JOSHUA CLARK v. LAKIN WORKMAN
NO. 2019-CA-000805-ME
Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals
JUNE 26, 2020
TO BE PUBLISHED
ACREE, DIXON, AND MCNEILL, JUDGES
APPEAL FROM GREENUP CIRCUIT COURT, HONORABLE JEFFREY L. PRESTON, JUDGE, ACTION NO. 14-CI-00448
OPINION
AFFIRMING
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BEFORE: ACREE, DIXON, AND MCNEILL, JUDGES.
ACREE, JUDGE: Joshua Clark (Father) appeals the Greenup Family Court’s May 6, 2019 order that he pay to Lakin Workman (Mother) in monthly child support the sum of $859.57. Finding no manifest injustice, we affirm.
NONCOMPLIANCE WITH RULES OF APPELLATE PROCEDURE
This Court is weary of the need to render opinions such as this one, necessitated as they are by the failure of appellate advocates to follow rules of appellate advocacy. In just the last two years, at least one hundred and one (101) Kentucky appellate opinions were rendered in which an attorney’s carelessness made appellate rule violations an issue in his or her client’s case.1 The prodigious
We will not reiterate all that has been said too many times before on this subject. If a lawyer is curious about the importance of these procedural rules or the practical reasons for following them, we recommend reading these opinions in chronological order: Commonwealth v. Roth, 567 S.W.3d 591 (Ky. 2019);
It is more than apparent that Father’s counsel failed to make a sincere attempt to comply with
- Subsection (4)(a)(ii) (requiring “1 1/2 inch margin on the left side”);
- Subsection (4)(a)(iii) (requiring cover to include “the file number(s) of the circuit court action(s)”);
- Subsection (4)(c)(iii) (requiring Statement of Points and Authorities to include “appellant’s contentions with respect to each issue of law relied upon for a reversal”);
- Subsection (4)(c)(iv) (requiring Statement of the Case to include “ample references to the specific pages of the record, or tape and digital counter number in the case of untranscribed videotape or audiotape recordings, or date and time in the case of all other untranscribed electronic recordings, supporting each of the statements narrated in the summary”);
- Subsection (4)(c)(v) (requiring the Argument to include “ample supportive references to the record”);
- Subsection (4)(c)(v) (requiring “at the beginning of the argument a statement with reference to the record showing whether the issue was properly preserved for review and, if so, in what manner”);
- Subsection (4)(c)(vi) (requiring “[a] ‘CONCLUSION’ setting forth the specific relief sought from the appellate court”);
- Subsection (4)(c)(vii) (requiring that “[t]he first item of the appendix shall be a listing or index of all documents included in the appendix”);
- Subsection (4)(c)(vii) (requiring that “[t]he index [i.e., appendix listing] shall set forth where the documents may be found in the record”);
- Subsection (4)(c)(vii) (requiring that “[t]he appellant shall place the judgment, opinion, or order under review immediately after the appendix list [i.e., or index] so that it is most readily available to the court”); and
- Subsection (4)(c)(vii) (requiring that documents in the appendix be marked by “appropriate extruding tabs”).
The appellant’s brief does not cite even once to the record despite the rule’s requirement that such citation permeate both the Statement of the Case and the Argument, specifically requiring that there be citation to the record “supporting each of the [factual] statements narrated . . . .”
REVIEW FOR MANIFEST INJUSTICE
There is no reason to disturb the family court’s ruling. Father earns $6,666.67 per month (or 78% of the parties’ joint gross monthly income) and Mother earns $1,819.86 per month (or 22% of the parties’ joint monthly income). Applying the support guidelines to the parties’ combined monthly income of $8,486.53 yields a base support obligation for their two children of $1,410.00. Adding in child care and health insurance premium costs gives a total child support obligation of $2,284.96. Father’s 78% share of that obligation is $1,782.26; after giving him credit for the premiums he pays for the children’s medical insurance coverage, Father’s share of the obligation is $1,362.26. In accordance with
However, notwithstanding that the custodial arrangement was not “split custody,” see
Father’s remaining arguments do not merit further review.
CONCLUSION
We affirm the Greenup Family Court’s May 6, 2019 order.
ALL CONCUR.
BRIEF FOR APPELLANT:
Richard A. Hughes
Ashland, Kentucky
BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:
James W. Lyon, Jr.
Greenup, Kentucky
