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In Re The Parenting of M.G.C.V. - Custody Appeal

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Filed March 31st, 2026
Detected April 1st, 2026
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Summary

The Montana Supreme Court affirmed the Twentieth Judicial District Court ruling requiring supervised visitation for Luke Venters with the parties' minor child, M.G.C.V. The decision upholds the parenting plan finding that supervised visitation at a facility was appropriate given Luke's history of partner or family member assault convictions. This non-precedential memorandum opinion was decided March 31, 2026.

What changed

The Montana Supreme Court affirmed the District Court's July 31, 2025 findings requiring Luke Venters's parenting time with the minor child to be supervised at a supervised visitation facility. The District Court adopted the amended parenting plan proposed by Gretchen Venters following Luke's arrest for partner or family member assault (PFMA) against Gretchen while the child was present. Luke had previously entered a deferred prosecution agreement for a 2023 PFMA charge. The case arises from Docket No. DR-24-60 in Lake County and was appealed as DA 25-0631.

The appellate court upheld the supervised visitation requirement based on the documented history of domestic violence and the court's concern for the child's safety during parenting time. As a non-precedential memorandum opinion, this decision is binding on the parties but may not be cited as authority in other cases. No administrative compliance actions are required from the regulated community; this case affects only the parties to the dissolution proceeding.

Source document (simplified)

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Top Caption Disposition [Combined Opinion

                  by Bidegaray](https://www.courtlistener.com/opinion/10830757/in-re-the-parenting-of-mgcv/#o1)

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March 31, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note

In Re The Parenting of: M.G.C.V.

Montana Supreme Court

Disposition

AFFIRMED

Combined Opinion

                        by Bidegaray

03/31/2026

DA 25-0631
Case Number: DA 25-0631

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA

2026 MT 68N

IN RE THE PARENTING OF
M.G.C.V.,

Minor Child,

GRETCHEN ANNE VENTERS,

Petitioner and Appellee,

and

LUKE AARON VENTERS,

Respondent and Appellant.

APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Twentieth Judicial District,
In and For the County of Lake, Cause No. DR-24-60
Honorable Molly Owen, Presiding Judge

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

For Appellant:

Luke Aaron Venters, Self-Represented, Polson, Montana

For Appellee:

Hilly McGahan, Brandi R. Ries, Ries Law Group, P.C., Missoula,
Montana

Submitted on Briefs: February 11, 2026

Decided: March 31, 2026

Filed:


Clerk
Justice Katherine M. Bidegaray delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Pursuant to Section I, Paragraph 3(c), Montana Supreme Court Internal Operating

Rules, this case is decided by memorandum opinion and shall not be cited and does not

serve as precedent. Its case title, cause number, and disposition shall be included in this

Court’s quarterly list of noncitable cases published in the Pacific Reporter and Montana

Reports.

¶2 Luke Venters (Luke) appeals from the Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and

Decree of Dissolution entered July 31, 2025, by the Twentieth Judicial District Court, Lake

County, adopting the amended proposed parenting plan proposed by Gretchen Venters

(Gretchen) which required Luke’s parenting time with the parties’ minor child to be

supervised at a supervised visitation facility.

¶3 The parties were married in October 2022 and have one child together, M.G.C.V.,

born in 2023. Before the child was born, Luke was charged with partner or family member

assault (PFMA) against Gretchen, following which he entered into a deferred prosecution

agreement for the 2023 PFMA. The parties separated in May 2024 following Luke’s arrest

for PFMA against Gretchen while the child was present in the home. In June 2024,

Gretchen filed a petition for a parenting plan while exploring legal separation. The parties

reconciled, and the court dismissed the parenting case in July 2024. Gretchen declined to

participate further in the 2024 PFMA investigation, and the State dropped the 2024 PFMA

charge against Luke.

2
¶4 In November 2024, Gretchen moved to reopen the parenting case, alleging

continued abusive behavior by Luke. She filed a petition for a temporary order of

protection (TOP). The same day, the court issued a TOP and set a hearing for December 4,

2024.

¶5 At the TOP hearing, the parties reached an agreement resulting in an interim

parenting plan and dismissal of the TOP. The court approved the interim parenting

arrangement pursuant to which the child would reside primarily with Gretchen; Luke

would have unsupervised weekday parenting time between noon and 6:00 p.m.; Luke

would undergo a mental health evaluation involving Gretchen’s input; and Gretchen would

obtain her own evaluation. The interim parenting plan permitted the parties to travel

together with the child to Boston, Massachusetts, from December 8 to 14, 2024. In its

findings accompanying the approval of the interim parenting plan, the court stated that

Luke had threatened to harm Gretchen and had been arrested twice for PFMA.

¶6 Following the parties’ December 2024 trip, Gretchen filed another petition for TOP

based on an incident at the Boston opera house involving Luke’s alleged public verbal

abuse that resulted in opera house staff getting involved. The court issued a TOP and set

a hearing for January 3, 2025. Following the TOP hearing, the court extended the TOP for

one month and limited Luke’s contact with the child to twice-weekly supervised visits at

Youth Connections.

¶7 On January 17, 2025, the parties participated in mediation and executed a

confidential mediated settlement agreement on January 23, 2025. They agreed that Luke

3
would undergo a psychological evaluation within 30 days, with costs to be split equally,

and that Luke’s parenting time would remain supervised until completion of the evaluation

and establishment of a new parenting agreement or amended parenting plan based on

findings from Luke’s psychological evaluation.

¶8 On February 7, 2025, Gretchen filed a petition for dissolution of marriage with a

proposed parenting plan that required Luke’s parenting time to be supervised. On

March 14, 2025, Luke filed his response. Luke underwent a psychological evaluation on

April 9, 2025, with Dr. Sara Boilen, who issued a report on April 28, 2025. Despite the

mediated agreement, Luke did not pay any portion of the evaluation costs, and Gretchen

covered the full expense by borrowing funds. The parties entered an agreed property

distribution agreement in May 2025, resolving all financial issues.

¶9 On July 30, 2025, Luke appeared pro se and Gretchen appeared with counsel before

the court to address a parenting plan, child support, and medical support. The court heard

testimony from the parties and multiple witnesses, including experts, and admitted exhibits,

including audio recordings spanning from February 2023 to October 2024. In one

recording, Luke made statements about Gretchen’s “mortal soul” and “hell.” Gretchen

testified Luke frequently used religion to justify his treatment of her, stating she was “trying

to subvert his God-given authority.” In other recordings, Luke called Gretchen a “whore,”

“bitch,” “fucking cunt,” and described her as a “cowardly, pig-headed, stupid, fucking

idiot.” Gretchen described the child’s reaction during these incidents as “predominantly

4
very scared, crying or screaming.” In some recordings, the parties’ child could be heard

crying in the background.

¶10 Dr. Sara Boilen, the psychologist who evaluated Luke, confirmed that the child was

audible in the background of the recordings she reviewed. Dr. Boilen testified that the

research is “very clear” that being in the presence of verbal and emotional abuse is an

adverse childhood experience that contributes to long-term problems. Dr. Boilen explained

that the “zero to three” age range is the “foundation” of a child’s psychological

development, and exposure to such trauma is akin to a “cracked or tilted foundation” in a

house. Gretchen observed that the child is “easily startled” and has “delayed” speech,

though she could not definitively name the cause.

¶11 Luke responded to the recordings. He acknowledged that the volume of his voice

in the recordings was “jarring” and not “pleasant” to hear. He argued the recordings lacked

context, claiming he was in the throes of a “trigeminal neuralgia attack” and was “shouting

in distress” rather than aggression. He denied that the child was present or could hear the

specific slurs used, asserting she was “asleep in another room” during most disagreements.

¶12 Luke offered visitation logs and third-party affidavits that the court excluded as

inadmissible hearsay because the witnesses were not present to testify or lay foundation.

On July 31, 2025, the court entered its decree in which it adopted Gretchen’s Amended

Proposed Final Parenting Plan; finding it to be in the child’s best interest under § 40-4-212,

MCA; requiring Luke’s parenting time to remain supervised at a visitation facility; and

prohibiting community-based supervision absent evaluator recommendation.

5
¶13 The District Court’s findings addressed the relevant best-interest factors under

§ 40-4-212(1)(a)-(i), MCA, in detail. The court found that the child had resided primarily

with Gretchen since birth and shared a close relationship with her. The court further found

that Luke had engaged in repeated verbal abuse toward Gretchen, sometimes in the

presence of the child, and that his conduct had caused distress and instability affecting the

child’s environment. In particular, the court found:

[Luke] has been abusive towards [Gretchen] throughout their relationship,
including in the presence of the child. [Luke] frequently became enraged at
[Gretchen], engaging in an escalating patter[n] of threatening verbal and
spiritual abuse, including using obscenities and gender-based slurs in the
presence of the child. [Luke] once threatened to throw a car seat at
[Gretchen] while the parties’ baby was next to her, and to throw [Gretchen]
down a hall. [Luke] has threatened to kill [Gretchen’s] therapist and himself,
and to harm [Gretchen].

The court also considered testimony regarding Luke’s mental health history; evidence of

prior domestic violence allegations; testimony from Luke’s sister that, on at least two

occasions when she was between the ages of 5 and 7 years old and Luke was between the

ages of 16 and 18, Luke sexually assaulted her; testimony that Luke had never received

sexual offender treatment; testimony from Gretchen’s therapist regarding Gretchen’s

mental health and parenting skills; testimony from a Boston opera house employee

regarding Luke’s concerning conduct towards Gretchen at the ballet production; and

numerous recordings of Luke verbally abusing Gretchen at times in their child’s presence

with the child crying in the background as Luke screamed obscenities and gender-based

slurs at Gretchen. Based on the evidence presented, the District Court concluded that a

parenting plan placing the child in Gretchen’s primary care and providing for Luke to have

6
supervised parenting time up to three times per week for up to two hours per visit was in

the child’s best interest. The parenting plan required Luke to do the following to change

his parenting time:

(1) participate in consistent and uninterrupted psychodynamic therapy consistent
with the recommendations in Luke’s psychological evaluation;

(2) arrange for a parenting evaluation to be conducted by Dr. Boilen or another
professional agreed upon by both parties and paid for by Luke; and

(3) successfully complete a batterer’s intervention program and all
recommendations stemming from that program. A reevaluation of the
parenting plan should not occur unless the professionals involved with the
family determine that Luke has made therapeutic progress in addressing his
mental health diagnoses, and meaningful positive changes that support
increased and/or unsupervised contact with the minor child, based upon their
professional opinions.

¶14 Luke, appearing pro se, appeals and raises numerous arguments challenging the

parenting plan. He asserts the District Court improperly eliminated unsupervised parenting

time, misapplied the parenting statutes, disregarded evidence favorable to him, violated his

due process rights, and infringed upon his constitutional right to parent.

¶15 We review a district court’s parenting plan determination for an abuse of discretion.

In re Marriage of Woerner, 2014 MT 134, ¶ 12, 375 Mont. 153, 325 P.3d 1244. Findings

of fact underlying a parenting determination are reviewed for clear error. In re D.E.,

2018 MT 196, ¶ 21, 392 Mont. 297, 423 P.3d 586.

¶16 Luke argues the District Court erred by ordering supervised parenting time without

making findings required by § 40-4-219(1), MCA, of actual harm, threatened harm, or

danger. Section 40-4-219(1), MCA, authorizes a court, in its discretion, to

7
amend a prior parenting plan if it finds, upon the basis of facts that have
arisen since the prior plan or that were unknown to the court at the time of
entry of the prior plan, that a change has occurred in the circumstances of the
child and that the amendment is necessary to serve the best interest of the
child.

Contrary to Luke’s assertions, § 40-4-219, MCA, does not require findings of “actual harm,

threatened harm, or danger.” A statute that does address supervised visitation and danger

is § 40-4-218(2), MCA, which Luke cites only in his reply brief. It provides: “If both

parents or all contestants agree to the order or if the court finds that in the absence of the

order the child’s physical health would be endangered or the child’s emotional

development significantly impaired, the court may order supervised visitation by the

noncustodial parent.” Section 40-4-218(2), MCA. Because it is unclear on which of these

statutes Luke relies in his appeal, we address both.

Application of § 40-4-219(1), MCA, Did Not Prohibit the Court from Requiring
Luke’s Parenting Time to Be Supervised

¶17 Luke argues that the District Court may have been constrained by § 40-4-219(1),

MCA, to find that “a change has occurred in the circumstances of the child” to “amend”

the interim parenting plan in this case. He contends that nothing in the record between

December 2024 (when the court entered the interim parenting plan finding that it was in

the child’s “best interest to have frequent, continuing, consistent, and significant

[unsupervised] contact with both parents”) and July 2025 (when the court entered its final

parenting plan requiring Luke’s parenting time to be supervised at a visitation facility)

supports reversing the court’s December 2024 finding supporting unsupervised parenting

time. To the contrary, the record reveals that (1) the court, following a January 3, 2025

8
TOP hearing, issued an order in which it limited Luke’s contact with the child to

twice-weekly supervised visits at Youth Connections; and (2) the parties agreed, at a

January 17, 2025 mediation, that Luke’s parenting time would remain supervised until

completion of a psychological evaluation and establishment of a new parenting agreement

or amended parenting plan based on findings from Luke’s psychological evaluation.

¶18 Therefore, § 40-4-219(1), MCA, does not support Luke’s argument because Luke’s

parenting time was subject to supervision at a visitation facility when the parties appeared

for the final hearing. When the court entered its final parenting plan here, it did not

“amend” an interim parenting plan; it continued the supervision requirement that was in

place since the January 3, 2025 hearing, which the parties agreed to continue in their

January 17, 2025 mediated settlement agreement. Even if § 40-4-219, MCA, applied, the

Boston opera house incident and the subsequent January 2025 TOP constituted a clear

“change in circumstances” since the original December 2024 interim agreement.

Application of § 40-4-218(2), MCA, Did Not Prohibit the Court from Requiring
Luke’s Parenting Time to Be Supervised

¶19 Luke also appears to rely on § 40-4-218(2), MCA, in arguing that the court erred by

imposing supervision of parenting time without finding “actual harm, threatened harm, or

danger.” That subsection provides that a court “may order supervised visitation by the

noncustodial parent” if the parties agree or if the court finds that, absent an order for

supervision, “the child’s physical health would be endangered or the child’s emotional

development significantly impaired.” Section 40-4-218(2), MCA; Bessette v. Bessette,

2019 MT 35, ¶¶ 25-26, 394 Mont. 262, 434 P.3d 894.

9
¶20 Although Luke disagrees that this standard was met, the District Court’s findings

regarding Luke’s dysregulation, verbal abuse, and threatening conduct constitute a de facto

finding of emotional impairment to the child. Outside of the authority provided to a district

court, pursuant to § 40-4-218(2), MCA, to order supervised visitation by the noncustodial

parent, a district court “shall determine the parenting plan in accordance with the best

interest of the child” and consider all relevant parenting factors, which may require it to

order supervised parenting. See § 40-4-212(1), MCA.

The District Court Acted within its Discretion When it Required Luke’s Parenting
Time to be Supervised

¶21 The district court has broad discretion when determining a parenting plan.

In re Z.D.L.-B., 2016 MT 164, ¶ 25, 384 Mont. 65, 375 P.3d 378. Here, the District Court

made thorough, comprehensive findings addressing each relevant factor, based upon the

evidence presented at the final hearing. Given the admitted evidence, the District Court

did not abuse its discretion in adopting the final parenting plan requiring Luke’s parenting

time to be supervised.

¶22 Although Luke disagrees with the court’s evaluation of the evidence, appellate

courts do not reweigh conflicting testimony or substitute their judgment for that of the

district court. Boeshans v. Boeshans, 2025 MT 187, ¶ 30, 423 Mont. 450, 573 P.3d 1226.

The District Court was in the best position to evaluate the credibility of witnesses and

weigh the evidence presented at trial.

10
The District Court Provided Luke with Due Process and a Fair Trial

¶23 Luke further contends the District Court denied him due process. “Due process

requires notice and the opportunity to be heard at a meaningful time and in a meaningful

manner.” Steab v. Luna, 2010 MT 125, ¶ 22, 356 Mont. 372, 233 P.3d 351. The record

demonstrates that Luke received notice of the final trial, participated in the trial, testified

extensively, and had the opportunity to present evidence and cross-examine witnesses.

The fact that the court ruled against him does not establish a due process violation.

¶24 On July 16, 2025, Luke moved to continue the July 30, 2025 trial for two weeks to

allow him time for discovery and witness preparation. Luke stated that his attorney had

withdrawn and he needed additional time to review his psychological evaluation.

But Luke’s attorney withdrew in February 2025 (five months before the scheduled trial);

the court set the trial in March 2025 (more than four months before Luke moved to continue

it); Luke’s psychological evaluation was issued April 28, 2025 (three months before the

scheduled trial); and Gretchen had undertaken significant logistical effort to prepare for the

trial as scheduled. Under these circumstances, the District Court did not deny Luke due

process by denying his motion to continue.

¶25 Luke also argues that the District Court ignored evidence that he characterizes

as exculpatory, including visitation reports and third-party affidavits. The District

Court excluded those materials on evidentiary grounds—hearsay and lack of

foundation—because witnesses were not present to testify at trial to lay foundation.

Luke, appearing pro se, had the same obligation as any litigant to subpoena the authors of

11
the affidavits and the visitation logs or the facility director to lay foundation. The months

of lead time Luke had between the trial setting in March and the trial in July to issue

subpoenas demonstrates that the exclusion of his proffered third-party affidavits and

visitation logs was a result of his own procedural failure, not a systemic denial of due

process. The court acted within its discretion in applying the Montana Rules of Evidence

in determining the admissibility of those materials.

The District Court’s Final Parenting Plan Does Not Infringe on Luke’s Constitutional
Right to Parent

¶26 Finally, Luke asserts that the parenting plan infringes on his constitutional right to

parent because of the supervision of his parenting time it requires. Parents possess a

fundamental liberty interest in the care and custody of their children. In re D.B., 2007 MT

246, ¶ 17, 339 Mont. 240, 168 P.3d 691. Nevertheless, district courts retain authority to

impose reasonable restrictions on parenting time when necessary to protect a child’s

welfare. The final parenting plan here did not terminate Luke’s parental rights; rather, it

required supervised parenting time in a supervised visitation facility and allowed for

reassessment of parenting time upon completion of certain therapeutic and evaluative

conditions. The District Court set forth clear conditions—psychodynamic therapy and a

batterer’s intervention program directly tailored to address the dysregulation and abusive

behavior the court found to support supervised parenting time—for Luke to meet to seek

amendment of his parenting time.

¶27 Having reviewed the record, we conclude the District Court carefully considered

the statutory best-interest factors and entered findings supported by evidence in the record.

12
Luke has not demonstrated that the District Court acted arbitrarily, exceeded the bounds of

reason, or otherwise abused its discretion in adopting the final parenting plan.

¶28 We have determined to decide this case pursuant to Section I, Paragraph 3(c) of our

Internal Operating Rules, which provides for memorandum opinions. In the opinion of the

Court, the case presents a question controlled by settled law or by the clear application of

applicable standards of review. The District Court’s decision is affirmed.

/S/ KATHERINE M. BIDEGARAY

We Concur:

/S/ CORY J. SWANSON
/S/ JAMES JEREMIAH SHEA
/S/ INGRID GUSTAFSON
/S/ JIM RICE

13

Named provisions

Direct Appeal Disposition

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Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
MT Courts
Filed
March 31st, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor
Document ID
2026 MT 68N
Docket
DA 25-0631 DR-24-60

Who this affects

Applies to
Consumers Legal professionals
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Parenting Plan Determinations Family Court Proceedings
Geographic scope
US-MT US-MT

Taxonomy

Primary area
Social Services
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Civil Rights Judicial Administration

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