UpdateOn 8/1/2012 the Indiana Supreme Court ruled that this case warranted oral arguments. Oral arguments occurred this morning at 9am and are posted online.
I found it very interesting since I've gone through a round of court on an Indiana relocation case based on the same statutes. IMO it appeared the justices dived in right away and pointed out that the Appeals Court didn't have substantial foundation to find the Trial Court's decision clearly erroneous. Based on the oral arguments I would be very surprised if the Supreme Court doesn't reverse the Appeal's Court decision and reinstate the original Trial Court's ruling.
If you're interested in listening the case beings at 4:44 and it bombs the connection when I try to jump to that point. Could just be my laptop but if you have trouble just let it run to that point. Also the appellee's attorney freezes from 22:15 - 22:46 and from 40:16 - 41:30 but does start playing again.
http://media.ihets.org/vod/supremecourt/wmv/09062012_0900am.wmvOne of the arguments of Mom's attorney that really pi*ssed me off was that since Dad was very civil with Mom and played safety net picking up her slack in parenting time, that it therefore justified her moving away since they'd get along well enough to work out his parenting time. WTH, being civil and accommodating within the same city is completely different than moving hours away.
And the big question mark for me when looking at the Trial Court ruling was what did the GAL recommend. It came out in the oral argument that the GAL recommendation favored keeping the child in place. So now you've got the judge's ruling backed up by a GAL so there was even less of a reason for the Appeals Court to overrule it.
And I'm glad he pointed out that the Appeals Court assumed that Mom was the primary parent because she was Mom, but in actuality the court record showed Dad had more than 50% of the parenting time.
Overall I was pleasantly surprised by our Supreme Court and their clear understanding of the value of both parents relationship, whether male or female, custodial or noncustodial. Hopefully a quick unanimous verdict overruling the Appeals Court will confirm my assumption.