BRANDON SMITH AND KIMBERLY WOLFE SMITH v. MILTON MARTIN AND GENEVA MARTIN
NO. 2014-CA-00040-COA
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
AFFIRMED - 03/01/2016
TRIAL JUDGE: HON. JANACE H. GOREE
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: YAZOO COUNTY CHANCERY COURT
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS: GEORGE S. WHITTEN JR. TOM P. CALHOUN III
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEES: JAMES H. POWELL III
NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - DOMESTIC RELATIONS
TRIAL COURT DISPOSITION: GRANTED APPELLEES’ PETITION FOR GRANDPARENT-VISITATION RIGHTS
DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 03/01/2016
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:
EN BANC.
CARLTON, J., FOR THE COURT:
¶1. Brandon and Kimberly Smith (collectively, the Smiths) appeal the Yazoo County Chancery Court’s grant of grandparent visitation to Milton and Geneva Martin (collectively, the Martins). On appeal, the Smiths raise numerous issues, which we have summarized as follows: (1) whether the chancellor followed a nonjudicial philosophy that was incompatible with trying cases and controversies; (2) whether the chancellor abused her discretion by excluding certain testimony as hearsay; (3) whether the chancellor erred by finding visitation
¶2. Finding no error, we affirm.
FACTS
¶3. Kimberly and Marty Martin married in 1996 and divorced in 2003. The couple had two minor children. The couple’s first son, Cliff,2 was born in 2001. Their second son, Hank,3 was born in 2004 after the entry of the divorce decree. Kimberly received physical custody of the two children, and Marty received visitation supervised by his parents, the Martins.
¶4. On February 8, 2008, Marty committed suicide. His body was discovered at his home
¶5. On May 17, 2008, Kimberly married Brandon. In 2010, Brandon adopted Kimberly’s children.4 Following an incident on January 2, 2011, Kimberly and Brandon discontinued the Martins’ visitation with the two minor children. Geneva and Kimberly both testified about the incident on January 2, 2011. The women both testified that the two children were visiting the Martins when Hank became ill. Geneva and Kimberly arranged to meet so that Hank could return home. Kimberly decided that Cliff should return home at the same time.
¶6. Geneva testified that, upon learning that he had to go home early, Cliff grew upset and began to cry. Geneva further testified that, upon arriving at the exchange location, she instructed the children to get inside Kimberly’s car while she spoke to Kimberly. Geneva told Kimberly that Cliff had accused Brandon of the following: being mean to Cliff, telling
¶7. At this point in the story, the two women’s accounts of events differed. According to Kimberly, during the conversation, Geneva would sob hysterically, compose herself, and then continue sobbing. Kimberly testified that Cliff, who witnessed the women’s conversation from inside Kimberly’s car, jumped from Kimberly’s car, ran to Geneva’s car, and locked himself inside. Kimberly further testified that, as he ran toward Geneva’s car, Cliff yelled, “You were right, Grandmother. My life would be better if I just lived with you and went to school at Carroll Academy.”
¶8. Geneva, however, disputed Kimberly’s version of events. According to Geneva’s testimony, she and Kimberly both remained composed during the conversation. Geneva admitted that, when Kimberly raised her voice at one point during the conversation, Cliff exited Kimberly’s car, hugged Geneva, and then ran to Geneva’s car. Geneva testified, though, that Cliff never yelled anything as he ran to her car and that he never locked himself inside her car.
¶9. On redirect, Kimberly testified that Cliff remained upset the entire drive home after the events on January 2, 2011. Even after arriving home, Kimberly stated that Cliff remained inconsolable. During her redirect, Kimberly testified as follows:
¶10. Because Cliff remained inconsolable and refused to believe anything they told him, the Smiths asked other family members to explain to Cliff the kind of man his father, Marty, had been and to explain why Kimberly had divorced Marty. The Smiths testified that they were reluctant to take this course of action but believed it was the only way to help Cliff calm down. During a proffer, Kimberly testified that she, Brandon, her two older sons, her mother, and her aunt all spoke to Cliff. The family members explained to Cliff that Marty had experienced an ongoing drug problem; Marty had beaten Kimberly; and Kimberly had divorced Marty because she was afraid for her safety and Cliff’s safety. During her direct examination, Kimberly testified that Cliff eventually calmed down after speaking to the other family members. However, because she and Brandon remained concerned, they made an appointment for a psychologist to evaluate Cliff and Hank.
¶11. Kimberly further testified that she ended the Martins’ visitation with the children due in part to the events on January 2, 2011. Kimberly testified that she and Brandon also ended the visitation because they had observed a change in the children’s behavior following their visits with the Martins. According to Kimberly, the children acted more aggressively and
¶12. On August 3, 2011, the Martins filed a petition for grandparent visitation pursuant to
¶13. On May 16, 2013, following a two-day hearing, the chancellor entered an order finding that the Martins were entitled to visitation under
¶14. After determining that the Martins were entitled to visitation under both section 93-16-3(1) and section 93-16-3(2), the chancellor considered the Martin factors. After considering the factors, the chancellor found: (1) limited visitation would not be too disruptive to the children’s lives; (2) the Martins’ activities posed no barrier to their ability to provide a suitable home with sufficient supervision when the children visited; (3) the children were ages eleven and nine at the time of the hearing; (4) the Martins, both in their sixties, appeared to be in good health at the time of the hearing even though Geneva had suffered a nervous breakdown after Marty’s suicide and Milton had experienced stress due to his son’s death and Geneva’s breakdown; (5) strong emotional ties existed between the Martins and the children; (6) no evidence was offered to prove that the Martins were morally unfit to have a relationship with the children; (7) the Martins’ home in Carroll County was not too far from the Smiths’ home in Yazoo County; (8) although the Smiths alleged that the
¶15. The chancellor concluded that it was in the children’s best interests to award grandparent-visitation rights to the Martins. The chancellor therefore granted the Martins visitation with the children on the third weekend of every month. The chancellor also ordered the Smiths, the Martins, and the children to attend family counseling to facilitate a smooth visitation experience between the Martins and the children. In addition, the chancellor ordered that the family counseling would continue until the counselor determined the need for counseling no longer existed.
¶16. Following the chancellor’s order, the Smiths filed an unsuccessful motion for a new trial. The Smiths asserted in their motion that the chancellor had erroneously excluded evidence and conducted the hearing in a manner pervasively prejudicial to them. Aggrieved by the chancellor’s grant of visitation and denial of their new-trial motion, the Smiths appeal.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶17. “‘Visitation and restrictions placed upon it are within the discretion of the chancery court.’ We are ‘bound to accept the findings of the chancellor unless he is manifestly wrong or there is clearly an abuse of discretion.’” Arrington v. Thrash, 122 So. 3d 144, 148 (¶13)
DISCUSSION
I. Whether the chancellor followed a nonjudicial philosophy that was incompatible with trying cases and controversies.
¶18. The Smiths assert that the chancellor “was driven by a philosophy that [was] not judicial at all . . . and [that was] incompatible with trying cases and controversies.” The Smiths further allege that “the chancellor was determined to be [a] therapist to the parties rather than a tribunal to whom both sides present their cases . . . and who hears all the admissible, relevant evidence.” The Smiths cite several statements the chancellor made throughout the hearing, and they argue these statements show the chancellor failed to admit relevant evidence and testimony unfavorable to the Martins due to her nonjudicial philosophy. Asserting that the chancellor’s rulings were erroneous, the Smiths argue that their testimony and evidence was admissible to explain why they denied further visitation with the Martins and why they determined that such visitation was not in the children’s best interests.
¶19.
¶20. Upon review, we find no merit to the Smiths’ assertions that the chancellor failed to admit relevant evidence and testimony unfavorable to the Martins due to a nonjudicial philosophy. After reviewing the chancellor’s rulings on the admission and exclusion of evidence, we find no abuse of discretion that resulted in prejudice or harm that adversely affected a substantial right of the Smiths. See id. As a result, this argument lacks merit.
II. Whether the chancellor abused her discretion by excluding certain testimony as hearsay.
¶21. The Smiths next argue that the chancellor abused her discretion by excluding as hearsay Brandon’s testimony about four statements Cliff made to Brandon. The Smiths contend Cliff’s statements were not hearsay because the Smiths did not offer the statements to prove the truth of the matter asserted. Instead, the Smiths argue that they offered Brandon’s testimony about Cliff’s statements to show the effect the statements had on the
¶22. As previously discussed, we review the exclusion of evidence for abuse of discretion. See Troupe, 955 So. 2d at 855 (¶19).
¶23. During both Kimberly’s and Brandon’s direct examinations, the Smiths’ attorney asked what specific statements Cliff made to them after the events on January 2, 2011. Each time, the Martins objected to the testimony as hearsay. After sustaining the Martins’ objection, the chancellor excused herself from the courtroom to allow Kimberly and Brandon to each make a proffer regarding Cliff’s statements. On appeal, the Smiths argue that the chancellor erred by excluding as hearsay Brandon’s testimony about the four following statements Cliff made to Brandon: (1) Brandon was not Cliff’s real daddy; (2) Brandon whipped Cliff every day; (3) Brandon was not Cliff’s real daddy and could not spank Cliff; and (4) Kimberly had lied to Cliff his entire life.
¶24. In their brief, the Smiths acknowledge that the chancellor allowed Kimberly to testify about Cliff’s statements during her redirect examination. As the record reflects, after initially
[Cliff] was hysterically telling me that I had lied to him, that his grandmother had told him I had lied to him his whole life; that I had divorced his daddy for no good reason, taken him away from [Marty]; [that Marty] got sadder and sadder, sicker and sicker until he died. That Brandon would never be his daddy, Brandon didn’t love him; that Grandmother said [Brandon] would never love him because he wasn’t [Brandon’s] real child, [the adoption] was just a piece of paper; [Brandon] had no right to discipline him. He kept on and on telling me that I had lied to him, I had lied to him his whole life about this divorce. He told Brandon his grandmother said she would hire an attorney and sue us to have his name changed back to Martin.
(Emphasis added).
¶25. In addition to allowing Kimberly to testify about Cliff’s statements on redirect, the chancellor addressed this assignment of error in her order denying the Smiths’ new-trial motion. The chancellor found that the Smiths sought to admit the testimony to convince her of the truth of the matter asserted rather than to show the effect on the hearer. As a result, the chancellor found that the statements, and any testimony about them, constituted inadmissible hearsay. Despite her findings, the chancellor further stated:
In spite of the foregoing, the [c]ourt considered many of the statements allegedly made by the [Smiths’] minor children [since] the [Smiths] prepared voluminous affidavits, which were filed in the court file. Some of these statements were contained in the affidavits, along with many other statements describing various events in the lives of these parties. Since opposing counsel did not object to these affidavits being made a part of the court file, this [c]ourt reviewed the affidavits in preparation for this case.
¶26. Although the chancellor reviewed the Smiths’ affidavits and admitted Kimberly’s
III. Whether the chancellor erred by finding visitation was in the grandchildren’s best interests before analyzing the Martin factors.
¶27. The Smiths next argue that the chancellor erred by “first declar[ing] visitation with the grandparents to be in the children’s best interests (based on preserving the close relationship)” and by then “appl[ying] the ten [Martin] factors only to guide her apportionment of how much time to award.” The Smiths contend that the chancellor erred because she should have analyzed the Martin factors before concluding that grandparent visitation served the children’s best interests.
¶28. Grandparent-visitation rights are governed by statute. Aydelott v. Quartaro, 124 So. 3d 97, 100 (¶9) (Miss. Ct. App. 2013). Mississippi’s applicable statute,
(1) Whenever a court of this state enters a decree or order awarding custody of a minor child to one (1) of the parents of the child or terminating the parental rights of one (1) of the parents of a minor child, or whenever one (1) of the parents of a minor child dies, either parent of the child’s parents may petition the court in which the decree or order was rendered or, in the case of the death of a parent, petition the chancery court in the county in which the child resides, and seek visitation rights with the child.
(2) Any grandparent who is not authorized to petition for visitation rights pursuant to subsection (1) of this section may petition the chancery court and seek visitation rights with his or her grandchild, and the court may grant
(a) That the grandparent of the child had established a viable relationship with the child and the parent or custodian of the child unreasonably denied the grandparent visitation rights with the child; and
(b) That visitation rights of the grandparent with the child would be in the best interests of the child.
¶29. As previously stated, the Martins sought grandparent visitation under section 93-16-3(2). However, in her order granting grandparent visitation, the chancellor first discussed section 93-16-3(1). Under section 93-16-3(1) and
¶30. In addressing the Martins’ petition under section 93-16-3(2), the chancellor first determined whether the Martins showed that they possessed a viable relationship with the children. The chancellor found that the Martins had exercised consistent and frequent
¶31. The chancellor next considered whether the Smiths had unreasonably denied visitation to the Martins. The Smiths testified that they terminated the Martins’ visitation due to several incidences, including the events that occurred on January 2, 2011. Kimberly also testified, however, that she and Brandon had noticed changes in the children’s behavior following their visits with the Martins. The Smiths both testified that Cliff and Hank acted more aggressively and disrespectfully after visitation with the Martins and that, at one point, Cliff attempted to shoot Brandon with a BB gun.
¶32. After considering the parties’ testimony and evidence, the chancellor found that the Smiths’ reasons for terminating the Martins’ visitation failed to show a causal connection between the children’s behavior and their contact with the Martins. Based on her review of the testimony and evidence, the chancellor found that the Smiths had unreasonably denied visitation to the Martins. The chancellor then stated that the children’s best interests would
¶33. Upon review, we find the record contains substantial credible evidence to support the chancellor’s findings that the Martins were entitled to grandparent visitation. As a result, we find no abuse of discretion in the chancellor’s award of grandparent visitation. See Arrington, 122 So. 3d at 148 (¶13). We therefore find that this argument lacks merit.
IV. Whether the chancellor applied an erroneous legal standard that placed an improper burden of proof on the Smiths.
¶34. The Smiths assert that the chancellor failed to treat this matter as a grandparent-visitation case and instead treated the matter more like a child-custody case between two natural parents. According to the Smiths, the chancellor “elevated the Martins to the higher status of a parent[] and demoted [the Smiths] to [a] weak[er] position of one parent going up against the other parent.” In so doing, the Smiths argue that the chancellor applied erroneous legal standards and improperly placed a heightened burden of proof on them.
¶35. The Smiths first contend that, instead of adhering to the best-interest-of-the-child standard, the chancellor erroneously required them to show that the Martins either posed a threat to the children or lacked the ability to adequately provide for the children’s basic needs. In addition, the Smiths argue that, instead of requiring the Martins to prove they were
¶36. As previously discussed, a chancellor’s decisions will not be reversed when her findings of fact are supported by substantial credible evidence in the record. See Henderson, 757 So. 2d at 289 (¶19). Unless the chancellor was manifestly wrong or clearly erroneous or applied an erroneous legal standard, her findings of fact remain undisturbed. Id. at 289-90 (¶19). As also acknowledged, grandparent visitation is purely a statutory right that may only be considered where the statutory requirements are met. Aydelott, 124 So. 3d at 100 (¶9).
¶37. The record reflects that the chancellor first found the Martins met the statutory criteria of section 93-16-3(1). The chancellor then went a step further and analyzed the Martins’ claim under section 93-16-3(2) as well. The chancellor determined that the Martins also satisfied the criteria in section 93-16-3(2) because they established a viable relationship with the children and unreasonable denial of visitation by the Smiths. As a result of her findings, the chancellor applied the Martin factors and determined that visitation was in the children’s best interests.
¶38. After reviewing the record, we find no support for the Smiths’ argument that the chancellor applied an erroneous legal standard and required them to satisfy a heightened burden of proof. Accordingly, we find that this assignment of error lacks merit.
V. Whether the chancellor improperly substituted her judgment for that of the Smiths.
¶40. Mississippi caselaw clearly establishes that “the best interest of the child must be the polestar consideration” when determining the amount of grandparent visitation. Martin, 693 So. 2d at 916. Our caselaw further states “that visitation granted to grandparents should not be equivalent to that which would be granted to a non-custodial parent unless the circumstances overwhelmingly dictate that it should be.” Id. In Stacy v. Ross, 798 So. 2d 1275, 1280 (¶23) (Miss. 2001), the Mississippi Supreme Court wrote:
The determination whether parents are unreasonable in denying visitation in whole or part to grandparents is not a contest between equals. Parents with custody have a paramount right to control the environment, physical, social, and emotional, to which their children are exposed. Interference with that right based upon anything less than compelling circumstances is not the intent of the visitation statute. Clearly, forced, extensive unsupervised visitation cannot be ordered absent compelling circumstances [that] suggest something near unfitness of the custodial parents.
(Internal citations omitted).
¶41. Although our caselaw instructs chancellors to give deference to a natural parent’s
VI. Whether the record contained substantial credible evidence to support the chancellor’s findings of fact.
¶42. The Smiths next challenge various findings of fact made by the chancellor. As previously discussed, however, this Court finds that the record contains substantial credible evidence to support the chancellor’s findings. As a result, we decline to further address the Smiths’ claims regarding this assignment of error.
VII. Whether the chancellor erred by ordering temporary visitation prior to hearing the merits of the Martins’ petition.
¶43. In their next assignment of error, the Smiths argue that the chancellor erred by granting the Martins temporary visitation prior to hearing the merits of the Martins’ grandparent-visitation petition. The Smiths challenge the grant of temporary visitation because they contend that the chancellor’s error could be repeated if this Court reverses the
VIII. Whether the chancellor erred by ordering the Smiths to participate in family counseling with a court-appointed counselor.
¶44. In their final assignment of error, the Smiths argue that the chancellor exceeded her power by ordering them to undergo family counseling with a court-appointed counselor. The Smiths assert that the chancellor’s jurisdiction was limited to granting the Martins grandparent visitation, and they argue that the chancellor erred by “order[ing] [them] to submit to counseling [and by] placing them under the control of a person with whose advice they might not agree.” The Smiths further argue that, in determining the issue of grandparent visitation, the chancellor failed to “acquire plenary jurisdiction over the [Smiths] to order them to attend parenting classes, counseling sessions, or refrain from speaking to their children on a certain subject.”
¶45. In granting visitation to the Martins, the chancellor indeed ordered the Martins, the Smiths, and the grandchildren to “attend family counseling, beginning during the month of June 2013[,] and continue until the counselor determines counseling is no longer needed.” The chancellor’s order also provided, however, that the purpose of the family counseling was to “facilitat[e] a smooth visitation experience between the children and their grandparents.” Upon review, we find no evidence to show that the chancellor’s order exceeded her authority. As a result, we find that this argument also lacks merit.
¶46. THE JUDGMENT OF THE YAZOO COUNTY CHANCERY COURT IS
LEE, C.J., IRVING AND GRIFFIS, P.JJ., BARNES, ISHEE, FAIR AND WILSON, JJ., CONCUR. JAMES AND GREENLEE, JJ., NOT PARTICIPATING.
Notes
Whenever a court of this state enters a decree or order awarding custody of a minor child to one (1) of the parents of the child or terminating the parental rights of one (1) of the parents of a minor child, or whenever one (1) of the parents of a minor child dies, either parent of the child’s parents may petition the court in which the decree or order was rendered or, in the case of the death of a parent, petition the chancery court in the county in which the child resides, and seek visitation rights with the child.
