record before us beginning with the June 16,
2003 judgment of divorce which incorporated a transcript of the parties agreement, through
the April 8, 2004 order summarily changing custody without a plenary hearing. We
are not unsympathetic to Family Part judges who are frustrated by parties failing
to comply with court orders. Nevertheless, the entry of five post-judgment orders that
substantially modified the parties agreement in the absence of an evidentiary hearing and
based, in part, on unsworn letters from a frustrated therapist, is clearly and
unequivocally reversible error.
It is obvious from the record before us that the parties had a
stormy parting. Just prior to the January 13, 2003 proceeding in which the
terms of the settlement agreement were placed on the record, defendant sought and
obtained a domestic violence temporary restraining order against plaintiff. He agreed to dismiss
that restraining order as part of the settlement agreement. The parties stormy pre-judgment
relationship should have been a red flag to the court and counsel, all
of whom should have insisted that the terms and conditions of the property
settlement agreement were reduced to writing and clearly understood by each of the
parties. In our view, the post-judgment acrimony was exacerbated by the absence of
a written agreement. Defendant was apparently satisfied with visitation from 8:30 a.m. on
Saturday morning to 7:00 p.m. on Sunday evening when the agreement was placed
on the record by his attorney. Within three months, however, he was back
in court seeking to expand that time.
We have repeatedly held that changes in custody are not to be made
without a plenary hearing, absent exigent circumstances. Clearly, the frustration of a psychologist
is not an exigent circumstance, nor is an unsworn uncross-examined letter from the
psychologist a basis for changing custody. See, e.g., Mackowski v. Mackowski,
317 N.J.
Super. 8, 11 (App. Div. 1998) (holding that failure to conduct a plenary
hearing and to interview a child regarding change in custody was inconsistent with
R. 5:8-6 and our previous decisions); G.C. v. M.Y.,
278 N.J. Super. 363,
368 (App. Div. 1995) (holding that it was improper to change custody on
an emergent basis without a plenary hearing and interview with the children in
the absence of imminent or threatened harm to the children); Lavene v. Lavene,
148 N.J. Super. 267, 273 (App. Div.) (holding that the lack of adequate
findings by the trial judge with respect to the custody award requires remand
as to the issue), certif. denied,
75 N.J. 28 (1977)
In an abundance of caution, we direct that this matter be remanded to
a different judge for the plenary hearing to avoid the appearance of bias
or prejudice based upon the judges prior involvement with the matter and his
expressions of frustration with plaintiff.
Plaintiff argues that the April 8 proceeding was in violation of R. 2:9-1
which deprives the trial court of jurisdiction after a notice of appeal is
filed, except for enforcement of orders pursuant to R. 1:10. Given the nature
of the appeal, the judge should have refrained from proceeding on April 8,
particularly where (1) plaintiff was not present on January 9 or January 30
and there was no clear indication that she had received timely notice of
the January 30 proceeding;
See footnote 5
and (2) the court ordered the April 8 proceeding
sua sponte on the basis of Dr. Hammers March 22 letter. The judge
lacked authority to schedule the April 8 proceeding sua sponte, solely on the
basis of Dr. Hammers unsworn, uncross-examined letter.
With respect to the judgment, we have expressly held that the entry of
a judgment appending a transcript purportedly addressing the orders provisions is a violation
of R. 4:42-1(a)(4), which requires a separate numbered paragraph for each separate substantive
provision of the judgment or order. J.S. v. D.M.,
285 N.J. Super. 498,
500 (App. Div. 1995). It is a disservice to the litigants, as well
as the court, for a trial judge to enter a judgment of divorce
appending a transcript of an agreement placed on the record. Recorded proceedings frequently
suffer transcription errors. See, e.g., State v. Cohen,
73 N.J. 331, 344 (1977).
By requiring the parties to reduce their agreement to writing, and thereby clarify
the terms and conditions, we will assure that such errors will not occur
and that both parties will fully understand and assent to the agreement they
are entering. In lieu of a judgment stating all of the substantive provisions
in numbered paragraphs, a properly drafted and executed written settlement agreement satisfies the
R. 4:42-1(a)(4) requirement and may be incorporated into a judgment of divorce.
Family Part judges must refrain from entering judgments and orders appending transcripts that
purport to set forth the terms and conditions of the parties agreement. We
refer this issue to the Family Practice Committee to consider a rule prohibiting
the practice and establishing the proper form of a judgment of divorce.
Reversed and remanded.
See footnote 6
Footnote: 1
We strongly disapprove of the practice of appending transcripts in which the
parties verbally state their assent to property settlement agreements placed on the record
by their attorneys. This practice is fraught with ambiguities and inconsistencies that often
result in extensive and acrimonious post-judgment proceedings. We address this practice further in
this opinion.
Footnote: 2
A different Family Part judge addressed holiday visitation during December, but that
order is not before us on appeal.
Footnote: 3
The April 8 proceeding was apparently scheduled sua sponte, by virtue of
a letter dated April 1 from the judge to counsel, enclosing Dr. Hammers
March 22 letter stating that he had been unable to complete his evaluation.
Footnote: 4
None of the judges findings that plaintiff deliberately frustrated defendants rights or the
courts orders were based on evidentiary hearings, and no sworn testimony was ever
taken upon which the judge could make such determinations. Indeed plaintiff was not
even present for at least two of the proceedings.
Footnote: 5
The cover page of the January 9 transcript shows that plaintiff appeared pro
se but the record itself indicates that plaintiff was not present. On January
30, the judge and defendants counsel discussed plaintiffs absence but no proof of
service was submitted.
Footnote: 6
We have been advised by the Appellate Division Clerks Office that plaintiff
has filed yet another appeal under docket number A-6425-03T5. Respondents brief has not
been submitted in that appeal and it will proceed in the ordinary course.