Pursuant to Ind.Appellate Rule 65(D),
this Memorandum Decision shall not be
regarded as precedent or cited before
any court except for the purpose of
establishing the defense of res judicata,
collateral estoppel, or the law of the case.
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:
                                                            November 19 2013, 6:20 am
KAREN A. WYLE
Karen A. Wyle Law Office
Bloomington, Indiana




                               IN THE
                     COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

FAWN MCDONALD-WOOLRIDGE,                           )
                                                   )
       Appellant-Petitioner,                       )
                                                   )
               vs.                                 )    No. 53A01-1204-DR-593
                                                   )
JACOB WOOLRIDGE,                                   )
    Appellee-Respondent.                           )


                      APPEAL FROM THE MONROE CIRCUIT COURT
                           The Honorable Valeri Haughton, Judge
                              Cause No. 53C08-0504-DR-233




                                        November 19, 2013



                 MEMORANDUM DECISION - NOT FOR PUBLICATION




ROBB, Chief Judge
                                  Case Summary and Issues

       Fawn McDonald-Woolridge (“Mother”) appeals the trial court’s order regarding

custody and parenting time. Mother presents four issues on appeal: 1) whether the trial

court’s findings of fact are erroneous; 2) whether the trial court abused its discretion in

failing to consider certain evidence; 3) whether the trial court abused its discretion in finding

Mother in contempt; and 4) whether the trial court improperly delegated the authority to

determine when Jacob Woolridge’s (“Father”) parenting time should become unsupervised.

Concluding that the findings of fact are not clearly erroneous and the trial court did not abuse

its discretion as to admission of evidence or finding Mother in contempt, but that whether to

move Father to unsupervised parenting time is properly determined by the trial court and that

certain make-up parenting time still needs to be addressed, we affirm in part and remand.

                                Facts and Procedural History

       In 2001, Mother and Father were married. Their son, O.W., was born in 2002 and

their daughter, A.W., was born in 2004.1 In 2005, Father was convicted of felony sexual

misconduct with a minor stemming from an offense involving Mother’s younger sister.

Mother and Father then divorced in 2005 and Mother was given primary custody of O.W. and

A.W. (the “Children”). Father was allowed visitation and was ordered to pay child support.

At some point Father remarried, and Father and his current wife, Brittany Woolridge, have a

daughter, L.W., who was two years old at the time of the hearings underlying this appeal.

       In December 2011, an agreed entry reflected Mother’s and Father’s stipulations as to



                                               2
parenting time arrangements. In the summer of 2012, Mother denied Father parenting time

for approximately two months, with his parenting time resuming at the beginning of

September 2012. Mother denied Father parenting time based on a belief that Father allowed

the Children to visit with his stepfather, Tom Stierwalt. The court has at times restricted or

limited Father in taking the Children to Stierwalt’s house, based on Father being exposed to

inappropriate behavior at the hands of Stierwalt when Father was growing up. In August

2012, Father filed a verified petition to modify a previous court order and a verified petition

for citation for contempt. In October 2012, Mother filed a motion for rule to show cause.

Mother’s and Father’s motions were heard in late October 2012.

       On November 19, 2012, A.W. told Mother some things that alleged that Father had

touched her inappropriately. Mother took A.W. to her mother’s (“Grandmother”) house

where A.W. elaborated on the incidents to Mother and Grandmother and used a doll to

explain where she had been touched. Mother called her attorney that day, and the next day

took A.W. to the police station and then to the Department of Child Services (“DCS”).

Sometime soon thereafter, Mary Deckard, a family case manager (“FCM”) with DCS, came

to Mother’s house and spoke to Mother and the Children. On November 28, 2012, A.W. was

interviewed at Susie’s Place, a child advocacy center where forensic interviews of possible

child victims are conducted. A forensic interviewer, Whitney Mallow, interviewed A.W.

while FCM Deckard, Detective Sergeant Downing—a state-certified forensic investigator

with the Morgan County Sheriff’s Department—and Beth Penn of the Morgan County

Prosecutor’s Office all observed the interview in a separate room with audio and video feeds.


       1
           Mother also has another son, C.W.
                                               3
       At the interview, Mallow first asked A.W. if she knew where she was or why she was

there. A.W. replied that she knew that Susie’s Place was there to help children who had been

hurt. As to what they were there to talk about, she said that “my mom says that, um, my dad,

he’s been touching me in inappropriate parts. He has done that to other peop— to this other

person, but he’s been doing it to me a lot.” Appellant’s Brief at 7. A.W. then went on to

describe an incident two years before in which she was in her bed at Father’s house in the

room that she shares with L.W. During the night, someone who she thought could have been

Father came in and she felt a big hand pinching and squeezing her private parts though her

pajama pants. When asked to clarify, she said that her private parts meant her vagina. After

that night-time incident, she said that Father had been “touching my vagina ever since, like

on top of clothes . . . like when I’m walking past, he like rubs along it and then he pinches it.”

Id. at 8. She said that it happened frequently, and it hurt. She talked about Stierwalt

pinching and tickling her vagina, bottom, and breast while they were in the living room and

family and friends were present. She also indicated that Brittany pinches her bottom but not

her “front parts.” She claimed that Father’s touches happened often, “like, at least every

minute,” as well as “everywhere” throughout Father’s house as well as at other houses and

with other people present. She said that Father told her not to tell anyone, and she affirmed

that the events she described “really happen[ed].” Id. at 9. When Mallow asked A.W.

whether she had any questions after answering so many, A.W. asked, “has this stuff been

really wrong?” Id. at 7. When asked what she thought now that she and Mallow had talked

about these things, A.W. replied that she hoped she would be safe now, but that she still



                                                4
wanted to go to her Father’s house to see her stepsister L.W. A few days after the interview,

FCM Deckard visited Father and Brittany at their home and spoke to them about the

allegations.

       On November 30, 2012, Mother filed a motion to suspend parenting time. In a report

dated December 11, 2012, FCM Deckard concluded that A.W. was determined to be safe as

“there was no disclosure of specific molest regarding [Father] or others in [Father’s] home.”

Appellant’s Appendix at 46. The allegations were determined to be unsubstantiated by DCS,

and the report concluded that the Children were safe to visit with Father in his home as

scheduled per the parenting time agreement. Mother and FCM Deckard testified that when

Deckard told her the allegations had not been substantiated, Deckard also told her that if she

had concerns about A.W., then she should do whatever she thought she needed to do as a

parent to protect her child.

       In December 2012, Father filed a verified petition to modify custody, a petition for

rule to show cause, a response to Mother’s motion to suspend parenting time, and a motion

for emergency hearing. On January 28, 2013, the court issued an order concerning the

motions heard in October 2012. Among other things, the court found both Mother and Father

to be in contempt of court and sentenced each of them to thirty days in jail suspended, and

ordered that Father would continue to have the right to exercise parenting time and that

Mother was not allowed to unilaterally withhold parenting time.

       On January 29, 2013, the court held a hearing on the emergency motions, and issued

an interim parenting time motion that allowed Father parenting time with the condition that it



                                              5
be supervised.2 The court continued the hearing on the remaining motions to February 2013.

Over two days in February 2013, hearings were held regarding parenting time; the hearing

was continued to March 2013 for evidence regarding modification of custody. Witnesses at

the hearings included both Mother and Father, Grandmother, FCM Decker, Sergeant

Downing, and Terry Eads, who is a mental health provider who had been meeting with A.W.

and had also been supervising visits between the Children and Father. On April 4, 2013, the

court issued an order on outstanding motions. The court ordered Father’s unsupervised

parenting time to resume with a transition period over several weeks for Father to return to

full weekends of parenting time; ordered A.W. to continue therapy with Eads, with Mother

and Father participating as requested by Eads, and with Eads developing a safety plan with

A.W.; denied Father’s modification of custody request, but expressed concerns about

Mother’s attempts to limit Father’s parenting time and reminded Mother that she had been

found in contempt in the court’s January 28, 2013 order and that any future failure to comply

with parenting time orders would result in the revocation of the suspended sentence; granted

Father make-up days for lost parenting time, allowing him to exercise parenting time for the

entire 2013 summer break; and found Mother to again be in contempt for failing to comply

with parenting time orders, “even after being instructed by [DCS] that it was determined the

[C]hildren were safe to visit with Father in his home as scheduled,” and ordered Mother to

pay $500 of Father’s attorney’s fees as a result of her contempt. Appellant’s App. at 13.




       2
          Mother had denied Father parenting time after A.W. first made the allegations on November 19,
2012, until this order was issued, at which point Father began supervised parenting time.

                                                   6
       On April 5, 2013, Mother filed a motion to stay order, and that same day the court

issued an order delaying implementation of parenting time as ordered on April 4. The April

5 order allowed Father to continue supervised parenting time “until such time as the

supervising agency provides the Court notice that sessions may become unsupervised”;

provided for A.W. to continue with therapeutic counseling and to work toward unsupervised

parenting time; reminded Mother and Father that neither may unilaterally stop the therapeutic

counseling; and asked both the counselor and supervising agency to file a report with the

court within thirty days. Appellant’s App. at 14. This appeal followed. Additional facts will

be supplied as necessary.

                                  Discussion and Decision

                                   I. No Appellee’s Brief

       When, as here, the appellee does not file a brief, we apply a less stringent standard of

review and will reverse the trial court if the appellant establishes prima facie error. State v.

C.D., 947 N.E.2d 1018, 1021 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011). “Prima facie” is defined as “at first sight,

on first appearance, or on the face of it.” Id. This rule is not intended to benefit the

appellant, but rather to relieve us of the burden of developing arguments on behalf of the

appellee. Id. The burden of demonstrating trial court error remains with the appellant. Id.

                                     II. Findings of Fact

                                   A. Standard of Review

       When a court has made findings of fact, we determine whether the evidence supports

the trial court’s findings and whether those findings support the court’s conclusions. Yanoff



                                               7
v. Muncy, 688 N.E.2d 1259, 1262 (Ind. 1997). We will only set aside findings where they

are clearly erroneous—that is, when the record contains no facts to support them either

directly or by inference. Id. In order to determine that a finding is clearly erroneous, our

review of the evidence must leave us with a firm conviction that a mistake has been made.

Id.

                     B. Findings of Facts Regarding A.W.’s Interview

       Mother argues that the trial court’s findings of fact indicate that it did not review the

DVD recording of A.W.’s interview at Susie’s Place and further argues that the findings are

inaccurate and unsupported by the record. Mother’s main argument focuses on two of the

court’s findings of fact, points twelve and thirteen, which begin with “Ms. Deckard and

Sergeant Downing testified . . . .” Appellant’s Br. at 17. Mother argues that the “logical

inference” is that the court was simply recounting the “largely inaccurate” testimony of the

witnesses rather than providing its own assessment. Id. Mother then goes on to give possible

interpretations of several of A.W.’s statements. Mother also argues that, even if these are the

court’s own findings of fact, they are not supported by the evidence. For this contention,

Mother cites to certain sentences within the court’s twelfth and thirteenth findings of fact and

notes that the wording is closer to that in FCM Decker’s DCS report than to A.W.’s exact

wording in the interview.

       We first note that while we recognize the seriousness of A.W.’s allegations, we do not

reweigh the evidence on appeal. Shady v. Shady, 858 N.E.2d 128, 139 (Ind. Ct. App. 2006),

trans. denied. To the extent that Mother asks us to re-interpret statements from A.W.’s



                                               8
interview, that is not within the purview of this court. As for Mother’s argument that the

findings of fact imply that the court did not watch the DVD of A.W.’s interview, that is

speculation. We have reviewed the record, including the DVD, and cannot say that the

findings of fact are clearly erroneous.3 Mother does not indicate how the outcome would

have been different had the court adopted the findings of fact exactly as Mother suggests.

The court order required A.W. to continue with therapy, denied Father’s request for

modification of custody, and with its order the next day, required that Father’s parenting time

be supervised. Presumably, Mother would prefer that the court had made more firm findings

against Father and denied him all parenting time. However, the record supplies some

uncertainties as to A.W.’s allegations and supports the judgment of the court, which seemed

to be trying to find a reasonable middle ground.4 The record reveals that A.W. has remained

firm in her allegations, but that DCS, Sergeant Downing, and Eads all question to what extent

those allegations are to be believed. That is because of statements that A.W. made in the

interview regarding what Mother had told her, the improbability of some of her accusations

(such as that Father pinches her vagina all of the time and around other people), and her

interactions with Father during supervised parenting time, among other things.




        3
          We remind the trial court that it must adopt, and not merely reference or quote, the testimony of
witnesses for a finding to be considered a finding of the court. See Parks v. Del. Cnty. Dep’t of Child
Servs., 862 N.E.2d 1275, 1279 (Ind. Ct. App. 2007).

        4
           At the end of the January 29 hearing, after which the court ordered supervised parenting time for
Father, the court said that it was “trying to reach a compromise solution so that both parties have some
assurances that they are being treated fairly, that the [C]hildren are being protected, that [Father’s] rights as

                                                       9
                                     III. Admission of Evidence

                                        A. Standard of Review

        Whether to admit or exclude evidence is a determination entrusted to the sound

discretion of the trial court. Mundy v. Angelicchio, 623 N.E.2d 456, 460 (Ind. Ct. App.

1993). We will reverse the trial court’s decision only when it has abused that discretion. Id.

An abuse of discretion occurs when the decision is clearly erroneous—that is, against the

logic and effect of the facts and circumstances or the reasonable inferences to be drawn

therefrom. Id.      Regardless of the objection made at trial, if the trial court’s exclusion of

evidence is supportable, we cannot say the trial court abused its discretion. Id. Moreover,

even if an evidentiary decision was an abuse of discretion, we will not reverse if the ruling

constituted harmless error. Spaulding v. Harris, 914 N.E.2d 820, 829-30 (Ind. Ct. App.

2009), trans. denied. Where wrongfully excluded testimony is merely cumulative of other

evidence, its exclusion is harmless error. Id.

                             B. Evidence Relating to Father’s History

        At the hearing, Mother attempted to have Grandmother testify as to the behavior of

her daughter (Mother’s sister) after her daughter had been molested by Father, in order to

compare that behavior to A.W.’s behavior. Father objected to the time frame of the

testimony as being prior to the last custody order and therefore not relevant to the current

proceedings. The court went off record to talk to counsel, and once back on the record

Mother stated that she had no more questions.



a parent are being preserved, and addressed.” Transcript at 29.

                                                    10
        Indiana Code section 31-17-2-21(c) provides that, regarding a modification of child

custody order, the court “shall not hear evidence on a matter occurring before the last custody

proceeding between the parties unless the matter relates to a change in the factors relating to

the best interests of the child as described by section 8 . . . .” Mother argues that there was no

prior custody proceeding, because custody was originally set in the divorce settlement

agreement, and since then parenting time has changed, but custody has not and there have

been no hearings involving custody.5 Mother further argues that, regardless of any prior

proceedings, the statute allows the court to hear matters relating to the best interest of the

child, and that Grandmother’s evidence went to whether Father had molested A.W. and

therefore went to factors to be considered when determining the best interest of the child,

such as the interaction and interrelationship of the child with her parents. We agree that the

testimony was not barred by Indiana Code section 31-17-2-21. However, the trial court has

wide discretion in admission and exclusion of evidence, and we conclude that there was no

abuse of that discretion here.

        Because the court went off the record after Mother’s offer of proof following Father’s

objection, we cannot know what transpired, although the transcript prior to that break

indicates that the court agreed with Father that any evidence prior to December 2011 was

somewhat off-limits. However, Mother acknowledges that the court did not exclude every

mention of Father’s history. Rather, the court did not allow testimony regarding evidence

predating December 2011, with the exception of evidence that the court had not previously


        5
         The “last custody order,” referenced by Father in his objection seems to refer to the December
2011 agreed entry regarding parenting time; that entry did not address custody.

                                                   11
heard. During the hearings, the court did allow testimony regarding events prior to

December 2011, over Father’s objections, if the evidence had not previously been presented

to the court. Additionally, by the time Grandmother testified, the court had already heard

testimony from Eads, a professional who had worked with “hundreds” of children regarding

sexual misconduct allegations prior to seeing A.W. Tr. at 40. Eads testified that prior to

supervising time between A.W. and Father, Eads was leaning in one direction because A.W.

was consistent in her story and did not appear to be dishonest, but when she saw A.W. with

Father, the “pieces didn’t fit at that point” and A.W. “did not represent as the child who had

been traumatized in the way that she had said.” Id. at 61. While she stressed that it was not

her job to conclude whether something had happened, but rather her goal was to help A.W.

process her feelings, Eads’s testimony was certainly equivocal as to whether A.W.’s behavior

indicated that she had been molested. We cannot say that the trial court abused its discretion

in declining to admit Grandmother’s evidence regarding the behavior of her own child who

was molested.

                                         IV. Contempt

                                      A. Standard of Review

       Whether a party is in contempt is a matter left to the sound discretion of the trial court,

and we reverse the trial court’s finding of contempt only if it is against the logic and effect of

the evidence before it or is contrary to law. Sutton v. Sutton, 773 N.E.2d 289, 297 (Ind. Ct.

App. 2002). When reviewing a contempt order, we will neither reweigh the evidence nor

judge the credibility of witnesses, and unless after a review of the entire record we have a



                                               12
firm and definite belief a mistake has been made by the trial court, the trial court’s judgment

will be affirmed. Id.

                              B. Finding Mother in Contempt

       Mother next challenges the court’s contempt finding in its April 2013 order. Mother

cites to Williamson v. Creamer for the proposition that if a parent believes a noncustodial

parent is molesting their child, the custodial parent must file a petition for modification of

parenting time rather than simply withholding parenting time; because Mother did file a

petition for modification of parenting time, she argues that she should not be held in

contempt. 722 N.E.2d 863, 866 (Ind. Ct. App. 2000). However, Williamson does not imply

that filing a petition for modification allows the parent to then withhold parenting time until

the court has made a decision. In fact, Williamson notes that, “[e]ven if a party contends that

an order is erroneous, the order must still be obeyed . . . A party’s remedy for an erroneous

order is appeal and disobedience of the order is contempt.” Id. (citation omitted). While we

sympathize with the conundrum of what to do in the interim—after the petition for

modification has been filed but before the court has issued an order—in this case it appears

that the trial court was mainly concerned with Mother continuing to withhold parenting time

after DCS determined that the allegation was unsubstantiated and A.W. was safe to visit

Father, rather than with Mother’s initial withholding of parenting time before A.W.’s

allegations could be investigated. It is possible that the court also viewed Mother’s actions in

light of her past attempts to withhold parenting time from Father. Mother notes that

“[c]ounsel is aware of no authority indicating that a DCS report, setting forth its personnel’s



                                              13
conclusions about what is best for a child, constitutes a court order or is in any other way

binding upon the parent concerned.” Appellant’s Br. at 25. We agree that the DCS report

was not a court order. However, the gist of the trial court’s concern seems to be not that

DCS in some way ordered Mother to resume parenting time, but that the court had originally

ordered parenting time, and there was nothing in the DCS report that might justify Mother’s

continued withholding of parenting time. We conclude that the trial court did not abuse its

discretion in finding Mother in contempt.

                   V. Delegation of Authority to Determine Supervision

       Mother also argues that the court erred in delegating to a supervising agency the

authority to determine when Father’s parenting time would become unsupervised. We agree.

Mother cites to In re Paternity of A.R.R., which interpreted a statute providing that the court

may modify an order granting or denying visitation rights. 634 N.E.2d 786, 789 (Ind. Ct.

App. 1994) (“[A] modification of visitation may not be granted absent a determination by the

court that the modification would serve the best interests of the child. No statute permits this

determination to be delegated to a caseworker, probation officer, guardian, or other authority,

and to do so would be to undermine the safeguards inherent in reserving to a detached and

impartial court the task of weighing the many considerations relevant to visitation.”); see also

In re Marriage of Stephens, 810 N.W.2d 523, 530 n.3 (Iowa Ct. App. 2012) (citing cases in

other jurisdictions agreeing that the court may not delegate to third parties its judicial power

to determine visitation or custody). A similar provision is now codified at Indiana Code

section 31-17-4-2. Ind. Code § 31-17-4-2 (“The court may modify an order granting or



                                              14
denying parenting time rights whenever modification would serve the best interests of the

child.”). While the court will likely rely upon the opinion of the supervising agency and

therapist, the ultimate decision of when and how to modify parenting time is in the hands of

the trial court and may not be delegated. We remand for the trial court to revise its order.

                                        VI. Parenting Time

       Mother also requests that we vacate the trial court’s award of make-up parenting time.

Mother notes that the order allowed the make-up time during the summer 2013 school break

that has since passed, suggests that the order is now moot, and argues that, considering the

errors complained of in this appeal, any make-up time was premature.6 We disagree that the

question of make-up time is moot, and given our conclusions on Mother’s other issues, we

cannot say that such a determination was premature. We remand to the trial court to re-

evaluate make-up parenting time.

       Finally, Mother requests that we remand for the trial court to reassess payment for

supervised parenting time. The court originally ordered Mother to pay the costs of the

supervised parenting time because she was “infinitely more comfortable with the supervised

parenting time right now,” and because Father’s income was “very, very limited” but the

court noted that it would consider payment at the final adjudication. Tr. at 238-39. As a

significant period of time has passed since the court’s April orders, which had Mother

continuing to pay the costs of A.W.’s therapy with Eads—presumably to include Eads’s




       6
          Mother implies that Father never had make-up parenting time during the 2013 summer, likely
because of the court’s April 5 order maintaining Father on supervised parenting time.

                                                  15
supervision of parenting time—it would be appropriate on remand for the trial court to re-

evaluate the parties’ situations and who should best pay for supervised parenting time.

                                        Conclusion

       Concluding that the trial court did not err as to its findings of fact or abuse its

discretion as to admission of evidence or finding Mother in contempt, but that the court did

err in delegating the authority to modify parenting time and that certain make-up parenting

time and payment of supervision needs to be addressed, we affirm in part and remand.

       Affirmed in part and remanded.

RILEY, J., and KIRSCH, J., concur.




                                            16
