Lead Opinion
1,Amalie (“Amy”) Bishop appeals from an order of the Lonoke County Circuit Court granting sole custody of the parties’ minor daughter to her ex-husband, appel-lee Joseph Singletary. She argues that the trial court erred by not analyzing the case as required by the holding in Hollandsworth v. Knyzewski,
The parties were married on February 14, 1998, and were divorced via a decree entered on April 21, 2010. The parties have one child, C.S., who was born in 2007. Regarding custody of C.S., the decree states that “[t]he parties shall have joint custody of the minor child with [Amy] having primary custody. Child support and visitation shall be in accordance with the settlement agreement attached hereto and incorporated herein as if set out word-for-word.” The parties’ stipulation and property-settlement agreement states that 12“the parties shall have joint legal custody of the parties’ minor child ... with [Amy] being the primary physical custodian.” The agreement further states that, unless agreed upon otherwise, the parties were to alternate custody of the minor child on a weekly basis. The agreement contains no provision for child support.
Amy filed a motion for change of child custody and support on April 19, 2011. In the motion, she alleged that a material change in circumstances had occurred since the decree was entered because her current spouse was being transferred to Fort Worth, Texas, in May 2011. She requested that she be granted sole custody of the child, subject to liberal visitation by Joseph. Joseph responded and counterclaimed, seeking sole custody of the child. He also filed a motion for a finding of contempt in which he alleged that Amy had relocated to Texas without the circuit court’s permission and that she had violated the exchange-of-custody terms set out in the decree.
The parties attended mediation prior to the hearing and reached an agreement that the visitation for the noncustodial parent would be reduced from two weeks per month to one week per month. The hearing on the motions before the circuit court was held on April 11, 2012. At the hearing, Amy and her husband, Gerald Bishop, testified that his new position in Texas had a higher salary, which would allow her to be a stay-at-home mother to C.S. and C.S.’s half-siblings, which they believed would be best for the family. Both Amy and Joseph testified that there were no disagreements with the custody arrangement prior to Amy’s relocation. Joseph testified that he understood what a custodial parent was at the time he signed the settlement agreement. Amy argued at the hearing that she should receive the | ¡¡presumption in favor of relocation by a custodial parent set out in Hollandsworth,
On May 8, 2012, the circuit court entered an order in which it found that the parties had joint custody of C.S., also found that Amy’s relocation constituted a material change in circumstances, and awarded sole custody of the child to Joseph. The circuit court did not apply Hol-landsworth in making its decision. This appeal followed.
We review equity cases de novo, but we will reverse only if the trial court’s findings were clearly erroneous or clearly against the preponderance of the evidence. Ford v. Ford,
Amy argues that the trial court erred by failing to apply Hollandsworth. In Hollandsworth, our supreme court held that relocation by a custodial parent does not, by itself, constitute a material change in circumstances.
We hold that the trial court erred by finding that the relocation by Amy constituted a material change in circumstances and by failing to apply the presumption that relocation by Amy is in C.S.’s best interest. The decree itself states that the parties would have joint custody, that Amy would have primary custody, and that child support and visitation would be in accordance with the parties’ settlement agreement. The parties’ settlement agreement, which was incorporated into the divorce decree, explicitly states that, while the parties would have joint legal custody of C.S., Amy would be the child’s primary physical custodian. Absent a subsequent modification, the language in the decree is controlling. Hurtt v. Hurtt,
Our holding in this case is supported by our case law. We affirmed the trial court’s | ^application of Hollandsworth in Chastain v. Chastain,
Joseph argues in his reply brief that, although the circuit court did not employ Hollcmdsworth, the order should still be affirmed because the circuit court found a material change in circumstances in addition to the relocation. For support, he cites our decision in Shannon v. McJunkins,
The circuit court’s order is reversed and remanded for the circuit court to review the case pursuant to the requirements set forth by our supreme court in Hollands-worth.
Reversed and remanded.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The primary question in this case is whether the interpretation of “joint custody of the minor child with [Amy] having primary custody” is a question of fact or a question of law. In this case, I believe the trial court properly viewed the issue as a question of fact. As I cannot say that was clearly erroneous, I would affirm.
The majority adequately sets out the facts of the case. The relevant part of the divorce decree states that “the parties shall have joint custody of the minor child with [Amy] having primary custody.” The property settlement states that “the parties shall have joint legal custody of the parties minor child.... with [Amy] being the primary physical custodian.” The majority holds that the trial court erred in finding that the relocation by Amy was a material change in circumstances and by failing to apply the presumption that relocation by Amy is in C.S.’s best interest. They acknowledge that the parties have joint legal custody, but Amy would be the primary physical custodian. The majority implies that the physical-custody language trumps the legal-custody language without explaining why that is so. By 17doing this, the majority makes the interpretation a question of law rather than a question of fact. Under the majority’s analysis, “joint legal custody” is surplusage.
It is basic contract law that we are required to read contracts by giving words their ordinary meaning. See Lee v. Bolan,
I also disagree with the dissent’s analysis. The holding does not remove custody decision making from the circuit court. The dissent states that Lewellyn v. Lewellyn,
The dissent next cites Chastain v. Chastain,
Both parties agreed at the hearing that the primary issue to be decided by the trial court was whether the parties had true joint physical custody under the terms of the settlement agreement or whether the appellee had primary physical custody.
Id.,
Our court discussed the factors relied on by the trial court in affirming the decision. This supports the proposition that the issue was a question of fact; however, we did not stop there. In discussing Hol-landsworth, we said:
The meaning of the language in the parties’ settlement agreement stating that they would share “joint and equal” custody, but the appellee would be the “primary residential parent” was an important issue to be determined by the court.
Chastain,
Before we can reach the fact question in the instant case, under basic contract law, the court must construe the contract, as a matter of law. Poff v. Peedin,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
|flThe majority decision is wrong for two primary reasons. First, it does not apply controlling supreme court precedent. Second, it removes custody decision-making from the circuit court, transforming a question of fact into a question of law, all the while overlooking some important policy considerations. Therefore, I dissent.
1. The Majority Opinion Violates Stare Decisis
Our supreme court has already addressed the issues involved in the current case in a previous, factually-indistinguishable case. See Lewellyn v. Lewellyn,
In the current case, the mother and her new husband moved out of state, and the parties attempted to continue to exercise joint custody, which was unsuccessful. The parties filed cross motions to change custody. The circuit court, following Lew-ellyn, determined that the case was a change-of-custody case instead of a relocation case and awarded the father custody based on the child’s best interest (after finding a material change in circumstances).
ImThe majority has disregarded Lewel-lyn. This it cannot do. Our court is required to follow the supreme court, and we cannot overrule its decisions. E.g., Rice v. Ragsdale,
Our supreme court had the opportunity to abrogate Lewellyn in its Hollandsworth decision; it did not do so. Here, the majority opinion has failed to follow our supreme court’s precedent in Lewellyn. In so doing, it has injected confusion into our change-of-custody and relocation case law.
2. The Majority Opinion Alters the Standard of Review in Child-Custody Cases
Even if our court had the authority to supersede the supreme court, the majority’s decision would still be incorrect. In fact, the decision fundamentally alters the way appellate courts review change-of-custody cases. One of the foundational premises of our child-custody case law is that appellate courts give “special deference to the superior position of the trial court to evaluate and judge the credibility of the witnesses in child-custody cases” because “we know of no cases in which the superior position, ability, and opportunity of the trial court to observe the parties carry as great a weight as those involving children.” Carver v. May,
Formerly, whether the parties had joint custody was a fact question, reviewed under our deferential standard of review. For example, in Chastain v. Chastain, which the majority favorably cites, we upheld the circuit court’s interpretation of the parties’ custody arrangement as “not clearly against the preponderance of the evidence.”
Now, under the majority’s reasoning, whether parents have a joint-custody arrangement or a primary-custody arrangement is a question of law. All that matters is that certain magic words of limitation appear in the divorce decree. If so, then the circuit court is now required to conduct a relocation analysis under Hollandsworth as a matter of law. In so doing, it must ignore what else is written in the decree and settlement agreement, and it also must ignore what is actually happening in the care of that child. Essentially, form prevails over function, and the child’s fate is left to what the divorce attorney, or an online form, put in the divorce decree under the guise of “primary physical custodianship,” when in fact the parties have agreed to and are practicing true joint-physical custody.
In this case, the divorce decree was at war with itself: on one hand, it said that the mother was primary physical custodian; on the other hand, it said that the parents were to divide physical custody evenly. As the fact-finder, the circuit court had to resolve this inconsistency. The court heard testimony that, since the divorce, the parents had in fact exchanged custody evenly as per the divorce and settlement agreement and that the child had 112spent an equal amount of time with each parent. Based on the testimony and the decree, the court found that the parents had a true joint-custody arrangement and that neither was entitled to the Hollands-worth presumption.
One final note: I also think it is useful to consider the policy behind the relocation presumption when one parent truly has primary custody. It makes sense that if a child resides primarily with one parent and that parent is the primary caregiver, then there should be a presumption in favor of the child moving with that parent if that parent needs to relocate. Continuity is important with children. That principle is not applicable when the child spends equal time with both parents, and both parents are co-caregivers in the truest sense. In these cases, the Hollandsworth presumption should not automatically apply solely because the decree says one party is “primary physical custodian.” Instead, the circuit court should consider the decree and settlement as a whole and also take into account how the parents actually divide custody in practice. By doing this, the circuit court can tailor its decision to facts of the particular case. The majority’s cookie-cutter approach, however, prohibits the court from conducting a case-by-case analysis, and, in the end, limits full consideration of the child’s best interest.
HARRISON and GRUBER, JJ., join.
Notes
. We have reaffirmed Lewellyn's distinction between "joint-custody-relocation" cases and "custodial-parent-relocation” cases in a post-Hollandsworth decision. Gray v. Gray,
