IN THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA
January 2013 Term
FILED
April 2, 2013
No. 11-1703 released at 3:00 p.m.
RORY L. PERRY II, CLERK
SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
OF WEST VIRGINIA
TODD M.S.,
Respondent Below, Petitioner
v.
JULIE M.G.,
Petitioner Below, Respondent
Appeal from the Circuit Court of Kanawha County
Honorable Paul Zakaib Jr.
Civil Action No. 07-D-1799
REVERSED AND REMANDED
Submitted: February 19, 2013
Filed: April 2, 2013
Lyne Ranson, Esq. Travis A. Griffith, Esq.
Lyne Ranson Law Offices, PLLC Olivio & Griffith Law Offices, PLLC
Charleston, West Virginia Charleston, West Virginia
Attorney for Petitioner Attorney for Respondent
The opinion of the Court was delivered PER CURIAM.
SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
1. “In reviewing a final order entered by a circuit court judge upon a review
of, or upon a refusal to review, a final order of a family court judge, we review the findings
of fact made by the family court judge under the clearly erroneous standard, and the
application of law to the facts under an abuse of discretion standard. We review questions
of law de novo.” Syllabus, Carr v. Hancock, 216 W.Va. 474, 607 S.E.2d 803 (2004).
2. “A statutory provision which is clear and unambiguous and plainly
expresses the legislative intent will not be interpreted by the courts but will be given full
force and effect.” Syl. Pt. 2, State v. Epperly, 135 W.Va. 877, 65 S.E.2d 488 (1951).
Per Curiam:
The petitioner father, Todd M.S., appeals the Order of Reversal and Remand
Regarding Petition for Appeal from the Family Court Order of May 11, 2011, entered
October 31, 2011, in the Circuit Court of Kanawha County. In that order, the circuit court
found that the parties had a “de facto” parenting plan under which the petitioner father was
to provide all transportation for the parties’ child for purposes of visitation following the
petitioner father’s relocation from West Virginia to Pennsylvania. The petitioner father
argues that the circuit court committed error in reversing the final order of the family court.
Having fully considered the record in this matter in conjunction with the parties’ briefs and
the arguments presented, we determine that the circuit court erred in reversing the final order
of the family court. Accordingly, the circuit court’s order is reversed and this case is
remanded to the circuit court with directions to remand the case to the family court for entry
of a new order modifying the parties’ parenting plan.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
The petitioner father and the respondent mother, Julie M.G., were married in
2002. They had one child together, a son, who was born on December 14, 2002. Their
marital home was located in Charleston, West Virginia.
1
The parties were divorced by order of the Family Court of Kanawha County
entered August 2, 2008. Adopted into the final divorce order was an agreed parenting plan
(“the parenting plan order”). Under the parenting plan order, the respondent mother is the
primary custodial parent and the petitioner father has parenting time every other weekend and
every Wednesday evening.1 The parenting plan order also allowed each parent to have three
non-consecutive weeks of vacation time with the child each year.2 The parties followed the
parenting plan order for approximately two years during which time they both continued to
reside in Charleston.
In February of 2010, the petitioner father resigned from his job in Charleston
and relocated to Fayetteville,3 Pennsylvania, which is approximately five hours from
Charleston. The petitioner father states that the purpose of the relocation was to be closer
to his family members and to marry his current wife.
1
The Wednesday evening visitation became an overnight visit on alternating
Wednesdays after the child reached school age.
2
A review of the parenting plan order in the appendix record reveals that it does not
set forth a schedule for holidays, such as Christmas and Thanksgiving.
3
According to the record, in addition to Fayetteville, the petitioner father has also
resided Franklin County, Pennsylvania, and Chambersburg, Pennsylvania. All three of these
locations appear to be approximately five hours from Charleston, West Virginia.
2
As a result of the petitioner father’s relocation, compliance with the provisions
of the parenting plan order regarding visitation became problematic. Consequently, during
2010, following the petitioner father’s relocation, he exercised visitation with the child one
weekend per month in Charleston. He also exercised visitation during a portion of the child’s
spring break that year and for approximately six weeks that summer.
Notwithstanding the respondent mother’s arguments to the contrary, the record
reflects that the parties were unable to reach an agreed-upon modification of the parenting
plan order following the petitioner father’s relocation to Pennsylvania. More specifically,
the record contains copies of email correspondence between the parties beginning in March
of 2010, one month after the petitioner father’s relocation, in which the parties were clearly
trying to modify the parenting plan order in light of the relocation. It is equally clear from
this email correspondence that the parties were unable to reach an agreement; that they were
contemplating a return to the family court to obtain a new parenting plan; and that their
primary dispute involved the transportation of the child for purposes of the petitioner father’s
visitation. The petitioner father wanted the respondent mother to transport the child to
3
Morgantown, West Virginia,4 whereas the respondent mother believed the petitioner father
should pick up the child at her home in Charleston.5
Although the need for court intervention to modify the parenting plan order
was contemplated by the parties, the first relief sought in the family court was a petition for
4
Charleston is approximately 155 miles from Morgantown, which the petitioner father
represents is approximately halfway between his home in Pennsylvania and Charleston.
5
In one email communication, the respondent mother told the petitioner father the
following:
I told you I will not agree to make exchanges in Morgantown.
That is not reasonable or workable for me. I understand it
would be more economical for you and more convenient for
you, and I understand that is your basis for asking that I agree to
that . . . Your visitation is about you spending time with [our
child], not what I can do . . . You made a choice to move to PA
. . . However, you moved without complying with the statute
[W.Va. Code § 48-9-403] and you did so knowing your move
would make your visitation more difficult. And, you made your
decision and moved without having a new plan in place. Your
visitation will be more difficult because you decided to move so
far away . . . I did not make any choice that created the problem
and I will not agree to bear the consequence after the fact.
4
expedited modification of child support filed by the petitioner father on September 9, 2010.6
He did not seek a modification of the parenting plan order at that time.7
On or about September 27, 2010, the respondent mother filed a response to the
petition for modification of child support and a counter-petition seeking to modify the
parenting plan order.8 In her counter-petition, she alleged that the parties had experienced
a change in circumstances (the petitioner father’s relocation to Pennsylvania) which required
a modification of the parenting plan order under West Virginia Code § 48-9-401 (2009).9
She further alleged that the petitioner father had failed to file a notice of his relocation as
required under West Virginia Code § 49-9-403 (2009) and that she “had made efforts to
facilitate [the petitioner father’s] visitation with the child despite no workable parenting plan
being in place.” As part of her pleadings, she also set forth a proposed modification to the
6
As grounds for the petition, the petitioner father argued that he no longer had an
income because he had been discharged from his employment in Pennsylvania. While the
petitioner father’s child support obligation was a contested issue below, it is not an issue in
the appeal to this Court.
7
Although the petitioner father is a lawyer, he was acting pro se at that time.
8
The respondent mother, who is also a lawyer, initially acted pro se in these
proceedings, as well.
9
West Virginia Code § 48-9-401(a) provides, in relevant part, as follows: “Except as
provided in section 9-402 [§ 48-9-402] or 9-403 [§ 48-9-403], a court shall modify a
parenting plan order if it finds . . . that a substantial change has occurred in the circumstances
of . . . one or both parents and a modification is necessary to serve the best interests of the
child.”
5
parenting plan order, which included requiring the petitioner father to travel to Charleston
to pick up the child for purposes of his visitation with the child.
In his response to the respondent mother’s counter-petition for a modification
of the parenting plan order, the petitioner father agreed that his relocation was a change in
circumstances under West Virginia Code § 48-9-401 that required a modification of the
parenting plan order. While acknowledging the fact that he did not file the requisite notice
under West Virginia Code § 49-9-403(b),10 the petitioner father stated that he verbally
informed the respondent mother of his anticipated relocation more than six months prior to
the move.
10
West Virginia Code § 48-9-403(b) provides, in part, that
[u]nless otherwise ordered by the court, a parent who has
responsibility under a parenting plan who changes, or intends to
change, residences for more than ninety days must give a
minimum of sixty days’ advance notice, or the most notice
practicable under the circumstances, to any other parent with
responsibility under the same parenting plan.
Similarly, Rule 52 of the Rules of Practice and Procedure for Family Court provides, in part,
that “[a] parent with responsibilities under a court ordered parenting plan who changes or
intends to change residence for more than 90 days shall file with the circuit clerk and provide
to the other parent a notice of relocation which complies with the requirements of W.Va.
Code, § 48-9-403.” On December 15, 2010, the petitioner father filed a “Notice Pursuant to
W.Va. Code § 48-9-403 Nunc Pro Tunc.”
6
On December 16, 2010, a hearing was held before the family court on all
outstanding matters. During this hearing, the respondent mother argued for the first time that
the parties had been following a “de facto” parenting plan since the petitioner father’s
relocation.11 Thereafter, on February 1, 2011, the family court entered an order finding, inter
alia, that under West Virginia Code § 48-9-402 (2009), “[w]hen a change in a parenting plan
exists, despite an established parenting plan for a period of time, a de facto parenting
arrangement occurs.”12 The family court then ordered the petitioner father to provide all
transportation for the child to and from Pennsylvania for his parenting time.
11
At this December 16, 2010, hearing, the respondent mother was represented by her
current counsel, Mr. Griffith, who filed a notice of appearance in the family court on
December 8, 2010.
12
West Virginia Code § 48-9-402 states, in relevant part, as follows:
(b) The court may modify any provisions of the parenting
plan without the showing of change [sic] circumstances required
by subsection 9-401(a) if the modification is in the child’s best
interests, and the modification:
(1) Reflects the de facto arrangements under which the
child has been receiving care from the petitioner, without
objection, in substantial deviation from the parenting plan, for
the preceding six months before the petition for modification is
filed . . .
For reasons more fully explained below, we do not believe that West Virginia Code § 48-9
402 is applicable to the facts and circumstances of the case at bar.
7
Thereafter, the petitioner father filed a motion seeking a clarification of
outstanding parenting issues in the family court, as well as a motion to reconsider the
February 1, 2011, order,13 on the basis that the order was inconsistent with the family court’s
rulings made during the December 16, 2010, hearing. The family court held a hearing on the
petitioner father’s motion for clarification on March 2, 2011.14 During this hearing, the
petitioner father presented the family court with a proposed parenting schedule for the period
of March of 2011, through August of 2012.
On May 11, 2011, the family court entered a final order15 which reflects that
it “accepted” the parenting plan proposed by the petitioner father covering the period of
March 2011 through August 2012, with primary custodial responsibility remaining with the
respondent mother (“final order”).16 The provisions of the final order also clarified the
13
When these motions were filed on February 25, 2011, the petitioner father was
represented by his current counsel, Ms. Ranson.
14
We note that although various orders of the courts below indicate that this hearing
was held on March 2, 2011, the transcript of this hearing indicates that it was held on March
15, 2011. For purposes of this opinion and to avoid confusion, we will refer to the hearing
date as March 2, 2011.
15
Although the final order states that the petitioner father’s motion for reconsideration
was being held in abeyance, the final order substantively changed the family court’s earlier
February 1, 2011, order; thus, in effect, the final order was a reconsideration of the February
1 order. Further, to the extent the family court’s final order did not dispose of the motion for
reconsideration, the motion has been rendered moot by this Court’s decision.
16
The family court’s final order also provided that “[t]he parties should meet and
(continued...)
8
family court’s prior order with regard to shared responsibility in the transportation of the
child by requiring the respondent mother to transport the child to Bridgeport, West Virginia,17
beginning in October of 2011, in order to facilitate the petitioner father’s parenting time. The
final order provided, in pertinent part, as follows:
The Court found that Mother is pregnant with her second
child and has experienced medical problems with her previous
pregnancy that limited her mobility. Therefore, after mother
gives birth to her second child who is expected to be born in
September, 2011, the parties will share in the transportation of
the minor child. Mother and Father will meet in Bridgeport
beginning the month of October, 2011to transfer the minor child
unless noted otherwise herein. The Court specifically said if the
mother leaves work at 5:00 p.m. she can get to Bridgeport in
time for the exchange at 7:00 p.m. Until October, 2011, Father
will pick up and drop off the minor child in Charleston.
Father’s parenting may occur in any location he so chooses.
The respondent mother appealed the family court’s final order to the circuit
court. Following a hearing on the appeal, the circuit court entered an order on October 31,
2011, reversing the family court’s final order. The circuit court found that the parties’ had
entered into a “de facto” parenting plan under West Virginia Code § 48-9-402 following
petitioner father’s relocation. The circuit court concluded that the family court had abused
16
(...continued)
discuss the parenting schedule for the remainder of 2012. In the event that the parties cannot
agree they are ordered to attend mediation to set a schedule for the 2012-2013 year.” Despite
this directive, the record does not indicate that the parties sought to mediate this matter.
17
Bridgeport is approximately 124 miles from Charleston.
9
its discretion in modifying the “de facto” plan at the petitioner father’s request, including
requiring the respondent mother to share in the transportation of the child for purposes of the
petitioner father’s visitation, without the petitioner father showing that there had been a
substantial change in circumstances18 since his relocation to Pennsylvania. The circuit court
remanded the matter to the family court for entry of an order in conformity with the circuit
court’s rulings.
It is from the circuit court’s October 31, 2011, order that the petitioner father
now appeals.
II. Standard of Review
We are asked to review a circuit court’s order entered upon an appeal of a
family court order. Our standard of review in this regard is well established:
In reviewing a final order entered by a circuit court judge
upon a review of, or upon a refusal to review, a final order of a
family court judge, we review the findings of fact made by the
family court judge under the clearly erroneous standard, and the
application of law to the facts under an abuse of discretion
standard. We review questions of law de novo.
Syllabus, Carr v. Hancock, 216 W.Va. 474, 607 S.E.2d 803 (2004). See also, Syl. Pt. 1,
Chrystal R.M. v. Charlie A.L., 194 W.Va. 138, 459 S.E.2d 415 (1995) (“Where the issue on
18
See West Virginia Code § 48-9-401(a) at note 9, supra.
.
10
an appeal from the circuit court is clearly a question of law or involving an interpretation of
a statute, we apply a de novo standard of review.”). With these standards in mind, the
petitioner father’s arguments will be considered.
III. Discussion
In the present appeal, the petitioner father raises several issues for our review.
First, he asserts that the parties had not entered into a “de facto” parenting plan following his
relocation. Second, he argues that the circuit court erroneously found that West Virginia
Code § 48-9-403(d)(1)19 gives “deference” in making parenting plan decisions to the parent
19
West Virginia Code § 48-9-403(d)(1) provides, as follows:
A parent who has been exercising a significant majority
of the custodial responsibility for the child should be allowed to
relocate with the child so long as that parent shows that the
relocation is in good faith for a legitimate purpose and to a
location that is reasonable in light of the purpose. The
percentage of custodial responsibility that constitutes a
significant majority of custodial responsibility is seventy percent
or more. A relocation is for a legitimate purpose if it is to be
close to significant family or other support networks, for
significant health reasons, to protect the safety of the child or
another member of the child’s household from significant risk
of harm, to pursue a significant employment or educational
opportunity or to be with one’s spouse who is established, or
who is pursuing a significant employment or educational
opportunity, in another location. The relocating parent has the
burden of proving of the legitimacy of any other purpose. A
move with a legitimate purpose is reasonable unless its purpose
is shown to be substantially achievable without moving or by
(continued...)
11
with seventy percent or more of the custodial responsibility for a child. Finally, the petitioner
father argues that the circuit court abused its discretion by determining the parties’ respective
caretaking functions in a manner inconsistent with the provisions of West Virginia Code §
48-9-403(e);20 by substituting its judgment for that of the family court even though the family
court’s modification of the parenting plan order was authorized under West Virginia Code
§§ 48-9-40121 and 48-9-403(a);22 and by disregarding not only his rights as the non-custodial
parent,23 but also the best interests of the child. In this regard, the petitioner father asserts
that the family court’s final order directing that the parties share in the transportation of the
child for purposes of his parenting time is in the child’s best interest as it will allow the child
19
(...continued)
moving to a location that is substantially less disruptive of the
other parent’s relationship to the child
20
West Virginia Code § 48-9-403(e) provides, as follows: “In determining the
proportion of caretaking functions each parent previously performed for the child under the
parenting plan before relocation, the court may not consider a division of functions arising
from any arrangements made after a relocation but before a modification hearing on the
issues related to relocation.” Id. (emphasis added).
21
See supra note 9.
22
West Virginia Code § 48-9-403(a) provides that “[t]he relocation of a parent
constitutes a substantial change in the circumstances under subsection 9-401(a) [§ 48-9-401]
of the child only when it significantly impairs either parent’s ability to exercise
responsibilities that the parent has been exercising.”
23
The petitioner father asserts that the circuit court’s order results in a reduction of his
parenting time over the summer and school breaks as compared to what he had in either 2010
or 2011.
12
to spend more time with his immediate paternal family in Pennsylvania. We will address the
petitioner father’s arguments in our discussion of the circuit court’s rulings below.
The primary issue in this appeal involves the modification of the parties’
parenting plan order.24 In this regard, we address two rulings of the circuit court upon which
all of its other rulings were seemingly based: (1) that the parties had entered into a “de facto
parenting plan” following the petitioner father’s relocation, which supplanted their parenting
plan order and which must dictate the terms of the court-ordered modification thereof, and
(2) that the parenting plan decisions of the respondent mother, as the primary custodial
parent, are to be given deference, including with regard to any modification to the parenting
plan order.
Once a parenting plan is in place, it may be modified under certain
circumstances as specified by statute. As we explained in Skidmore v. Rogers,
[o]nce entered, a parenting plan order may only be modified
under certain circumstances. W.Va. Code §§ 48-9-401, -402,
-403 & -404. Specifically, section 401 provides for
modification upon a showing of changed circumstances or harm
to a child, section 402 provides for modification without a
showing of changed circumstances, section 403 provides for
modification upon the relocation of a parent, and section 404
provides for modification due to a parent’s military service.
24
As indicated previously, the parties’ “parenting plan order” is the parenting plan
adopted into their final divorce order.
13
Id., 229 W.Va. 13, , 725 S.E.2d 182, 188 (2011).
In the case at bar, the circuit court relied upon West Virginia Code § 48-9
40225–which contemplates the modification of a parenting plan without showing a change
in circumstances as required by West Virginia Code § 48-9-401(a)–to find that the parties
entered into a “de facto” parenting plan following the petitioner father’s relocation to
Pennsylvania. The circuit court further found that the family court had abused its discretion
by modifying this “de facto” plan when there had been no significant change in the
circumstances of the parties or the child under West Virginia Code § 48-9-401 since the
petitioner father’s relocation.26 The respondent mother argues that the circuit court was
correct in these rulings. We disagree.
25
See supra note 12.
26
The circuit court found that the change in the petitioner father’s employment and
economic status and his remarriage, all of which occurred after his relocation, were not a
significant change in circumstances under West Virginia Code § 48-9-401 that would justify
a modification of the “de facto” parenting plan. Subsection (c) of West Virginia Code §
48-9-401 provides, in part, as follows:
Unless the parents have agreed otherwise, the following
circumstances do not justify a significant modification of a
parenting plan except where harm to the child is shown:
(1) Circumstances resulting in an involuntary loss of income, by
loss of employment or otherwise, affecting the parent’s
economic status;
(2) A parent’s remarriage . . . .
Id. (emphasis added). As discussed more fully, infra, there was no “de facto” parenting plan
in the case sub judice and the petitioner father’s relocation is the substantial change in
circumstances that warranted the entry of the family court’s final order modifying the parties’
parenting plan order.
14
Contrary to the circuit court’s order, West Virginia Code § 48-9-402 does not
provide for “de facto” parenting plans. Rather, this statute states that a court “may” modify
a parenting plan–in the absence of a substantial change in circumstances under West Virginia
Code § 48-9-401(a)–if the modification reflects the parents’ agreed upon de facto
arrangements in substantial deviation from their parenting plan. W.Va. Code § 48-9
402(b).27 In other words, where parents have been following de facto parenting arrangements
for at least six months, without objection and in substantial deviation from their court-
ordered parenting plan, but without a substantial change in circumstances, a parent may seek
a modification to the parenting plan that reflects those agreed upon de facto arrangements.
Here, as the parties originally–and correctly–contemplated, West Virginia Code
§ 48-9-402 has no application under the facts and circumstances of the case sub judice. In
the respondent mother’s counter-petition to modify the parent plan order filed in the family
court, she relied instead upon both West Virginia Code § 48-9-401 (providing for
modification upon, inter alia, a substantial change in circumstances) and § 48-9-403
(providing that the relocation of a parent is a substantial change in circumstances under § 48
9-401(a)).28 She alleged that “[a]s [the petitioner father] has relocated, it is not possible for
him to comply with the parenting plan currently in place [i.e., the parenting plan order]. [The
27
See supra note 12.
28
See supra note 9.
15
respondent mother] has made efforts to facilitate [the petitioner father’s] visitation with the
child despite no workable parenting plan being in place.” (emphasis added). The parties
clearly agreed, as does this Court, that the petitioner father’s relocation was, in fact, a change
in circumstances under West Virginia Code § 48-9-401(a) that required a modification of the
parenting plan order under the relocation statute, West Virginia Code § 48-9-403.
The respondent mother later argued in the courts below that the petitioner
father’s failure to file a timely notice of relocation meant that the parties parenting plan order
should be modified under West Virginia Code § 48-9-402 and in accordance with their “de
facto” parenting plan.29 However, West Virginia Code § 48-9-403(b) expressly contemplates
such failures and provides, in relevant part, as follows:
Failure to comply with the notice requirements of this section
without good cause may be a factor in the determination of
whether the relocation is in good faith under subsection (d) of
this section and is a basis for an award of reasonable expenses
and reasonable attorney’s fees to another parent that are
attributable to such failure.
29
Again, as we previously explained, there is no “de facto” parenting plan.
16
W.Va. Code § 48-9-403(b). Simply stated, a relocating parent’s failure to comply with these
statutory notice requirements does not negate the applicability of the relocation statute (West
Virginia Code § 48-9-403).
In light of the foregoing, we find that the circuit court erred in concluding that
West Virginia Code § 48-9-403 does not govern the modification of the parenting plan order;
in finding that the parties had entered into a “de facto” parenting plan as a result of the
petitioner father’s relocation; and in finding that this “de facto” plan could not be modified
at the petitioner father’s request unless he showed a significant change in circumstances after
his relocation.
We now turn to the circuit court’s ruling that the family court abused its
discretion by not providing deference to the respondent mother because “[u]nder the West
Virginia parent relocation statute [West Virginia Code § 48-9-403], a parent having seventy
percent (70%) or more of the custodial responsibility over a child, pursuant to a parenting
plan, shall be given deference when making parenting plan decisions.” Although the
respondent mother argues that the circuit court was correct in this ruling, we disagree and
find that the circuit court erred in this regard.
17
We look to the language of West Virginia Code § 48-9-403 to determine
whether there is any foundation for the circuit court’s ruling. In applying West Virginia
Code § 48-9-403, we stated that where “the legislative intent is clearly expressed in the
statute, this Court is not at liberty to construe the statutory provision, but is obligated to apply
its plain language.” Storrie v. Simmons, 225 W.Va. 317, 326, 693 S.E.2d 70, 79 (2010)
(internal citations omitted). Further, in syllabus point 2 of State v. Epperly, 135 W.Va. 877,
65 S.E.2d 488 (1951), we stated that “[a] statutory provision which is clear and unambiguous
and plainly expresses the legislative intent will not be interpreted by the courts but will be
given full force and effect.”
Under the clear and unambiguous language of West Virginia Code § 48-9
403(d)(1),30 a parent who has been exercising seventy percent or more of the custodial
responsibility should be allowed to relocate with the child so long as that parent shows that
the relocation is in good faith, for a legitimate purpose, and that the new location is
reasonable in light of the stated purpose. The plain language of the statute does not accord
deference to the primary custodial parent with regard to all parenting plan decisions. See Syl.
Pt. 11, in part, Brooke B. v. Donald Ray C., II, __ W.Va. __, 738 S.E.2d 21 (2013) (“[i]t is
not for this Court to arbitrarily read into a statute that which it does not say.”). We therefore
30
See supra note 19.
18
conclude that the circuit court committed error in finding that the respondent mother is to be
given deference in all parenting plan decisions.31
In consideration of all of the above, we reverse the circuit court’s order which
wrongly concluded that the family court abused its discretion through the provisions of the
family court’s final order. Having determined that the circuit court erred in reversing the
family court’s final order, we observe that the parenting plan set forth therein only covered
the period of March 2011 through August 2012.32 Consequently, we remand the case and
direct that the family court shall modify the parties’ parenting plan order to cover the period
until the child either attains the age of eighteen years, graduates high school, or upon further
order of the family court.
IV. Conclusion
Based upon the foregoing, the order of the Circuit Court of Kanawha County
entered October 31, 2011, is reversed, and this case is remanded to the circuit court for
31
Furthermore, West Virginia Code § 48-9-403(d)(1) has no application to this case
because the petitioner father, the non-custodial parent, is the party who chose to relocate.
32
We further observe that the allocation of costs in the family court’s final
order–through shared transportation of the child for purposes of the petitioner father’s
visitation–is specifically provided for under West Virginia Code § 48-9-403(c), which states,
in part, that “the court may consider the additional costs that a relocation imposes upon the
respective parties for transportation and communication, and may equitably allocate such
costs between the parties.”
19
purposes of entering an order remanding this matter to the family court for entry of an order
modifying the parenting plan order consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and Remanded with Directions
20