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You can search the entire site. or go to the recent opinions, or the chronological or subject indices. Adam F. v. Caitlin B. (7/12/2024) sp-7705

Adam F. v. Caitlin B. (7/12/2024) sp-7705

         Notice:  This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER.   

         Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts,  

         303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email  

         corrections@akcourts.gov.  

  

  

                    THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA  



  



 ADAM F.,                                                   )     

                                                            )   Supreme Court No. S-18519  

                             Appellant,                     )     

                                                            )   Superior Court No. 1SI-20-00108 CI  

           v.                                               )     

                                                            )   O P I N I O N  

  CAITLIN B.,                                               )     

                                                            )   No. 7705 - July  12, 2024  

                             Appellee.                      )  

                                                            )  

                     

                   Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, First  

                   Judicial District, Sitka, M. Jude Pate, Judge.  

  

                   Appearances:  Taylor R. Thompson, Thompson Law Group,  

                   Anchorage, for Appellant.  James W. McGowan, Sitka, for  

                   Appellee.  

  

                   Before:      Maassen,   Chief   Justice,   and   Borghesan   and  

                   Henderson,   Justices.      [Carney   and   Pate,   Justices,   not  

                   participating.]  

                     

                   HENDERSON, Justice.  

  



         INTRODUCTION  



                   A mother sought to modify visitation between her child and  the child's  



father  based  upon  allegations  of  domestic  violence  between  the  father  and  his  new  



romantic  partner.    On  the  day  of  the  court  hearing  about  the  mother's  request,  the  



father's attorney withdrew from the case, and a different attorney took over representing  



the father.  The court allowed the substitution of counsel, but denied the father's request  


----------------------- Page 2-----------------------

for  a  continuance  to  give  his  new  attorney  additional  time  to  prepare.    The  court  



proceeded with the hearing, which continued into a second day six days later.  At the  



conclusion of the hearing, the court found that the father had committed five acts of  



domestic violence:  two that constituted assault or reckless endangerment and three  



violations of domestic violence protective orders.  It also found that the father was not  



engaged in a previously ordered domestic violence intervention program.  Initially the  



court declined to modify the father's visitation, but two days later it reconsidered its  



order and temporarily suspended the father's visitation pending his demonstration of  



engagement with a domestic violence intervention program.    



                The father appeals the court's denial of his request for a continuance, its  



findings of domestic violence, and its temporary suspension of his visitation.  Observing  



no clear error or abuse of discretion, we affirm.  



        FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS  



        A.      Facts  



                 1.      Divorce and long-term domestic violence protective orders  



                Caitlin B. and Adam F. were married in 2016 and had one child together  



in  2017.    In  September  2020,  Caitlin  filed  for  divorce  and  was  granted  long-term  



domestic violence protective orders (DVPOs) against Adam, on behalf of both herself  



                                                                                                          1 

and the child.  Among other terms the DVPOs denied Adam visitation with the child.    



A couple of months later Adam hired an attorney to represent him in the divorce and  



custody proceeding.   



                In July 2021 the superior court issued a divorce decree and custody and  



visitation order deciding all contested issues.  The court found that both parties had "a  



history of domestic violence" that triggered the rebuttable presumption against custody  

and  unsupervised  visitation,2  but  it  found  that  Caitlin  was  less  likely  to  perpetuate  



                                                                                                            

        1       The order was extended in October 2021 for an additional year.   



        2       AS 25.24.150(g).  



                                                  - 2 -                                               7705  


----------------------- Page 3-----------------------

domestic violence and awarded her sole legal and primary physical custody of the child.   



In a separate order the court awarded Adam supervised visitation for two hours, twice  



a week, noting Adam had begun, but not completed, a domestic violence intervention  



program (DVIP) that would rebut the presumption against custody and unsupervised  

visitation.3   The court also modified the DVPOs that had been previously issued to  



allow for supervised visitation, but ordered that Adam  could not be "within sight or  



                                                       4 

sound" of Caitlin during custody exchanges.    



                 2.      Caitlin's motion to modify visitation  



                 In December 2021  Caitlin  filed a request to suspend Adam 's visitation  



with the child, asserting a change in circumstances because he had disengaged from his  



DVIP  program  and  committed  a new  act of domestic  violence against  his romantic  



partner Mackenzie.  Several months later additional acts of domestic violence came to  



light when Mackenzie filed for a DVPO against Adam.  Adam's attorney was not able  



to  represent  him  in  the  context  of  the  DVPO  litigation  because  the  attorney  had  



represented  Mackenzie  in  a  previous  unrelated  criminal  matter,  so  Adam  secured  a  



different  attorney  to  represent  him  in  the  DVPO  case.    Meanwhile,  the  hearing  on  



Caitlin's motion to modify visitation was delayed in part by Adam 's noncompliance  



with  discovery,  and  the  hearing was  eventually  scheduled  for August 2022.    Adam  



moved to modify the DVPO held by the  child so that he could wave to her if he was  



driving past her, and this motion was scheduled to be considered along with Caitlin's  



during  the  parties'  upcoming  hearing.    In  the  meantime,  Adam  continued  to  have  



supervised visitation.   



                                                                                                             

        3        AS 25.24.150(h).  



        4        Between   the   time   of   the   original   custody   order   and   the   custody  

modification hearing at issue Caitlin asserted violations of the DVPO that resulted in a  

separate  temporary  suspension  of  Adam's  supervised  visitation  not  subject  to  this  

appeal.   



                                                   - 3 -                                               7705  


----------------------- Page 4-----------------------

        B.       Proceedings  



                 1.      Denying Adam's requested continuance  



                 On the day of the parties' hearing, Adam's attorney moved to withdraw  



from  the  case.    The  attorney  cited  an  unwaivable  conflict  in  light  of  the  fact  that  



Mackenzie,  also  her  current  client,  had  been  subpoenaed  to  testify  in  the  custody  

hearing.5  In spite of the fact Caitlin's visitation motion was based largely upon violence  



between  Adam  and  Mackenzie, the attorney stated that she had not been certain an  



unwaivable conflict existed until Mackenzie was actually subpoenaed to testify in the  

visitation-related proceedings.6  The attorney did not explain why she did not seek to  



withdraw at that time.  Adam sought to have the attorney who had represented him in  



his DVPO case against Mackenzie  step in to represent him in this visitation litigation  



as  well.    That  attorney  was  present  at  the  hearing  and  willing  to  take  over  the  



representation.   



                 Caitlin disagreed with the assertion that a conflict existed, and contended  



that Adam 's motion "appear[ed] to be a manipulative effort to avoid" that day's hearing.   



After hearing evidence on the nature of the conflict the court agreed that the attorney  

seeking  to  withdraw  appeared  to  have  a  conflict  that  "fit  within  1.7(a)(2),"7  but  



expressed dismay over the attorney's failure to identify and act on the conflict in a  



timely way.  The court permitted the withdrawal and substitution of new counsel, who  



was present.   



                                                                                                              

        5        Alaska R. Prof. Conduct 1.7(a)(2); ABA Comm. on Ethics & Pro. Resp.,  

Formal Op. 367 (1992).  

        6        Under  certain  circumstances,  an  attorney's  client  can  agree  to  waive  

conflicts of interest.  Alaska R. Prof. Conduct 1.7(b).  

        7        Alaska  Professional  Conduct  Rule  1.7(a)(2)  states  that  a  conflict  of  

interest exists if "there is a significant risk that the representation of one or more clients  

will be materially  limited by the lawyer's responsibilities to another client, a former  

client, or a third person or by a personal interest of the lawyer."   



                                                   - 4 -                                                7705  


----------------------- Page 5-----------------------

               Adam's  new  attorney  immediately  sought  a  continuance.    She  stated,  



"[T]here's no way I could be ready to go today" and asserted that conducting the hearing  



that same day would not allow her to "zealously advocate" for Adam.  Caitlin objected  



to  any  continuance.    She  noted  that  Adam's  discovery-related  conduct  had  already  



delayed the hearing, that he had long been on notice of the conflict that caused his first  



attorney to withdraw, and that the new attorney should be prepared to litigate about  



allegations  of  domestic  violence  between  Adam  and  Mackenzie  because  she  had  



represented Adam in the related DVPO proceeding.   



               The court granted a continuance with respect to litigation over discovery  



and child support issues, of which Adam 's new attorney lacked knowledge, but denied  



the request to continue litigation about the allegations of domestic violence between  



Adam and Mackenzie and whether a change in visitation or modification of the child's  



DVPO would be in the child's best interests.  The court cited previous delay in the case  



and  also  reasoned  that  Adam's new  attorney  had  represented him  in  related DVPO  



proceedings and that  she  should be "ready to go forward on those issues."   The court  



observed  that  the  two  grounds  for  Caitlin's  motion  to  modify  visitation  were:    (1)  



Adam's alleged "new acts of domestic violence," and (2) his alleged failure to remain  



engaged in a DVIP program.  The court decided both were time-sensitive.   



               2.      The August 11 and continued August 17 trial days  



               The  evidentiary  hearing  then  began  with  Caitlin  putting  on  her  case,  



including calling Adam  and Mackenzie  as witnesses.   The court routinely paused the  



hearing   to   permit   Adam's   counsel   to   attend   other   scheduled   hearings   "to   be  



sensitive, . . . to  [the]  degree  [it]  can,  to  [Adam]'s  ability  to  have  an  attorney."   



Ultimately the parties and the court ran out of time at the end of the court day and had  



to schedule a second hearing, six days later.   



               At  the  continued  hearing  on  August  17,  Adam  completed  his  cross- 



examination of  Mackenzie, put on his witnesses, and also testified.   During closing  



                                              - 5 -                                          7705  


----------------------- Page 6-----------------------

argument,   Adam   nonetheless   asserted   that   he   had   not   had   the   "opportunity  

to . . . prepare" his case.  8   



                 During  the  two  hearing days,  the  court  heard  testimony  about  Adam's  



physical  altercations  with  Mackenzie,  as  well  as  about  Adam 's  violations  of  the  



protective  orders  held  by  Caitlin  and  the  parties'  child.    Regarding  the  physical  



altercations, Mackenzie testified about an incident earlier that summer in which she had  



returned to her father's home late one night after she and Adam had argued.   She said  



Adam came to the home and somehow got into the locked house.  Mackenzie testified  



that she quietly told Adam to leave and that he refused, speaking loudly enough that she  



believed her brother in the next room could hear him "wanting [Mackenzie] to go back  



home with him."  She testified that Adam then "picked [her] up from the chair" she was  



sitting in, and she fell on the ground "because . . . [she] was wiggling around . . . trying  



to get out."  After Mackenzie hit the ground, she said Adam held her down.  Mackenzie  



testified that Adam then picked her up again, this time aggressively, and threw her down  



on her upper back.  After he stopped, she said she felt unwell and checked for bruising  



and saw none.   She also said that "when [she] did fall on [her] upper back, it was not  



like intentional.  It's how [she] wiggled out and how [she] just landed."  



                 Mackenzie  also  testified  about  a  second  recent  incident  during  which  



Adam entered her father's home without permission, this time while she was preparing  



for her second day of work at a new job.   Mackenzie  indicated that Adam was there  



because he wanted her to work at his shop instead of her new job, and that she did not  



want to talk to him.  She said he became frustrated and eventually became loud enough  



                                                                                                               

        8        During  closing  arguments,  Adam  requested  the  opportunity  to  call  his  

therapist, who had been present on the August  11 trial day, to testify about the type of  

work she had done with him.  Adam had not previously called the therapist as a witness,  

and the court did not reopen the evidence.  Regardless, Adam does not argue on appeal  

that the court's decision to move forward with the August 11 trial day prejudiced his  

ability to call the therapist.   



                                                   - 6 -                                                 7705  


----------------------- Page 7-----------------------

"where  people  possibly  could  hear  outside,"  so  she  told  him  to  stop  and  leave.   



Mackenzie testified that Adam then lifted her from behind by the waist while she was  



"crouched down on the ground . . . getting ready for work," and threw her on her bed,  



an act that both startled and shocked her.  She said that she was not hurt, but was more  



concerned for her younger brother, who was in the house.  She explained that although  



she   did   not   think   Adam   would   do   anything   else   in   that   moment,   she   was  



"frightened. . . because . . . it's just you . . . don't really know what's going to happen  



next."  



                 Adam's testimony differed greatly from Mackenzie's.  Regarding the first  



incident, he stated that he went to Mackenzie's father's home to check on her after she  



had not responded to his calls.  He stated he did not remember if Mackenzie's father  



asked him to leave his house or if he asked Mackenzie to leave with him.  He denied  



grabbing  Mackenzie  and  lifting her off  the  ground  that night,  and  said he had only  



previously done so in a playful, non-controlling way.  Regarding the second incident,  



Adam  testified he entered the home through an unlocked door and calmly spoke to  



Mackenzie since he had not heard from her for several days.  He claimed that Mackenzie  



yelled at him, and that he did not pick her up or throw her down at any point.   



                 3.      The superior court's findings and related decisions  



                 At the conclusion of the hearing, the court made findings and a decision  



on the record regarding  Caitlin's motion to modify visitation and Adam's motion to  



modify the DVPO held by the child.   Significant to this appeal the court found Adam  



had  committed  five  acts  of  domestic  violence  since  its  last  custody-  and  visitation- 



related order.  The court found three violations of protective orders and two incidents  

of "assault in the fourth degree and/or reckless endangerment" against Mackenzie.9  The  



                                                                                                              

        9        AS  11.41.230  (assault  in  the  fourth  degree);  AS  11.41.250  (reckless  

endangerment).  Crimes against a person under AS  11.41, which include assault in the  

  



                                                   - 7 -                                                7705  


----------------------- Page 8-----------------------

court  relied  on  Mackenzie's  testimony  to  support  its  findings.   It  found  Mackenzie  



credible  and  stated  its  impression  that  she  testified  truthfully  but  tried  to  shade  her  



testimony in favor of Adam.  The court found that Adam was not credible.  At that time  



the  court  concluded  that  it  had  not  "heard  the  level  of  evidence  [it]  would  need  to  



preclude [Adam]'s visitation entirely," as Caitlin's motion had sought.  It noted the lack  



of direct evidence that anything inappropriate had happened during Adam 's supervised  



visitation.    The  court  determined  that  it  was  a  close  call,  but  that  it  did  not  find  



extraordinary circumstances sufficient to suspend his visitation entirely.   It ruled that  



Mackenzie  should not be present for Adam's supervised visits with the parties' child,  



given  its  concern  about  exposing  the  child  to  domestic  violence  and  the  dynamic  



between Adam  and Mackenzie.   It also reiterated that Adam needed to meaningfully  



engage with and complete a DVIP program in order to pursue unsupervised visitation.   



Finally, the court granted Adam's request to modify the child's protective order so that  



he could wave at the parties' child if driving past her on the road where Adam lived.   



                 The next day the court notified the parties that it was reconsidering its  

order on its own motion pursuant to Alaska Civil Rule 77(k)(5).10   The court held a  



hearing  on  August  19  to  explain  the  reasons  for  its  reconsideration  and  resulting  



decision on the record.  During that hearing it revised its findings and determined that  



it was in the child's best interests to temporarily suspend all visitation with Adam.  The  



                                                                                                               



fourth  degree  and  reckless  endangerment,  are  acts  of  domestic  violence  when  the  

perpetrator      and    victim     have     engaged      in   a    dating    or    sexual     relationship.   

AS  18.66.990(3)(A), (5)(C), (5)(D).  Adam did not appeal the court's findings of three  

violations of a protective order that also each constitute an act of domestic violence.   

AS  18.66.990(3)(G).    An  act  of  "domestic  violence  is  a  substantial  change  in  

circumstances" for purposes of a motion to modify visitation as a matter of law.  Bruce  

H. v. Jennifer L., 407 P.3d 432, 436 (Alaska 2017) (citing AS 25.20.110(c)).  

         10      Alaska R. Civ. P. 77(k)(5) ("The court, on its own motion, may reconsider  

a ruling at any time not later than 10 days from the date of notice of the final judgment  

in the case.").  



                                                    - 8 -                                                7705  


----------------------- Page 9-----------------------

court  noted  that  it  did  not  make  the  decision  lightly  as  this  was  "the  most  serious  



decision" it could make.  The court stated it had given "too much weight to [Adam] 's  



parental rights" in its earlier decision and that it had "failed to give enough weight to  



what is in [the child's] best interest."  It observed that Adam showed "a blatant disregard  



for court orders" by "violat[ing] protective orders three times."   It also observed that  



the  nature  of  the  acts  of  domestic  violence  he  committed  against  Mackenzie  were  



similar to those he had committed in the past against Caitlin.  The court reiterated its  



concern that Mackenzie's presence during Adam's supervised visitation with the child  



would allow for "those echoes and that relation of domestic violence to seep into [the  



child]."  Finally, it determined Adam was not "enrolled" in a DVIP program as the court  



had  previously  required  when  it  awarded  him  supervised  visitation.    Given  these  



considerations  the  court  concluded  that  extraordinary  circumstances  indeed  existed  



necessitating "a temporary suspension of [Adam] 's [supervised] visitation."   



               After  imposing  the  temporary  suspension,  the  court  outlined  the  steps  



Adam  needed  to  take  in  order  to  petition  to  resume  both  supervised  and  then  



unsupervised visitation.  In addition to refraining from further acts of domestic violence,  



the court explained that he needed to attend an intake meeting with a particular service  



provider available in Southeast Alaska.   He also needed to complete a psychological  



evaluation  administered  by  a  licensed  practitioner.    The  court  expressly  noted  that  



Adam  "d[id] not need to wait for recommendations" from the Southeast provider or  



complete  the  recommended  DVIP  courses  to  apply  for  supervised  visitation.    It  



explained that in order to petition for unsupervised visitation, however, he needed to  



complete  the  recommended  DVIP  courses.     In  addition  the  court  revoked  the  



modification of the protective order that had allowed Adam to wave at the child.  The  



court outlined its new findings and decision in a written order.   



               Adam now appeals the court's denial of his request for a continuance, its  



findings that he committed acts of domestic violence against Mackenzie, and its order  



temporarily suspending his supervised visitation with the child.   



                                               - 9 -                                           7705  


----------------------- Page 10-----------------------

         STANDARD OF REVIEW  



                 "We  'will not disturb a [superior] court's refusal to grant a continuance  

unless an abuse of discretion is demonstrated. ' "11  "An abuse of discretion exists when  



a party has been deprived of a substantial right or seriously prejudiced by the [superior]  

court's  ruling."12    "We  consider  'the  particular  facts  and  circumstances  of  each  



individual case to determine whether the denial was so unreasonable or so prejudicial  



                                                    13 

as to amount to an abuse of discretion.' "              



                 Whether "findings on domestic violence are supported by the record is a  

question of fact which we review for clear error."14  "Whether the superior court applied  



                                                                                         15 

the correct legal standard is a question of law that we review de novo."                     



                 "The  superior   court   has  broad  discretion   in   determining  'whether,  



following an evidentiary hearing, the moving party has proven a substantial change in  

circumstances,  meaning one  that  affects  the  child's  welfare.' "16    We  also review a  



court's decision on whether a proposed modification in visitation is in the child's best  

interests for abuse of discretion.17  "We will set aside the superior court's best interests  



determination only if the trial court abused its discretion or if the fact findings on which  

the  determination  is  based  are  clearly  erroneous."18    "A  factual  finding  is  [clearly]  



                                                                                                               

        11       Layton v. O'Dea , 515 P.3d 92, 100 (Alaska 2022) (alterations in original)  

(quoting Greenway v. Heathcott, 294 P.3d 1056, 1062 (Alaska 2013)).  

        12       Id. (alterations in original) (quoting Greenway, 294 P.3d at 1062).  



        13       Id. (quoting Greenway, 294 P.3d at 1062).   



        14       Bruce H., 407 P.3d at 436 (quoting Caroline J. v. Theodore J., 354 P.3d  

1085, 1090 (Alaska 2015)).  

        15       Id. (quoting Rego v. Rego, 259 P.3d 447, 452 (Alaska 2011)).  



        16       Id. (quoting Collier v. Harris, 377 P.3d 15, 20 (Alaska 2016)).  



        17       Id. (citing Skinner v. Hagberg, 183 P.3d 486, 489 (Alaska 2008)).  



        18       Id. (quoting Rego, 259 P.3d at 452).  



                                                   - 10 -                                                7705  


----------------------- Page 11-----------------------

erroneous if, 'based on a review of the entire record, the finding leaves us with a definite  

and firm conviction that a mistake has been made.' "19  



        DISCUSSION  



        A.       The Superior Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion When It Partially  

                 Denied A Continuance After A Substitution Of Counsel.   



                 Adam asserts the superior court abused its discretion when it denied him  

a continuance after his former attorney had to withdraw from representing him.20  He  



asserts  that  he  was  diligent  in  finding  a  new  attorney  and  that,  though  his  former  



attorney may have failed to timely address her conflict of interest, it would be unfair to  



impute that lack of diligence to him.  He argues that he was unprepared for the hearing  



and, as a result, lost his ability to visit with the parties' child.   



                 Caitlin  contends that Adam has failed to demonstrate he was diligent in  



obtaining new counsel and, regardless, has failed to explain how the court's denial of a  



continuance prejudiced him.   



                 "A  party  is  not  automatically  entitled  to  a  continuance  when  counsel  



withdraws, especially if the party is not free from fault or does not use due diligence to  

obtain substitute counsel."21  To establish that the court's denial of a continuance in this  



context amounted to an abuse of discretion, the moving party must first demonstrate  

that the party acted with due diligence to find and obtain counsel.22   If the party was  



diligent in obtaining counsel, then the party must demonstrate either:  (1) denial of the  



                                                                                                              

         19      Id. (quoting Rego, 259 P.3d at 452).  



        20       Adam characterizes the denial of the continuance as covering all matters  

to  be  decided  at  the  hearing,  but  the  court  granted  a  partial  continuance  on  issues  

unrelated to the best interests of the child.   

        21       Taylor v. Gill St. Invs., 743 P.2d 345, 349 (Alaska 1987).  



        22       Layton v. O'Dea , 515 P.3d 92, 101-02 (Alaska 2022) (citing Greenway v.  

Heathcott, 294 P.3d 1056, 1067 (Alaska 2013)).   



                                                   - 11 -                                               7705  


----------------------- Page 12-----------------------

continuance prejudiced the party or deprived the party of a substantial right,23 or (2) the  



court inappropriately weighed "the need[] for . . . promptness with [a party's] right to  



                                                    24 

fair" representation in the particular case.             



                 Here,  although  it  appears  Adam's  former  counsel  failed  to  promptly  



identify and address her conflict of interest, we need not determine whether lack of  

diligence by Adam 's attorney should be imputed to him.25  Even if Adam  acted with  



due diligence in securing a new attorney, the superior court's denial of his requested  



continuance did not prejudice his substantial right to present his case or his ability to  



secure fair representation.  



                 As a threshold matter, Adam makes no argument that he was not able to  



accomplish a specific action at trial due to the court's denial of a continuance.  Nor does  



his  appeal articulate, or even imply, what he would have, or thinks he would have,  



accomplished had he received a continuance.  When asked during oral argument what  



Adam would or could have done differently had the superior court granted his request  



for a continuance, he had no substantive answer.  He only generally asserted he would  



have been better able to prepare his own testimony.   



                 Equally     unpersuasive       is   Adam's       related    argument      that    moving  



immediately  forward  with  his  new  attorney  was  tantamount  to  having  to  represent  



himself during the hearing.  Adam likens his circumstance to that of the father in Fidler  



v. Fidler, where we held the denial of a self-represented father's requested continuance  

was  an  abuse  of  discretion.26    But  Adam  was  not  self-represented  and  the  record  



                                                                                                              

        23       Fidler v. Fidler, 296 P.3d 11, 13 (Alaska 2013).  



        24       Sarah D.  v. John D., 352 P.3d 419,  427  (Alaska 2015)  (third alteration  

added) (quoting Sylvester v. Sylvester, 723 P.2d 1253, 1256 (Alaska 1986)).  

        25       See  Alaska  R.  Prof.  Conduct  1.7(c)   (requiring  attorneys  "act  with  

reasonable diligence in determining whether a conflict of interest . . . exists").  

        26       296 P.3d at 12-13.  



                                                   - 12 -                                               7705  


----------------------- Page 13-----------------------

establishes that his attorney was able to substantively assist him with the issues taken  



up at the hearing.  Indeed, Adam concedes on appeal that "his [current] attorney did an  



amazing job all things considered."   



                 The palpable distinction between Adam  and the father in Fidler  is that  



                                                                                                           27 

Adam was significantly assisted by his counsel throughout the proceeding at issue.                              



Adam, through his attorney, was able to raise multiple objections to Caitlin's questions,  



respond to objections, request that he be presented exhibits when testifying about them,  



take notes, be guided through his testimony, and exclude admission of one of Caitlin's  



proposed  exhibits.  Again, Adam has failed to identify any meaningful way in which  



the court's initial denial of a continuance impacted what he hoped to accomplish during  



the hearing.  This is in stark contrast to the self-represented father in Fidler, who was  



unable to offer certain evidence and could not raise certain arguments, due to the court's  



                              28 

denial of a continuance.          



                 Furthermore, the court eventually did need to continue the hearing into a  



second day.  And when the superior court inquired about a next hearing date, Adam and  



his counsel announced that they could be available and ready for a continued hearing  



on August 17.  If Adam was caught flat-footed by the withdrawal of his former attorney  



on the first day of the hearing, the court's scheduling of a continued hearing six days  



later  in  this  context  cured  any  associated  prejudice.    Given  that  Adam  was  able  to  



present the case he wanted to, with his attorney present, we conclude that he was not  



                                                                                            29 

prejudiced by the court's denial of a continuance of the first hearing day.                       



                 We  also  reject  Adam 's  related  argument  that  the  court  improperly  



balanced his right to representation with the need to resolve new domestic violence  



                                                                                                               

        27       See id. at 13.  



        28       See id.  



        29       This  case  is  also  distinguishable  from  Fidler  in  that  Adam  had  seven  

months of notice about the nature of the hearing whereas Fidler had none.  Id. at 12-13.   



                                                    - 13 -                                               7705  


----------------------- Page 14-----------------------

allegations and their impact on his visitation.  We consider the particular circumstances  



of each "case to determine whether the denial [of a continuance] was so unreasonable"  

as  to  constitute  an  abuse  of  discretion.30    Alaska  "courts  should  balance  the  need[]  



for . . . promptness with the right [] to fair presentation of the case."31  " 'Because of the  



necessity for orderly, prompt[,] and effective disposition of litigation and the loss and  



hardship  to  the  parties  and  witnesses  [when  litigation  is  delayed],'  a  motion  for  

continuance  should  be  denied  absent  a  'weighty  reason  to  the  contrary.' "32    Here,  



particularly where  Adam 's new counsel was already familiar with the allegations of  



domestic  violence  central  to  the  hearing,  and  had  already  prepared  to  litigate  those  



allegations in a separate matter, the court did not abuse its discretion in prioritizing the  



need to move ahead with the hearing.  Moreover, the hearing was meant to address a  



time-sensitive  issue  -  whether  Adam  had  committed  acts  of  domestic  violence  



warranting  a  change  in  visitation  -  and  the  hearing had  already  been  significantly  



delayed.  The superior court's balancing of Adam's interest in fair representation with  



the need to move forward promptly with the hearing was well within its discretion.  



        B.       The  Superior  Court  Did  Not  Clearly  Err  In  Finding  That  Adam  

                 Committed Acts Of Domestic Violence.  



                 Adam  claims  that  the  superior  court  clearly  erred  when  it  found  he  



committed two acts of assault or reckless endangerment against Mackenzie.  He broadly  



argues  that  the  court  lacked  evidence  that  he  acted  recklessly,  that  he  injured  



Mackenzie, and that he intended to injure Mackenzie.  Caitlin, meanwhile, contends  



                                                                                                              

        30       Layton v. O'Dea , 515 P.3d 92, 100 (Alaska 2022) (quoting Greenway v.  

Healthcott, 294 P.3d 1056, 1062 (Alaska 2013)).  

        31       Sarah  D.  v.  John  D.,  352  P.3d  419,  427  (Alaska  2015)  (alterations  in  

original)  (internal quotation marks omitted)  (quoting Sylvester v. Sylvester, 723 P.2d  

1253, 1256 (Alaska 1986)).  

        32       Id. (first alteration in original) (quoting Wagner v. Wagner, 299 P.3d 170,  

175 (Alaska 2013)).  



                                                   - 14 -                                               7705  


----------------------- Page 15-----------------------

that Adam mischaracterizes the evidence related to domestic violence, and she correctly  



observes  that  intent  to  injure  is  not  a  necessary  element  of  assault  or  reckless  



endangerment.   



                 We reject Adam's arguments for the reasons cited by Caitlin.  First, Adam  



asks  us  to  review  the  evidence  of  his  conduct  toward  Mackenzie  in  the  light  most  



favorable to him.  At the very least, he asks that we disregard facts in the record and  



reweigh  the  evidence.    "[W]e  ordinarily  will  not  reweigh  evidence,  especially  oral  

testimony."33   The court heard sufficient evidence to find that Adam both physically  



hurt Mackenzie34 and engaged "in conduct which create[d] a substantial risk of serious  



physical injury" to Mackenzie.35  Mackenzie's testimony that Adam was loud enough  



that she thought people outside could hear him, that she told him to leave, and that on  



both occasions he picked her up and threw or dropped her is sufficient evidence for the  



court to find Adam committed assault in the fourth degree or reckless endangerment.   



                 Second, Adam  contends that the superior court's findings of assault or  



reckless endangerment are undermined by his lack of intent to injure Mackenzie.  He  



cites  Sarah  D.  v.  John  D.  where  we  held  that  the  superior  court  must  look  to  "the  



perpetrator's intent" to determine whether the person "  'attempted' to place the other  

person 'in fear of imminent physical injury.' "36   But  Sarah D.  is inapplicable here  



because the superior court in this case did not rely on findings that Adam was attempting  



to commit a particular crime, which would require evidence and findings related to what  



                                                                                                              

        33       Rosemarie P. v. Kelly B., 504 P.3d 260, 266 (Alaska 2021).  



        34       AS  11.41.230 (assault in the fourth degree).  



        35       AS  11.41.250 (reckless endangerment).  



        36       352 P.3d at 434 (quoting Parks v. Parks, 214 P.3d 295, 300 (Alaska 2009);  

Harris v. Governale, 311 P.3d 1052, 1058 (Alaska 2013)).  



                                                   - 15 -                                               7705  


----------------------- Page 16-----------------------

Adam intended.37  Indeed, in making this argument, Adam ignores the plain language  



of the statutes defining assault and reckless endangerment.  Neither statute requires the  



finding that a person intended to physically harm another person or endanger them -  

only that a person acted recklessly.38   A person acts recklessly with respect to a risk  



where the person is "aware of and consciously disregards a substantial and unjustifiable  



risk" of harm, such that disregard of the risk is a "gross deviation" from the conduct of  

a "reasonable person . . . in the situation."39  The court did not need to find that Adam  



intended  to  injure  Mackenzie.    It  only  needed  to  find  that Adam  was  aware  of  the  



substantial and unjustifiable risk that lifting Mackenzie off the ground and throwing or  



dropping her could result in injury (or fear of injury), that he disregarded that risk, and  



that his disregard of that risk was unreasonable.  The court heard ample evidence to  



support such findings in light of Mackenzie's testimony.  The court applied the correct  



legal  standards  and did not  clearly  err  in  finding  that  Adam  committed  two  acts of  



assault or reckless endangerment against Mackenzie.   



        C.       The    Superior   Court   Did   Not   Abuse             Its   Discretion   When         It  

                 Temporarily Suspended Adam's Visitation With The Child.  



                Adam  argues  that  the  superior  court  abused  its  discretion  when  it  

suspended  Adam 's  supervised  visitation.40    He  contends  that  the  evidence  did  not  



support  a  finding  of  extraordinary  circumstances  allowing  for  suspension  of  all  



                                                                                                             

        37       Compare  AS  11.31.100  (attempt),  with  AS  11.41.230  (assault  in  the  

fourth degree), and AS  11.41.250 (reckless endangerment).  

        38      AS  11.41.230(a)(1) (assault in the fourth degree); AS  11.41.250 (reckless  

endangerment).  

        39      AS  11.81.900(a)(3).  



        40       In appealing the custody order Adam  expresses a concern that he "now  

has a duty to actively ignore" the child "in the small town of Sitka."  While Adam did  

not appeal the court's denial of his motion to modify the child's protective order, we  

understand this is a hardship for Adam.  But custody orders must be based on the best  

interests of the child, not on the hardship to the parents.  AS 25.24.150(c).  



                                                  - 16 -                                               7705  


----------------------- Page 17-----------------------

visitation.    Caitlin  disagrees,  urging  that  the  evidence  before  the  court  warranted  



suspension   of   visitation.     Although   Adam 's   argument   regarding   extraordinary  



circumstances presents a close question, we conclude based on the record as a whole  



that the court did not abuse its discretion.  



                 As a preliminary matter we reject Adam's one-sentence argument that the  



court  improperly  focused  on  one  best-interests  factor  in  its  decision  suspending  

visitation.41  Adam  does not explain what factors the court failed to consider, and his  



argument is belied by the record.  The court expressly weighed multiple relevant factors,  



including   Adam's   inability   to   put   the   child's   needs   over   his   own   "sense   of  

entitlement,"42  his recent commission of certain acts of domestic violence,43  and the  



extent to which his acts of domestic violence against Mackenzie would "bleed over" to  

the child and impact his ability to meet the child's needs.44  The record demonstrates  



that the court did not improperly focus on one factor to the exclusion of other relevant  



factors in determining the best interests of the child.   



                 Turning to Adam 's core argument, that the evidence does not demonstrate  



"extraordinary circumstances" sufficient to suspend all visitation, we observe that this  



argument  presents  us  with  a  closer  call.    Adam  contends  that  the  superior  court's  



suspension of his visitation is contrary to our holding in Bruce H. v. Jennifer L.  that  



requires the court to "explain its decision" to award "restricted visitation" with "specific  



                                                                                                               

        41       See Park v. Park, 986 P.2d 205, 211 (Alaska 1999) (holding "the superior  

court's  singular  focus"  on  one  parent's  resistance  to  other  parent's  request  for  

"visitation suggests that it attached overriding importance to that one factor" and did  

not consider all relevant factors).  

        42       AS 25.24.150(c)(2)  (capability and desire of each parent to meet child's  

needs).  

        43       AS 25.24.150(c)(7) (parental acts of domestic violence).  



        44       AS 25.24.150(c)(1)  (child's physical, emotional, and mental needs), (2)  

(capability and desire of each parent to meet child's needs).  



                                                   - 17 -                                                7705  


----------------------- Page 18-----------------------

findings."45  Adam argues that his previous supervised visits complied with the court's  



requirements, and that there "was no risk of future mental harm to [the child] in his very  



                                                                                                      46 

limited supervised visits."  He also cites our unpublished decision in J.D. v. C.S.                       as  



an illustration of what he contends is the high threshold to establishing extraordinary  



circumstances necessary to suspend a parent's visitation.   



                 In response Caitlin asserts that ample evidence in the record supports the  



court's finding of extraordinary circumstances.  She first points to evidence considered  



by the court in making its initial visitation order, when the court found that Adam 's acts  



of domestic violence were "some of the worst emotional power and control that [it had]  



seen, just the pure rage of it and the degree and the consistency."  She cites the court's  



observation that it had listened to related recordings from the first custody trial and that  



the recordings "shook" the court.   She also cites the statutory rebuttable presumption  



that a parent who perpetuates domestic violence "may not be awarded . . . joint physical  



            47 

custody."        



                 We have held  that visitation  should not be  wholly  "taken  away absent  

extraordinary circumstances."48  We require a superior court suspending visitation "to  



make findings supporting that  decision 'unless the reasons can be gleaned from the  

record.' "49  Our precedent on this topic is limited as "[t]here are relatively few divorce- 



related cases in which a parent's visitation rights have been completely taken away or  



                                                                                                              

        45       407 P.3d 432, 441-42 (Alaska 2017).  



        46       No. S-9552, 2001 WL 34818209 (Alaska Feb. 28, 2001).  



        47       AS 25.24.150(g).  



        48       Bruce H., 407 P.3d at 441 (quoting William P. v. Taunya P., 258 P.3d 812,  

818-19  (Alaska  2011));  see  also   1  JEFF   ATKINSON,   MODERN   CHILD   CUSTODY  

PRACTICE § 5-11 (2d ed. 2024).    

        49       Bruce H., 407 P.3d at 441  (quoting I.J.D. v. D.R.D., 961 P.2d 425, 432  

(Alaska 1998)).  



                                                   - 18 -                                               7705  


----------------------- Page 19-----------------------

suspended."50  While uncommon in divorce and child custody cases, it is not uncommon  



for the superior court to contemplate whether suspension of visitation is in a child's best  



interests where a child is in the custody of the State, pursuant to a child in need of aid  

proceeding.51  Given the multiple factors carefully considered by the court in reaching  



its finding of extraordinary circumstances, and given the court's provision of clear steps  



that  Adam  could take in order to restore his supervised visitation within a relatively  



short period, we conclude that the court did not abuse its discretion in this case.   



                 First, we begin by highlighting that the court  did not terminate  Adam's  



visitation - it only ordered a temporary suspension.  Equally important is the court's  



provision of clear, achievable milestones  Adam  was required to complete before he  



could resume visitation.  The temporary nature of the suspension and clear milestones,  



which  upon  completion  would  remove  the  suspension,  ensured  the  court  protected  



Adam's parental rights while making its visitation-related decision based on the best  



                           52 

interests of the child.        



                                                                                                               

        50       See  1 JEFF ATKINSON, MODERN CHILD CUSTODY PRACTICES  § 5-11 (2d  

ed. 2024).  

        51       See, e.g., Rock H. v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s  

Servs., No. S-18160, 2022 WL 2236187, at *1-3  (Alaska Jun. 22, 2022) (observing  

suspension of visitation by the Office of Children's Services after parent failed to attend  

five scheduled visits); cf.  AS 47.10.113(a) ("Except as provided [under the divorce and  

child custody statute], a court shall hear a request to make, modify, or vacate an order  

for the custody of or visitation with a minor child in state custody under this chapter as  

part of the child-in-need-of-aid proceedings related to the child.").  

        52       See  AS 25.24.150(c);  S.J.  v.  L.T.,  727  P.2d  789,  796  (Alaska  1986)  

("[P]arents should not be deprived of the fundamental rights and duties inherent in the  

parent-child relationship except for grave and weighty reasons." (alteration in original)  

(internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting In re Adoption of K.M.M. , 611 P.2d 84, 87  

(Alaska   1980)));  see   also  Meyer   v.   Nebraska ,   262   U.S.  390,   399-400   (1923)  

(recognizing fundamental right to have and raise a family).   



                                                   - 19 -                                                7705  


----------------------- Page 20-----------------------

               Next,  we observe  that  the  legislature  enacted  a  statutory framework  to  

protect children from domestic violence perpetrated by their parents.53  Unless rebutted  



by  completion  of  a  DVIP  program  pursuant  to  AS 25.24.150(h),  AS 25.24.150(g)  



prevents a superior court from awarding either legal or physical custody to a parent  



"who has a history of perpetrating domestic violence against the other parent, a child,  



or a domestic living partner."  Prior to the current controversy over visitation, the court  



had already found that Adam had a history of perpetrating domestic violence due to his  



severe  and  violent  acts  of  power  and  control  against  Caitlin.    As  a  result,  the  law  



presumed that  awarding him  any legal or physical custody would be contrary to the  

child's best interests.54   In addition the statute provides that a court "shall allow only  



supervised  visitation  by  that  parent  with  the  child,  conditioned  on  that  parent's  



participating in  and successfully completing an intervention program for batterers, and  

a parenting education program, where reasonably available."55  This part of the statute  



also applied to Adam.56   The court's temporary suspension of Adam 's visitation was  



based in part on its finding that, contrary to its prior orders, Adam was not meaningfully  

engaged in a DVIP program.57  Adam does not contest this finding on appeal.   



        53      AS 25.24.150(g)-(k);  Stephanie  F.  v.  George  C.,  270  P.3d  737,  751  

(Alaska  2012)  ("The  legislature  underscored  the  important  priority  of  protecting  

children from domestic violence when it adopted AS 25.24.150(g)-(h).").  

        54      See AS 25.24.150(g).  



        55      AS 25.24.150(j) (emphasis added).  



        56      State  v.  Fyfe,  370  P.3d  1092,  1099  (Alaska  2016)  (presuming  that  in  

statutes "no words or provisions are superfluous and that the legislature intended every  

word,  sentence,  or  provision  of  a  statute  to  have  some  purpose,  force,  and  effect"  

(quoting Adamson v. Mun . of Anchorage, 333 P.3d 5, 16 (Alaska 2014))).  

        57      Adam  has not asserted that a DVIP program is not available where he  

lives.  As we have said before, where no certified DVIP program is available a suitable  

alternative will meet the statutory requirement.  Stephanie F., 270 P.3d at 753.  



                                               - 20 -                                          7705  


----------------------- Page 21-----------------------

                 We further observe the court's emphasis on Adam 's continued  coercive  



and controlling behavior and how this posed a risk of substantial harm to the child.  The  



risk  identified  by  the  court  may  be  nuanced  and  difficult  to  detect  as  compared  to  



injuries due to physical abuse, clear disparaging remarks, or conduct by a parent in front  

of a child.58  But the nuanced nature of the risk does not render it less serious.59  The  



court here  explained  its  concern  that until  Adam  meaningfully  engaged  in behavior  



change, there continued to be a great risk that the parties' child would internalize her  



father's  behavior  and  attitude  toward  others  such  as  Mackenzie.    And  contrary  to  



Adam's argument, removal of Mackenzie  from the supervised visitations, consistent  



with the court's initial order, would not remove the risk associated with Adam 's own  



behavior.    In  other  words,  although  removal  of  Mackenzie  from  the  supervised  



visitations  would  decrease  the  likelihood  of  the  child  directly  observing  Adam 's  



violence against Mackenzie, it would not mitigate other ways in which Adam's coercive  



and controlling behavior could influence and impact the child.   



                 We also note that the court's findings regarding Adam 's behavior, and the  



risks associated with that behavior, were informed by multiple opportunities to observe  



and interact with the parties over an extended period of time.   Over time, the court  



observed that Adam 's coercive and controlling behavior had continued with a different  



partner and that Adam had not meaningfully engaged in a DVIP program.  Given this  



history of continued perpetration of significant acts of domestic violence, the court's  



                                                                                                              

        58       See, e.g., Borchgrevink v. Borchgrevink, 941 P.2d 132, 140 (Alaska 1997)  

(physical abuse of other parent); J.D. v. C.S. , No. S-9552, 2001 WL 34818209, at *2  

(Alaska Feb. 28, 2001) (parental misconduct); Taylor v. Taylor, 970 N.W.2d 209, 212  

(N.D. 2022) (conduct in children's presence).  

        59       See Borchgrevink, 941 P.2d at  140 ("[T]he deleterious impact on children  

of  witnessing  domestic  violence  is  widely  recognized.  .  .  .  [E]ven  if  the  physical  

violence between the parties has ceased, the abusive ex-spouse may continue to engage  

in controlling behaviors that adversely affect the children.").  



                                                   - 21 -                                               7705  


----------------------- Page 22-----------------------

findings  regarding  the  risk  of  substantial  harm  to  the  child  associated  with  even  



supervised visitation, its findings regarding Adam's failure to meaningfully engage in  



treatment, even after having been previously ordered to do so, and its identification of  



clear steps Adam could take in order to resume visitation, we conclude the court did not  



abuse its discretion in temporarily suspending Adam 's visitation.  



        CONCLUSION  



                 We AFFIRM the superior court's order in all respects.  



  



                                                   - 22 -                                                7705  

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