This case involves a child-custody dispute between parents who shared legal and physical joint custody of their three children. Appellant Carmen Gray appeals from an order of the Pulaski County Circuit Court specifically finding that there was no material change in circumstances to require a change of custody. The court decided to continue joint-legal custody in both parents but changed physical custody to appellee Karl Gray during the school year. On appeal, Carmen argues that the trial court erred in finding that there was no material change in circumstances to warrant a change of custody. We agree and reverse and remand.
Following their divorce in 2002, Carmen and Karl Gray were awarded joint custody of their three children. They shared a week on/ week off visitation schedule that allowed the children to remain in the same school district and daycare facility. In September 2004, Carmen moved to Missouri to live with her parents due to financial problems, and the children stayed with Karl.
Complications arose because of Carmen’s relocation. Although Carmen continued to see her children, her time with them was reduced from the previous arrangement due to the fact that the children were in school in Arkansas, and Carmen now lived in another state. When she was able to see the children, Carmen drove eight hours round-trip to pick them up and return them. She testified that, following the move, she was no longer allowed to participate in decisions regarding the children and that Karl made important changes without consulting her, including decisions about the children’s extracurricular activities and daycare.
In December 2004, Karl filed a motion seeking sole-legal custody based primarily on Carmen’s relocation to Missouri. She responded with a counterclaim asking for sole-legal custody. Both parties alleged that Carmen’s move constituted a material change in circumstances that required a change in custody. On August 8, 2005, the trial court held a hearing on the motions and determined that neither party had shown a material change in circumstances to warrant a change of joint-legal custody to sole-legal custody. However, the trial court amended the initial custody arrangement to allow the parties to continue joint-legal custody but to designate Karl as primary custodian for purposes of school attendance, stating that “true joint physical custody is not possible given the logistics” of Carmen’s move.
Carmen now appeals from the trial court’s order and contends that the court clearly erred in finding that no material change in circumstances had occurred and requesting that we award her full custody of her three children.
In child custody cases, we review the evidence de novo, but we will not reverse the findings of the court unless it is shown that they are clearly contrary to the preponderance of the evidence. Thompson v. Thompson,
Arkansas law is well settled that a judicial award of custody should not be modified unless it is shown that there are changed conditions that demonstrate that a modification of the decree would be in the best interests of the children. Campbell v. Campbell,
Joint custody or equally divided custody of minor children is not favored in Arkansas unless circumstances clearly warrant such action. Thompson,
In Lewellyn v. Lewellyn,
Amanda’s first contention on appeal is that there was no material change in circumstances from the time of the divorce decree sufficient to set aside joint custody in the parents and to place sole custody in Tim. She argues, as a specific matter, that her relocation, standing alone, cannot constitute a material change in circumstances. For authority, she cites the court to Jones v. Jones,326 Ark. 481 ,931 S.W.2d 767 (1996). See also Gerot v. Gerot,76 Ark. App. 138 , 145-46,61 S.W.3d 890 , 896 (2001) (“[RJelocating in order to obtain better employment itself does not constitute a material change in circumstances.”); Hollinger v. Hollinger,65 Ark. App. 110 ,986 S.W.2d 105 (1999) (holding that the combined effect of the mother’s move, the desires of the children to stay in their original location, and the long passage of time between the divorce decree and the modification, amounted to a material change in circumstances.).
The problem with Amanda’s case authority is that the Jones case did not involve joint custody in the parents where physical custody alternated on a month-to-month basis. Indeed, the Jones-Gerot-Hollinger line of cases all involved mothers with sole custody of a child or children who sought to relocate. That is not what we have in the case at hand. Here, both parents had custody,and each parent petitioned for sole custody, 'with Amanda being the parent who wished to relocate.
Lewellyn,
In the present case, the parties shared a type of joint custody — true shared legal and physical custody — that was impossible to maintain once Carmen moved several hundred miles away. In addition, Carmen complained that Karl failed to include her in decisions relating to the children, a requirement of their prior custody order. Our case law makes it clear that a joint-custody arrangement requires cooperation by both parents, see Remick,
This case involved a true joint-custody arrangement, where each parent shared legal and physical custody of the children equally. Once one parent relocated outside of the general area and the parents could no longer cooperate in jointly raising the children, it was clear error for the trial court to find that a material change in circumstances did not exist requiring a change of custody. We, therefore, reverse and remand this case to the trial court to award custody based on its determination of the best interests of the children.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
For this same reason, Hollandsworth v. Knyzewski,
