a240225 Nonprecedential Affirmed Processed

County of Hennepin v. Christina Elizabeth VonderHaar, James Mark Hedquist, ...

Minnesota Court of Appeals · Filed November 18, 2024

Opinion text

This opinion is nonprecedential except as provided by
Minn. R. Civ. App. P. 136.01, subd. 1(c).

STATE OF MINNESOTA
IN COURT OF APPEALS
A24-0225

County of Hennepin,
Respondent,

vs.

Christina Elizabeth VonderHaar,
Appellant,

James Mark Hedquist,
Respondent.

Filed November 18, 2024
Affirmed
Bjorkman, Judge

Hennepin County District Court
File No. 27-PA-FA-20-175

Kathryn M. Lammers, Kyle L. Prouty, Heimerl & Lammers, LLC, Minneapolis, Minnesota
(for appellant/cross-respondent Christina VonderHaar)

Valeria Camboni Miller, Camboni Miller Law Office, LLC, St. Paul, Minnesota (for
respondent/cross-appellant James Hedquist)

Considered and decided by Bjorkman, Presiding Judge; Wheelock, Judge; and

Jesson, Judge. ∗


Retired judge of the Minnesota Court of Appeals, serving by appointment pursuant to
Minn. Const. art. VI, § 10.
NONPRECEDENTIAL OPINION

BJORKMAN, Judge

Appellant Christina Elizabeth VonderHaar (mother) and respondent James Mark

Hedquist (father) both challenge the district court’s order awarding mother sole legal and

physical custody and awarding father parenting time. Mother argues that the district court

abused its discretion (1) by admitting the parties’ psychological-evaluation reports,

admitting testimony from a custody evaluator who did not complete a report, and refusing

to take judicial notice of father’s prior divorce proceeding; (2) in its award of parenting

time to father; and (3) by subjecting her to alcohol monitoring during parenting time. By

notice of related appeal, father argues that the district court abused its discretion by

admitting evidence of his divorce and by awarding sole legal and physical custody to

mother. We affirm.

FACTS

Mother and father were in a romantic relationship but never married. They have

two joint children, twin boys born in October 2014. The children have always lived with

mother. The parents have a volatile history punctuated by instances of domestic abuse on

both sides.

In spring 2020, respondent Hennepin County (the county) initiated this action

seeking to establish father’s paternity. 1 The district court adjudicated father’s paternity

that December. Thereafter, progress toward a resolution of custody and parenting time

1
Because this appeal does not concern child support or any other matter for which the
county is responsible, the county is not participating in this appeal.

2
moved slowly, marked by several changes in counsel for each parent and recalcitrant

behavior from both.

In February 2021, the district court ordered the parents to participate in a custody

and parenting-time evaluation, to be completed by June 23. On June 22, evaluator Jason

Chinander wrote to the district court to say that he was closing the file because of the

parents’ “lack of cooperation.” The district court released Chinander from his duty to

complete the evaluation.

In July 2021, the district court noted Chinander’s concerns that both parents are

“mentally and emotionally unstable” and ordered the county to arrange for psychological

evaluations of both parents. The court later learned that the county was not taking family

court referrals but reiterated that psychological evaluations of the parents are “necessary,”

and the parents agreed to select a private evaluator. After they settled on Michelle

Millenacker, Psy.D., the court ordered the parents to undergo psychological evaluations

with Dr. Millenacker and ordered Dr. Millenacker to submit her findings to the court. Each

parent met with Dr. Millenacker multiple times, and she filed a report for each.

In the meantime, the district court awarded father temporary supervised parenting

time. Mother refused to cooperate with parenting time for months, so father was unable to

exercise parenting time until early July 2022. According to staff at the center supervising

the visits, the first one seemed to go well but subsequent visits deteriorated. The children

repeatedly refused to attend and disparaged father, and mother did not encourage them to

attend. After three canceled visits, the center ended its supervisory services. Father was

thereafter unable to exercise parenting time.

3
During a three-day trial in February and March 2023, the district court received

testimony from both parents; each requested sole legal and physical custody of the children

and substantial restrictions on the other’s parenting time. The court also heard from several

other witnesses, including Chinander. Dr. Millenacker did not testify, but the district court

received her reports as the direct testimony of a court-appointed expert, over mother’s

objection. 2 The district court also received extensive additional documentary and video

evidence, including records from the center that supervised father’s visits with the children,

chemical-health assessments for both parents, numerous police reports, and videos of the

parents’ hostile interactions, often in front of or involving the children.

In a July 2023 order, the district court made express credibility determinations—

particularly emphasizing that neither parent was “entirely credible”—and findings as to the

children’s best interests and the presumption in favor of each parent receiving at least 25%

parenting time. Based on those findings, the court awarded mother sole legal and physical

custody, subject to father’s parenting time. Its order provides for two parenting-time

phases. In phase one, through the end of 2023, father has up to four hours of weekly

supervised parenting time and must participate in six reunification-therapy sessions. In

phase two, starting on January 4, 2024, regardless of what happens with reunification

therapy, father has unsupervised parenting time every other week from Thursday evening

2
The district court admitted the reports based on its September 2022 order establishing
trial procedures, in which it provided that “direct examination of all experts must take place
by the expert’s pre-marked written report,” and any party who wants to cross-examine a
court-appointed expert must timely subpoena the expert. Mother did not subpoena
Dr. Millenacker.

4
to Monday morning. The order also requires both parents to refrain from using alcohol or

other nonprescription chemicals during parenting time and to participate in alcohol

monitoring before and during their parenting time; they may file a motion to discontinue

testing after one year with no positive results.

Both parents moved for amended findings. The district court corrected clerical

errors and made minor modifications but otherwise denied the motions. Mother

subsequently moved to suspend indefinitely the transition to phase two unsupervised

parenting time. The district court denied the indefinite suspension but delayed the start of

unsupervised parenting time by one month, to February 4, 2024, to allow for additional

reunification therapy and supervised parenting time.

Mother filed this appeal, and father filed a notice of related appeal. 3

DECISION

I. The district court did not abuse its discretion in its evidentiary rulings.

We review a district court’s evidentiary rulings for an abuse of discretion. Braith v.

Fischer, 632 N.W.2d 716, 721 (Minn. App. 2001), rev. denied (Minn. Oct. 24, 2001). The

party asserting evidentiary error is entitled to relief only if they demonstrate that the error

was prejudicial. Minn. R. Evid. 103(a); Olson ex rel. A.C.O. v. Olson, 892 N.W.2d 837,

3
On October 21, 2024, mother filed a motion asking us to review the district court’s order
denying her motion to stay enforcement of the orders underlying her appeal. Because this
opinion makes any such review unnecessary, we deny the motion as moot. See Szarzynski
v. Szarzynski, 732 N.W.2d 285, 291 (Minn. App. 2007) (recognizing that an issue may be
dismissed as moot if “an event occurs which makes a decision on the merits unnecessary”).

5
841 (Minn. App. 2017). “An evidentiary error is prejudicial if it might reasonably have

. . . changed the result of the trial.” George v. Est. of Baker, 724 N.W.2d 1, 9 (Minn. 2006).

A. Psychological-Evaluation Reports

Mother argues that the district court abused its discretion by admitting

Dr. Millenacker’s reports because Dr. Millenacker was not a court-appointed expert and,

even if she was, mother is entitled to cross-examine such an expert. 4 We disagree. A

district court may appoint an expert witness of its own selection or one “agreed upon by

the parties.” Minn. R. Evid. 706(a). Its appointment order need not reference rule 706.

Peterka v. Dennis, 764 N.W.2d 829, 833 (Minn. 2009) (recognizing a witness as an expert

under rule 706 when court appointment was “the practical effect of the court’s order, as

well as the conduct of the parties and [the expert]”). The district court (1) ordered the

parents to undergo psychological evaluations with Dr. Millenacker, (2) recognized that it

was doing so to substitute for a county evaluator and based on the parents’ agreement, and

(3) ordered Dr. Millenacker to report her findings to the district court. The parents and the

doctor complied with the order. While the order may not have referenced rule 706, it had

the practical effect of making Dr. Millenacker a court-appointed expert. And while such

an expert “shall be subject to cross-examination by each party,” Minn. R. Evid. 706(a),

mother identifies nothing in the language of that rule or any other authority precluding a

4
Mother also argues that, because Dr. Millenacker was not a court-appointed expert,
foundation was required for her reports. But she does not contend that foundation beyond
the appointment order is required for the admission of a court-appointed expert’s report or
identify any authority supporting such a contention.

6
district court from requiring the party seeking that cross-examination to subpoena the

expert, as the district court did here.

Moreover, mother has not demonstrated that the admission of the reports caused her

prejudice. Mother obtained the custody result she requested—sole legal and physical

custody of the children—so any claim of prejudice must relate to the parenting-time

decisions she challenges. Based on our close review of the record, we see no basis for

concluding that excluding Dr. Millenacker’s reports would have led to a different

parenting-time outcome. In particular, to the extent the court’s parenting-time decisions

were influenced by Dr. Millenacker’s assessment that mother is aggressive and belligerent

and underreports her concerning and problematic alcohol use, the district court also noted

the extensive additional evidence of mother’s behavior and alcohol use in the record,

including numerous police reports and testimony from Chinander, a former nanny for the

children, and a police officer familiar with mother. Indeed, part of mother’s argument

against admitting the reports at trial was that they are cumulative, which underscores the

lack of prejudice from admitting them. Mother is not entitled to relief based on the

admission of Dr. Millenacker’s reports.

B. Chinander’s Testimony

Mother asserts several challenges to the district court’s admission of Chinander’s

testimony. She first argues that it was improper for him to testify because he did not

complete a custody evaluation, yet the district court relied on his testimony to “manufacture

a custody evaluation out of testimony alone.” The record defeats this argument. The

district court expressly stated that it did not expect Chinander to offer any recommendation

7
as to custody; Chinander confirmed that he would not do so. Instead, he testified about his

interactions with and impressions of the parents, which are matters within his personal

knowledge. See Minn. R. Evid. 602 (requiring witnesses to testify from “personal

knowledge”).

Mother also contends that, during his testimony, Chinander improperly relied on

notes that are not in the record. We disagree. Our careful review of the transcript reveals

two instances in which Chinander referred to notes he prepared or records he reviewed.

But there is no indication that he accessed or relied on any such materials during his

testimony.

Finally, mother argues that Chinander should have been excluded as an incompetent

witness because he described his recollection of a “whole time period” that he was asked

about as “fuzzy” because of medical treatment he was undergoing at that time. But mother

omits several significant details: Chinander explained that the “fuzzy” period coincided

with when he spoke with Dr. Millenacker about the parents, he did not testify about his

conversations with Dr. Millenacker, and he expressly confirmed that his thinking was not

similarly affected at the time he interacted with the parents. As such, there was no reason

for the district court to doubt his competence to testify about his personal experiences with

the parents.

C. Father’s Prior Divorce Proceeding

Both parents challenge the district court’s management of evidence related to

father’s prior divorce proceeding. During the first day of mother’s cross-examination of

father, the district court permitted her, over father’s relevancy objection, to question father

8
about that proceeding. When she returned to the subject the next day, she asked the court

to take judicial notice of an order in the divorce proceeding denying father’s motion to

modify parenting time; the district court denied the request.

Father now argues that the district court abused its discretion by permitting the

questioning about his prior divorce proceeding because it was improper character evidence

in violation of Minn. R. Evid. 404(b) and any relevance it had was outweighed by unfair

prejudice under Minn. R. Evid. 403. Because father objected to the evidence solely based

on relevance, he has forfeited any argument as to these other grounds. See Minn. R. Evid.

103(a) (precluding a challenge to a ruling admitting evidence absent a timely, specific

objection). Moreover, the record reveals that the district court conscientiously

circumscribed the evidence, interjecting several times during the questioning to ensure its

continued relevance and ultimately cutting it off sua sponte based on rule 403. On this

record, father has not demonstrated reversible error by the district court in permitting brief

questioning about his divorce.

Mother, in turn, contends the district court abused its discretion by declining to take

judicial notice of the “divorce proceeding.” “A district court’s decision whether to take

judicial notice of proffered facts is an evidentiary ruling that we review only for abuse of

discretion.” Fed. Home Loan Mortg. Corp. v. Mitchell, 862 N.W.2d 67, 71 (Minn. App.

2015), rev. denied (Minn. June 30, 2015). Mother argues that father’s conduct toward his

former spouse is relevant to his credibility. But the district court had already heard

testimony from him on that subject, and it explained that another court’s determination in

a separate proceeding that father was not credible in his claimed desire for more parenting

9
time has no bearing on this proceeding. Because mother does not identify any flaw in the

district court’s reasoning, she has not demonstrated an abuse of discretion.

II. The district court did not abuse its discretion by awarding mother sole legal
and physical custody.

The “guiding principle” in deciding custody is the children’s best interests.

Thornton v. Bosquez, 933 N.W.2d 781, 789 (Minn. 2019) (quotation omitted). In

determining the children’s best interests, a district court “must consider and evaluate all

relevant factors,” including 12 statutorily enumerated factors. Minn. Stat. § 518.17,

subd. 1(a) (2022). It may not rely on any single factor “to the exclusion of all others.”

Minn. Stat. § 518.17, subd. 1(b)(1) (2022). The court also must use a rebuttable

presumption that joint legal or physical custody is not in the children’s best interests if

domestic abuse has occurred between the parents. Minn. Stat. § 518.17, subd. 1(b)(9)

(2022). The district court has “broad discretion” in custody matters. Hansen v. Todnem,

908 N.W.2d 592, 596 (Minn. 2018). We will not reverse a custody award unless the district

court abuses that discretion “by making findings of fact that are unsupported by the

evidence, misapplying the law, or delivering a decision that is against logic and the facts

on record.” Woolsey v. Woolsey, 975 N.W.2d 502, 506 (Minn. 2022) (quotation omitted).

The district court determined that the parents’ history of domestic abuse “strongly

supports” an award of sole custody. And it made findings as to each of the 12 best-interests

factors, determining that (1) many factors do not favor either parent as custodian,

(2) concerns about mother’s mental and chemical health favor an award to father, and

(3) mother’s role as primary caretaker and the continuity of maintaining that arrangement

10
favor an award to mother. Based on these findings, the court awarded mother sole legal

and physical custody.

Father acknowledges that awarding sole legal and physical custody to one parent

was appropriate in light of the parents’ history of domestic abuse. But he contends that the

record does not support the district court’s selection of mother as the custodial parent.

He first asserts that the court gave insufficient weight to evidence of mother’s

“alcohol abuse and mental health issues,” and failed to consider evidence that, because of

these issues, mother “does not focus on the children’s best interests.” We are not

persuaded. The district court was required to consider the “physical, mental, or chemical

health issue[s] of a parent that affects the child’s safety or developmental needs,” Minn.

Stat. § 518.17, subd. 1(a)(5), and it did just that. As to mother, the court noted the extensive

record evidence of mother’s alcohol abuse and mental-health challenges and expressed

concern that “without drastic intervention through therapy and sobriety,” her behavior is

likely to affect the children. And as noted above, the court found that this factor favors an

award of custody to father. But it also noted similar concerns as to father, found that other

considerations favor an award of custody to mother, and explained that father did not

demonstrate that “he is a better parent to receive an award of legal and physical custody.”

In short, father has not demonstrated that the district court abused its discretion in

considering mother’s chemical and mental health as they pertain to custody.

Father also challenges the district court’s assessment of the “history and nature of

each parent’s participation in providing care for the child[ren].” Minn. Stat. § 518.17,

subd. 1(a)(6). He argues that the court’s analysis was deficient because it failed to make

11
detailed findings as to each parent’s role in preparing the children’s meals, bathing them,

addressing their medical care, disciplining them, and the various other indicators of a

primary caretaker delineated in Pikula v. Pikula, 374 N.W.2d 705, 713 (Minn. 1985). But

we discern no need for the district court to make findings parsing out the caretaking duties

because the record so thoroughly establishes that mother has always been the children’s

primary caretaker. She was the children’s only legally recognized parent during the first

six years of their lives (until the district court adjudicated father’s parentage in December

2020). The children have lived only with mother, and their whole lives are centered around

mother and her home. Father acknowledged as much in his testimony, agreeing that

awarding him custody would be a “big change” for the children. On this record, we see no

abuse of discretion in the decision to award mother sole legal and physical custody.

III. The district court did not abuse its discretion in determining the amount and
terms of parenting time.

The children’s best interests are also the driving factor when establishing parenting

time, and a district court looks to the same 12 best-interests factors as in custody disputes.

Minn. Stat. § 518.17, subd. 1(a). A district court has “broad discretion” in determining

parenting-time issues, and we will not reverse absent an abuse of that discretion. Suleski

v. Rupe, 855 N.W.2d 330, 334 (Minn. App. 2014). We review the district court’s factual

findings for clear error and defer to its credibility determinations. Hagen v. Schirmers, 783

N.W.2d 212, 215 (Minn. App. 2010).

12
A. Father’s Parenting Time

Mother challenges the district court’s award of parenting time to father, arguing that

(1) the district court’s findings as to several best-interests factors are flawed and (2) the

court abused its discretion by not requiring father to successfully complete reunification

therapy before starting supervised and then unsupervised parenting time. We address each

argument in turn.

1. Best-Interests Findings

The district court’s findings as to the 12 statutory best-interests factors also

informed its analysis of parenting time, and it determined that none of the factors rebut the

presumption in Minn. Stat. § 518.175, subd. 1(g) (2022), that each parent is entitled to at

least 25% parenting time.

Mother takes issue with the district court’s findings as to four of the best-interests

factors, beginning with the children’s preference. A district court must consider a child’s

“reasonable preference,” if it “deems the child to be of sufficient ability, age, and maturity

to express an independent, reliable preference.” Minn. Stat. § 518.17, subd. 1(a)(3). In

considering this factor, the district court found that any preference the children have is not

independent and reliable because the records from the parenting-time supervisor show that

mother “influenced” them to “exhibit disdain” for and “distance themselves” from father.

Mother contends these findings are clearly erroneous and inadequate because the district

court made no findings about the lack of contact between the children and father in recent

years or even “what the children’s preferences were.” But the challenged order as a whole

demonstrates that the district court was aware that the children are not accustomed to

13
spending time with father. And the records that the court cited and discussed in detail

amply support its finding that mother has influenced the children’s preference. On this

record, the district court did not abuse its discretion by finding that the children’s

preference “cannot be considered” as part of its best-interests analysis.

Second, mother argues that the district court gave inadequate weight to the evidence

of the parents’ mental and chemical health. See Minn. Stat. § 518.17, subd. 1(a)(5).

Specifically, she contends the district court failed to account for her testimony that she

suffers from PTSD and anxiety because of her relationship with father. We disagree. The

district court found that both parents’ testimony was largely not credible and specifically

expressed doubt about mother’s testimony as to diagnoses not supported by an expert.

Moreover, mother does not explain how her claimed diagnoses should have influenced the

district court’s determinations as to the amount and conditions of father’s parenting time.

Third, mother challenges the district court’s findings as to “the history and nature

of each parent’s participation in providing care for the child[ren].” Minn. Stat. § 518.17,

subd. 1(a)(6). Mother again contends the district court failed to “give adequate weight” to

evidence that father has had little contact with the children in recent years. We are not

persuaded. The district court expressly found that mother has been the children’s primary

caretaker and noted that they exhibit “signs of estrangement” from father. As noted above,

the court’s findings as a whole reflect its awareness that father has not cared for the children

in some time and will need to build a relationship with them through reunification therapy

and supervised visitation. Mother identifies no authority for the proposition that a parent’s

lack of history providing care for a child necessarily weighs against a parent receiving

14
parenting time. To the contrary, Minnesota law presumes that each parent is entitled to at

least 25% parenting time, Minn. Stat. § 518.175, subd. 1(g), and that it is in the children’s

best interests to foster relationships with both parents, Minn. Stat. § 518.17, subd. 1(b)(2)

(2022). Because the district court considered and made well-supported findings on this

factor as part of a comprehensive analysis of what parenting-time arrangement will serve

the children’s best interests, we see no abuse of discretion.

Finally, mother challenges the district court’s consideration of “the benefit to the

child[ren] in maximizing parenting time with both parents and the detriment to the

child[ren] in limiting parenting time with either parent.” Minn. Stat. § 518.17,

subd. 1(a)(10). She contends the court “overlooked [father’s] overall absence from the

children’s lives” and that, because of this “estrangement,” it would be in the children’s best

interests to minimize father’s parenting time. But the district court accurately noted that

this factor focuses on the benefits from maximizing parenting time, not a benefit from

minimizing a particular parent’s time with the children. The district court also expressly

and repeatedly noted father’s inconsistent and difficult contact with the children; it simply

attributed those issues substantially to mother’s influence on the children and her failure to

support father’s parenting time, rather than to father. Mother has not demonstrated that the

district court abused its discretion in its consideration of this best-interests factor. 5

5
Mother also contends the evidence of the children’s “lack of a relationship” with father
“supports findings” restricting his parenting time to below the presumptively appropriate
25% mark. See Minn. Stat. § 518.175, subd. 1(g). This argument essentially asks us to
reweigh the evidence, which is “inconsistent with [our] abuse-of-discretion standard of
review.” Bayer v. Bayer, 979 N.W.2d 507, 513 (Minn. App. 2022).

15
2. Reunification Therapy and Supervision

Mother argues that the district court abused its discretion by awarding father

unsupervised parenting time without requiring that he first successfully complete

reunification therapy and supervised parenting time. She contends it is contrary to the

children’s best interests not to have “a review mechanism” to ensure the success of

reunification therapy and supervised parenting time, and that the district court based its

refusal to impose such a mechanism on clearly erroneous findings as to her conduct. This

argument is unavailing.

The district court agreed that it is in the children’s best interests “to complete

reunification therapy and supervised parenting time.” But it did not place “a firm start-

date for unsupervised parenting time,” explaining that mother’s conduct poses a barrier to

that process. It highlighted mother’s efforts to undermine father’s supervised parenting

time and alienate him from the children, as reflected in the parenting-time records. It also

noted mother’s own statements showing her hostility to father having a relationship with

the children, including a text message she sent him saying: “I’ll kill the boys if you ever

try to take them.” This record convinces us that the district court’s refusal to condition the

transition to unsupervised parenting time on successful completion of reunification therapy

and supervised parenting time, which would “lend [mother] control over Father’s path to

parenting time,” was not an abuse of discretion.

B. Mother’s Parenting Time

Mother also challenges the district court’s decision to impose an alcohol-testing

requirement on her parenting time. She contends the decision rests on flawed factual

16
findings that misrepresented her as having a 2015 conviction of driving while impaired

(DWI), overemphasized incidents involving chemical use from before the children’s birth,

and misrepresented police reports. We are not persuaded. The district court found that

mother’s denial of any problems with alcohol is “contrary to” the record. Our careful

review of the record reveals ample support for this finding: Mother admitted to a 2014

DWI conviction; numerous exhibits document her pre-children history of hospitalization,

disruptive or violent behavior, and family concern related to alcohol and chemical use;

police reports from throughout the children’s lives document alcohol- or other chemical-

related police contacts with mother; and a former nanny and an officer who has had

multiple contacts with mother both testified about interacting with mother while she

exhibited signs of intoxication, including while the children were in her care. This

evidence supports the district court’s finding that alcohol continues to play a large role in

mother’s life, despite her insistence to the contrary.

Mother nonetheless asserts the district court abused its discretion by requiring her

to undergo alcohol testing to ensure that she is sober during her parenting time. She

acknowledges that the findings “support the directive” that she must be sober when caring

for the children but contends the record does not demonstrate that chemical testing

advances the children’s best interests. This argument is not convincing. As discussed

above, ample evidence supports the district court’s findings that mother continues to have

a problematic relationship with alcohol, including when she is caring for the children, and

is not a reliable reporter regarding her alcohol use. The testing mandate merely ensures

that mother complies with the undisputedly appropriate directive that she remain sober

17
during parenting time. Additionally, the testing mandate applies to both parents, and they

can have the mandate removed after only a year if they have no positive tests. We discern

no abuse of discretion in this targeted and balanced mandate to ensure the children’s safety

while in their parents’ care. 6

Affirmed.

6
Mother also purports to challenge the district court’s denial of her motion for amended
findings. But she advances no arguments distinct from the various assignments of error
discussed above. Because those arguments fail, so too does this one.

18

Semantically similar Other opinions on related ground

Ranked by cosine-distance similarity of voyage-law-2 embeddings — these read closest to this opinion's legal subject matter, not just by keyword overlap.

Docket Court Filed Disposition Case
a230452 Minn. Ct. App. 2024-06-17 Affirmed In re the Custody of A.W.W: Nicholas Taylor Wehrwein v. Patricia Katrine Hascall
a250514 Minn. Ct. App. 2025-09-02 Affirmed In Re the Marriage of: Beth Amy Gissibl v. Matthew Glen Gissibl
a250628 Minn. Ct. App. 2026-03-09 Affirmed In Re the Custody of: A. A. S., Karryn Colleen Schwab v. Ryan George Schenck, .…
a231263 Minn. Ct. App. 2024-05-28 We affirm in all other respects In re the Matter of: Zoraba Ross v. Angel Raeleen Smith
a230845 Minn. Ct. App. 2024-06-17 Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded Justin Dean Schultz v. Analisa French Perkins