MENDELSON V. GIL

Annotate this Case
Download PDF
NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION AND, IF FILED, DISPOSED OF. IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF FLORIDA THIRD DISTRICT JANUARY TERM A.D., 2004 MIRIT MENDELSON, ** ** Appellant, vs. ** CASE NO. 3D04-688 ** YOSI GIL, ** Appellee. LOWER TRIBUNAL NO. 97-27400 ** Opinion filed June 3, 2004. An appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Gerald D. Hubbart, Judge. Franklin & Criscuolo and Donald Criscuolo, for appellant. Buchbinder & Elegant and Ira Elegant and E. Philip Green, for appellee. Before COPE, FLETCHER and RAMIREZ, JJ. PER CURIAM. Mirit Mendelson, the former wife, appeals schedule ordered in post-dissolution proceedings. a visitation We affirm in part and reverse in part. The former wife and Yosi Gil, the former husband, were divorced in 2000. There are three children of the marriage, ages thirteen, ten, and seven at this time. The former wife is the primary residential parent. The judgment granted the former husband liberal visitation but did not spell out the details of the visitation schedule. As a result of visitation disputes, both parties petitioned the court to establish a visitation schedule. From the court s ruling, the former wife appeals. The parties agree that the former husband visitation with the children every other weekend. should have We therefore affirm that part of the visitation order. As to weekday visitation, the trial court s order specifies that the children will have overnight visitation with the former husband every Monday night and every Wednesday night. As we interpret the transcript, we agree with the former wife that the written order pronouncement. does not conform to the trial court s oral As we read it, the oral pronouncement was for the former husband to have overnight visitation on alternating Mondays. Thus, following a weekend when the former husband did 2 not have visitation, the children would have Monday night visitation with the former husband. The more substantial issue presented below, and on this appeal, is whether the former husband should have any weekday visitation at all, or at least, while school is in session. At the hearing below, the wife objected to the weekday visitation for the following reasons. (1) The former husband, an Israeli national, does not read English and is unable to help the children with their homework. long hours in his business (2) The former husband works and frequently comes late for visitation, sometimes by as much as three or four hours, and frequently cancels entirely. leaves the children with (3) The former husband frequently third-person for visitation. As former wife had subpoenaed the former husband s former a building security guard, proffering that neighbor, this and would be the latter witnesses point, than present a the rather being girlfriend, to caretakers the testimony. However, because the time for hearing was about to expire, the witnesses were not allowed to testify. The former husband replied as follows. (1) He acknowledges that he does not read English but stated that he would hire a tutor to be present to help the children with their homework. (2) He did not dispute being late for visitation or canceling at the last minute, but says that the children have been willing to 3 schedule alternative visitation on other weekdays. (3) He did not respond to the charge that he frequently leaves the children with third-party caretakers during his scheduled visitation. A visitation schedule is appropriate if it is in the best interests of the children and appropriate for the children s ages and circumstances. See Brown v. State, 705 So. 2d 682, 685 (Fla. 4th DCA 1998). The issues raised by the former wife are, in our view, substantial ones. the weekday It is not clear on the present record that visitation is, in fact, in the children s best interest. It is hard to see (at least on the present record) how the former husband s visitation would work. The former husband maintains that he will provide a tutor, but does not dispute that he frequently picks up the children late (which would seem to render tutoring time unworkable) or not at all, and schedules visitation for a different day. If, as the former wife says, the former husband s practice is to leave the children with third persons (including, potentially, the tutor) this too would not seem to be in the children s best interests. Because the former wife was not given an opportunity to present her witnesses, and the former husband s testimony does little to respond to the former wife s concerns, we reverse the order insofar as it provides for weekday visitation and remand 4 for a new hearing to determine whether the former husband should have weekday visitation and, if so, how much. that the motives trial court was operating in attempting to have outstanding visitation issues, with a speedy but the under We acknowledge utmost of good resolution of all the of the facts present case, we conclude that a further hearing is called for on the issue of weekday visitation. Affirmed in part, reversed in further proceedings consistent herewith. 5 part, and remanded for

Some case metadata and case summaries were written with the help of AI, which can produce inaccuracies. You should read the full case before relying on it for legal research purposes.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.