this court will affirm a district court's decision regarding custody absent a
clear abuse of discretion. Wallace v. Wallace, 112 Nev. 1015, 1019, 922
P.2d 541, 543 (1996). Thus, this court will affirm a district court's decision
if it is supported by substantial evidence. Williams v. Williams, 120 Nev.
559, 566, 97 P.3d 1124, 1129 (2004).
At the evidentiary hearing, the district court heard evidence
that the child is only seven years old and for the majority of the child's life,
appellant has worked overseas, resulting in appellant only seeing the child
for a few two-week periods of time each year. The district court also heard
evidence regarding the safety of the African countries where appellant
proposed that visitation could occur, and the court took judicial notice that
the countries were not subject to the Hague Convention. The district court
also heard and considered evidence about appellant's schedule and
reliability. Although the district court's order does not contain specific
factual findings, the record as a whole demonstrates that the district court
considered many factors regarding the child's best interest when deciding
visitation. See NRS 125.480(1). As such, while remanding this matter to
the district court for the court to enter factual findings supporting its
conclusion is an option available to this court, we decline to do so in this
case as it would unnecessarily delay the custody dispute. See generally
Ellis v. Carucci, 123 Nev. 145, 149, 161 P.3d 239, 242 (2007) (explaining
that custodial stability is important in promoting the developmental and
emotional needs of a child). And in any case, the parameters of visitation
ordered by the district court were similar to the visitation that appellant
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had been exercising before the custody proceeding.' Thus, we conclude
that the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying appellant's
request to exercise visitation in Africa and in setting the duration of
appellant's visitation periods. See Wallace, 112 Nev. at 1019, 922 P.2d at
543.
Appellant also asserts that the district court denied his
constitutional right to parent his child by limiting where he could exercise
visitation. See Troxell v. Granville, 530 U.S. 57, 65 (2000) (providing that
a parent has a fundamental interest in the care, custody, and control of his
or her child); In re Parental Rights as to A.G., 129 Nev. „ 295 P.3d
589, 595 (2013) (same). But the district court did not deny appellant his
constitutional right to parent his child, as the district court considered the
child's best interest in determining visitation. See Rico v. Rodriguez, 121
Nev. 695, 704, 120 P.3d 812, 818 (2005) ("In a custody dispute between
two fit parents, the fundamental constitutional right to the care and
custody of the children is equal" and "the dispute in such cases can be
resolved best, if not solely, by applying the best interest of the child
standard"). The district court carefully considered evidence of appellant's
ongoing involvement with the child, his extended family's involvement,
and made significant accommodations for appellant to continue
coparenting, and thus, the district court's ruling did not deny appellant of
his constitutional right to parent his child.
'Appellant was awarded five, two-week periods of specific visitation
with the child throughout the year in the United States and directed that
no more than three of those visitation periods could be exercised within a
sixty-day period.
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Lastly, appellant argues that the district court abused its
discretion in considering appellant's rental income when it calculated
appellant's child support obligation. NRS 125B.070 provides that in
determining child support obligations, the court must consider the
parent's gross monthly income, meaning "the total amount of income
received each month from any source." NRS 125B.070(1)(a) (emphasis
added). Further, this court has specifically held that for purposes of
calculating a noncustodial parent's child support obligation, the parent's
gross monthly income is not limited to income from employment. See Metz
v. Metz, 120 Nev. 786, 793, 101 P.3d 779, 784 (2004). Although appellant
argues that the district court miscalculated the monthly amount that he
earned from the rental property, he failed to provide any evidence
regarding the amount, and thus, the district court did not abuse its
discretion in relying on respondent's evidence concerning the amount and
in calculating appellant's child support obligation. See Wallace, 112 Nev.
at 1019, 922 P.2d at 543 (providing that this court reviews child support
orders for an abuse of discretion).
For the reasons discussed above, we
ORDER the judgment of the district court AFFIRMED. 2
To the extent that appellant's arguments are not specifically
2
addressed in this order, we conclude that they lack merit.
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cc: Hon. Kenneth E. Pollock, District Judge
McFarling Law Group
Andrea Ewalefo
Eighth District Court Clerk
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PICKERING, J., dissenting:
The district court denied visitation in Africa, where the father
was born and currently lives and works. Whether the father should be
allowed to have his son visit him in Africa was the main issue in this
custody and visitation case. Yet, all the written "decree of custody" says
about it is that the father's "request for visitation in Africa is denied." The
decree gives no reason for this ruling. And, although the "best interest of
the child" is the polestar by which courts are to navigate custody and
visitation disputes, see NRS 125.480(1), the decree does not mention the
best interest of the child, even in passing.
The district court's oral findings do not explain the ban on
African visitation either, at least not in terms of parental fitness or the
interest of the child. At the end of the evidentiary hearing, the district
judge acknowledges that, "[v]e know that the law attempts to maximize
the relationship between the child and both parents." Continuing, he
finds the child, then almost seven, too young to have a creditable visitation
preference; that the parents have "minimal" conflicts; that neither the
mother, the father, nor the child has mental or physical health problems;
that the child has traveled with his parents—to Africa, in fact—and
"benefitted from . . . that travel"; and that there is "no evidence of any
abuse or neglect," "no evidence ... of domestic violence," and "no evidence
of a parental abduction" in this case. The only arguably negative finding
as to the parties concerns the mother, who the judge said "has
demonstrated a tendency towards controlling behavior," though he
hastened to add, "that may simply [be] because of the absence of [court]
orders and being the primary parent stepping up."
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The sole reason given for the district court's decision to forbid
visitation in Africa until the child reaches majority is this:
In terms of the visitation in Africa. . . I should
note that the world is a dangerous place as we've
learned even in the United States terrorism can
occur, that the proposed countries [for visitation in
Africa—Rwanda and Uganda] are not Hague
signatories nor Hague compliant.
(Emphasis added.)
On this record, I am not prepared to infer, as my colleagues
say the law requires, that the "district court properly exercise[d] its
discretion in determining [thej child's best interest." Majority opinion
ante, at 1-2 (citing Wallace v. Wallace, 112 Nev. 1015, 1019, 922 P.2d 541,
543 (1996)) (notably, Wallace reverses a district court's custody and
visitation determination as "precipitous," id. at 1020, 922 P.2d at 544). In
my view, it is incumbent on us, as the reviewing court, to evaluate
whether "the district court . . . reached its conclusions for [legally]
appropriate reasons," Ellis v. Carucci, 123 Nev. 145, 149, 161 P.3d 239,
241-42 (2007), and from what appears here, I cannot say that occurred.
The analysis properly begins with the "presumption that fit
parents act in the best interests of their children." Troxel v. Granville, 530
U.S. 57, 68 (2000)--a presumption that rests on a parent's "fundamental
constitutional right to make decisions concerning the rearing of [his or]
her own" child. Id. at 70. Here, the mother and father disagree on the
appropriateness of their child visiting his father in Africa in the summers
between the Las Vegas school years. The legal question presented is
significant: Where, as here, both parents are fit and no threat of abduction
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is found, should a parent's visitation rights depend on whether the country
in which visitation is proposed is signatory to the Hague Convention? 1
Courts elsewhere that have considered visitation in non-
Hague-signatory countries recognize that reflexive fear of the unknown is
not sufficient to overcome a parent's desire to expose his or her child to the
world beyond the United States. Absent an established basis to believe
the parent would abduct or refuse to return the child, or demonstrated
risk of grave harm, courts have
decline[d] to adopt a bright-line rule
prohibiting out-of-country visitation by a parent
whose country has not adopted the Hague
Convention or executed an extradition treaty with
the United States. Such a rule would
unnecessarily penalize a law-abiding parent and
could conflict with a child's best interest by
depriving the child of an opportunity to share his
or her family heritage with a parent. Moreover, it
would mistakenly change the focus from the parent
to whether his or her native country's laws,
policies, religion or values conflict with our own.
Such an inflexible rule would border on
'In this case, although the mother cited concern with the child's
safety which the district court picked up, the court heard no competent,
non-hearsay evidence concerning the safety of the countries in which the
father proposed to exercise visitation rights (Rwanda and Uganda).
Indeed, the mother voluntarily traveled with the child to Kenya in the
past, without incident. And, while the mother has spent more time and
thus has a closer relationship with the child than the father, this seems
inevitable, given the father's place of work and the mother's insistence on
Nevada visitation.
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xenophobia, a long word with a long and sinister
past.
Abouzahr v. Matera-Abouzahr, 824 A.2d 268, 281-82 (N.J. Super. Ct. App.
Div. 2003) (emphasis added); see Long v. Ardestani, 624 N.W.2d 405, 417
(Wis. Ct. App. 2001) (finding no cases that "even hint" at a rule that
provides, "as a matter of law that a parent. . . may not take a child to a
country that is not a signatory to the Hague Convention if the other
parent objects, even if a court finds the parent wishing to take the child
intends to return the child and otherwise comply with court orders"). For
a general discussion see Lexi Maxwell, Comment, The Disparity in
Treatment of International Custody Disputes in American Courts: A Post-
September 11th Analysis, 17 Pace Int'l L. Rev. 105 (2005).
This case was appealed and submitted on abbreviated, fast-
track briefing. While we may be able to review the hearing transcript and
come up with reasons the district court perhaps could have used to deny
the father visitation in Africa, the fact remains that these are not reasons
the district court gave for ruling as it did. On the contrary, the reason the
district court gave for requiring the father to come half-way around the
world to visit his son for two-week stretches of time in Nevada is that the
father seeks visitation in a country not signatory to the Hague
Convention. I am not prepared to subscribe to a rule that such a
restriction is impliedly in the best interest of the child. The findings and
record being inadequate to sustain the visitation restriction imposed, I
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would reverse or, at minimum, direct full briefing and argument in this
troubling case.
I respectfully dissent.
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