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  • InsideTrack
  • September 21, 2016

    On Family Law: Zero Tolerance During Child Placement Conflicts

    According to a recent appellate court decision, it is reasonable for a trial court to prohibit alcohol consumptions during periods of child placement. Your clients may resist your advice to avoid alcohol when resolving these conflicts.

    Gregg M. Herman

    glass of wine

    Sept. 21, 2016 – Alcohol is very much a part of Wisconsin’s culture. As a result, our clients don’t always welcome the recommendation to not drink when an issue of alcohol affects placement. I don’t mean recommending limiting drinking – I mean zero tolerance.

    Recently, in an unpublished opinion, citeable for its persuasive value, the court of appeals affirmed an order that a party not consume alcohol during her periods of placement. In Simon v. Wilson, No. 2015AP1769 (filed June 6, 2016), the appellate court found that Milwaukee County Judge William Sosnay appropriately exercised his discretion in considering whether a party has or had a significant problem with drug or alcohol abuse. The trial court found that the mother’s chronic illness called for use of medication that can cause mood disorders and that alcohol can alter moods. Therefore, the appellate court found that it was eminently reasonable for the trial court to prohibit her consumption of alcohol during periods of placement.

    Gregg HermanGregg Herman is a family law attorney with Loeb & Herman S.C. His primary office is in Milwaukee. Gregg is the co-editor of the System Book for Family Law, published by the State Bar of Wisconsin PINNACLE® and is a former chair of the State Bar and American Bar Association family law sections. Follow Gregg’s opinions on his family law blog.

    While this gives trial courts the authority to make such orders, as lawyers for parties – on either side of this issue – we have an obligation to advise our clients on how to protect their children. This advice, wherever alcohol is an issue, is to go cold turkey. Zero tolerance.

    Alcohol is not necessary for human life. It is completely voluntary. Other than making a person feel better (sometimes), it serves no positive purpose. But it has many negative ramifications.

    For one, it can add to depression (and what person going through a divorce does not have some degree of depression?). Worse, it can lead to domestic violence. It can make driving dangerous. The list is long.

    So the arithmetic is simple: Nothing positive versus lots of negative.

    Unlike a lot of other problems, this one is easily solved. If a parent, knowing that alcohol use (note that I did not say “abuse” simply “use”) is an issue affecting the child and refuses to take the issue off the table, one of two things is true. Either that parent cannot stop drinking voluntarily, in which case the parent has an addiction problem, or the parent refuses to stop drinking, in which case the parent has a character problem. I suspect the latter problem is more difficult to treat.

    Many parties will resist the “zero-tolerance” solution, especially if the alcohol problem is mostly (or solely) that of the other parent. But this resistance should lead us back to the cost-benefit analysis. There is no cost (if anything, in fact, a savings in cost) and substantial potential benefits. You don’t even need a calculator to figure out which approach is favored.

    The resistance typically takes the position of “rights” as in “I have the right to drink.” Yes, absent drunk driving arrests, domestic violence incidents, or similar incidents, courts are unlikely to make a no-drinking order. But as lawyers, we can advise our clients to do the right thing for their children over and beyond what a court may require. This advice can go as follows:

    “Yes, you have the right to drink, but your children have the right to minimal conflict in their lives. Even if you don’t have a drinking problem, alcohol is creating conflict with the other parent. Since you don’t need to drink alcohol, this is a resolvable conflict. You need to ask yourself if you love drinking more than you love your children. If your answer is that you love your children more, than what is the advantage of drinking? There is none. Therefore, if you choose to continue to drink, you contradict what you just told me. If you cannot stop drinking, then you have a dependency issue that you need to address.”

    There are few problems in this area of law that can be solved without any corresponding cost. Drinking may, in fact, be the only one. There is no excuse, therefore, not to solve it.


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