Arneshia L. RYAN, Appellant, v. Britney Q. WHITE, Appellee.
No. CV-15-92
Court of Appeals of Arkansas, DIVISION II.
OPINION DELIVERED September 23, 2015
2015 Ark. App. 494
Third, the trial court did not act thoughtlessly or improvidently. The trial court considered the evidence presented to it on the juror‘s alleged bias and withheld its ruling until the next day so it could more fully consider the facts and the law as they applied in this case. The court, prior to entering its ruling, further questioned the juror to assess her ability to act impartially. Armed with this information, the court found that the juror could remain impartial. Based on the facts before us, we cannot find that the court committed a manifest abuse of discretion.
Finally, Richardson has not demonstrated prejudice. Richardson was identified by one of the tellers as the person who robbed him, and Johnson identified her as his accomplice. The jury was also provided with the surveillance video and still photos of the robbery. Moreover, there was no evidence that this “extraneous evidence” was ever communicated to the other jurors.
For the reasons set forth above, we affirm.
Affirmed.
Gladwin, C.J., and Hoofman, J., agree.
Appellate Solutions, PLLC d/b/a/ Riordan Law Firm, by: Deborah Truby Riordan, Little Rock, for appellee.
ROBERT J. GLADWIN, Chief Judge
Appellant Arneshia Ryan appeals the July 28, 2014 order entered by the St. Francis County Circuit Court that awarded joint custody of the parties’ minor child to appellant and appellee, Britney White, the father of the child. Appellant argues that the circuit court erred in giving a preference to joint custody in this case and in finding that appellee met his burden required by
The parties are parents to a son, J.W., born out of wedlock on June 26, 2012. The parties dated for nine years and lived together in appellee‘s home for the last four years of their relationship. During that time, appellant became pregnant with J.W. When she was five months pregnant, she moved out of appellee‘s house based on suspicions that appellee had been unfaithful. Appellant then cancelled her phone service and moved again without informing appellee of her new contact information. Appellee repeatedly, but unsuccessfully, sought to contact appellant after she had moved out. When appellee realized that appellant was not going to allow him to be involved for the remainder of the pregnancy, he filed a complaint to establish paternity, to request that he be allowed to be present at his son‘s birth, and to establish joint custody of the child upon his birth. Appellant responded to appellee‘s complaint, admitting paternity and requesting full custody of the baby. Because appellant did not inform appellee about the impending birth, appellee, of his own initiative, made multiple trips to the hospital around the due date to try to see his newborn son. On his fifth trip, someone at the hospital told appellee that he had arrived two days too late.
Appellant refused to allow appellee to see J.W. until September 3, 2012, ten weeks after the child had been born. Appellee and appellant then arranged occasional visits among appellant, appellee, and J.W. during the fall of 2012. Those visits continued until February 2013, when appellant received notice that a “temporary hearing” on appellee‘s complaint had been scheduled for May 2013. From February until May 2013, appellant did not permit appellee to see J.W. On June 11, 2013, the circuit court filed an order, signed by counsel for both parties which, in accordance with the May 21, 2013 hearing, established appellee‘s paternity and granted appellant temporary physical custody “subject to the right of reasonable visitation.” Appellee was given a phased-in visitation schedule progressing to standard (Schedule A) visitation.
Appellant deprived appellee of his first scheduled visitation in June 2013 and on two subsequent occasions in December 2013, including Christmas. Thereafter, appellee filed a petition for contempt. At the January 16, 2014 hearing scheduled for a final custody determination, Judge Hudson recused but noted that her prior orders remained in effect and were to be followed. The very next day, however, appellant denied appellee‘s scheduled visitation and refused to allow contact between J.W. and him. Appellee filed a second verified petition for contempt on January 23, 2014, noting that appellant had denied him scheduled weekend visitations in January 2014 without explanation. An order to appear and show cause was issued on January 29, 2014, setting February
At the March 10, 2014 hearing, appellant acknowledged her history of unilaterally cutting off appellee‘s visitation. She testified that she has no concerns with the physical attributes of appellee‘s home, other than a stray shovel that might be lying in the back yard, and she agreed that appellee is a good father who is very concerned about J.W. and has been involved to the extent that he has been allowed. Appellant testified that she knew of no reason why appellee could not adequately care for J.W. in his home. She further acknowledged that a father‘s relationship with a child is as important as the mother‘s and that a father should be permitted to spend as much time with his child as possible. Appellant‘s only disagreement with appellee‘s request for joint custody was that she felt it would confuse J.W., being almost two years old, but she did express a desire to “co-parent” with appellee.
Appellee expressed multiple concerns with appellant having primary custody of J.W., including her fluctuating work schedule, her mother keeping a loaded gun in the apartment and having fired it with J.W. present, her cutting appellee off from contact with J.W. when she became angry, and her fictitious report of child abuse made when she was angry because appellee had J.W.‘s hair cut. Appellee acknowledged his continued willingness to work with appellant to care for J.W., and he stated that between February 20, 2014, and the March 10, 2014 hearing, the parties had been able to work together. Appellee requested a seven-day schedule where both parents would have equal time with J.W. to eliminate appellant‘s bargaining ability or “holding him hostage over my head and blackmailing me with my son.”
After hearing the testimony of appellee, appellant, appellee‘s mother, the DHS investigator, and appellant‘s character witness, the circuit court noted that appellee had sustained his statutory burden to be awarded custody and that both parties are “suitable people to have custody of this child.” The circuit court acknowledged that as of that date, both parties had presented testimony regarding their willingness to work together and confirmed that they had successfully done so in the weeks leading to the hearing.
In its order entered July 25, 2014, the circuit court found that both parties were capable of providing nurture and support to J.W. and that both were appropriate for placement. The circuit court found that appellee had established paternity and sustained his burden of providing financial and emotional support to J.W. in order to sustain a custody request. The circuit court noted that it was cognizant of the fact that the Arkansas Legislature has directed that joint custody is favored, as stated in
The primary consideration in child-custody and visitation cases is the welfare and best interest of the child involved. All other considerations are secondary. Donato v. Walker, 2010 Ark. App. 566, 377 S.W.3d 437. On appeal, this court
Also, this court reviews issues of statutory interpretation de novo. Steele v. Lyon, 2015 Ark. App. 251, 460 S.W.3d 827. In reviewing issues of statutory interpretation, a court will determine the meaning and effect of a statute first by construing the statute just as it reads, giving the words their ordinary and usually accepted meaning in common language. Id. When the statute‘s language is clear and unambiguous, there is no need to look further and apply the rules of statutory construction. Id.
Several statutes are relevant to the current appeal. Specifically,
(a) When a child is born to an unmarried woman, legal custody of that child shall be in the woman giving birth to the child until the child reaches the age of eighteen (18) years unless a court of competent jurisdiction enters an order placing the child in the custody of another party.
(b) A biological father, provided he has established paternity in a court of competent jurisdiction, may petition the circuit court in the county where the child resides for custody of the child.
(c) The court may award custody to the biological father upon a showing that:
(1) He is a fit parent to raise the child;
(2) He has assumed his responsibilities toward the child by providing care, supervision, protection, and financial support for the child; and
(3) It is in the best interest of the child to award custody to the biological father.
Additionally,
(a)(1)(A) Subsequent to the execution of an acknowledgment of paternity by the father and mother of a child pursuant to § 20-18-408 or § 20-18-409; or a similar acknowledgment executed during the child‘s minority, or subsequent to a finding by the court that the putative father in a paternity action is the father of the child, the court shall follow the same guidelines, procedures, and requirements as set forth in the laws of this state applicable to child support orders and judgments entered by the circuit court as if it were a case involving a child born of a marriage in awarding custody, visitation, setting amounts of support, costs, and attorney‘s fees, and directing payments through the clerk of the court, or through the Arkansas child support clearinghouse if the case was brought pursuant to Title IV-D of the Social Security Act.
Finally,
(a)(1)(A)(i) In an action for divorce, the award of custody of a child of the marriage shall be made without regard to the sex of a parent but solely in accor-
dance with the welfare and best interest of the child. (ii) In determining the best interest of the child, the court may consider the preferences of the child if the child is of a sufficient age and mental capacity to reason, regardless of chronological age.
(iii) In an action for divorce, an award of joint custody is favored in Arkansas.
...
(5) As used in this section, “joint custody” means the approximate and reasonable equal division of time with the child by both parents individually as agreed to by the parents or as ordered by the court.
...
(b)(1)(A)(i) When in the best interest of a child, custody shall be awarded in such a way so as to assure the frequent and continuing contact of the child with both parents consistent with subdivision (a)(1)(A) of this section.
(ii) To this effect, the circuit court may consider awarding joint custody of a child to the parents in making an order for custody.
(Emphasis added.)
I. Did the Circuit Court Err in Giving Preference to Joint Custody?
Act 1156 of 2013 enacted Senate Bill 901 of the Arkansas General Assembly, which is codified at
In this case, J.W. has never lived with both parents, and paternity was not established until he was almost a year old, which was also the first time that frequent visits began with appellee. Before then, J.W. had lived exclusively with appellant, and she had legal custody of him pursuant to
We hold that, although the circuit court did not err in acknowledging the “favored” status of joint custody under
(b)(1)(A)(i) When in the best interest of a child, custody shall be awarded in such a way so as to assure the frequent and continuing contact of the child with both parents consistent with subdivision (a)(1)(A) of this section.
(ii) To this effect, the circuit court may consider awarding joint custody of a child to the parents in making an order for custody.
II. Did Appellee Meet His Burden Under § 9-10-113 for an Award of Custody?
Initially, appellant notes that in Norwood, supra, the circuit court deemed the initial determination of paternity as the last custody order and required a material change in circumstances in addition to the three conditions previously listed. The analysis was that custody vested with the mother at birth and was implicitly affirmed in the paternity order granting the father visitation. Appellant reiterates that whenever a party is requesting a change of custody, it is then that party‘s burden to show that there has been a change of circumstances since the original order establishing custody or that there were facts not presented at the initial hearing that would bear on the best interest of the child. See Metz v. Steele, 2012 Ark. App. 373, 418 S.W.3d 411. In this case, a full hearing was conducted and two orders were entered on June 11, 2013.1 Appellant claims that these two orders, regardless of whether they were temporary, established paternity and awarded visitation to the father. She cites Hodge v. Hodge, 97 Ark. App. 217, 245 S.W.3d 695 (2006), in which this court held that it was error if a material-change-of-circumstances standard was not used after an initial award in favor of the mother.
Other than the requirements set out in
The June 11, 2013 order set temporary custody rather than vesting final, primary custody in appellant. It was temporary in order scheduling the May 2013 hearing, which was personally served on appellant on May 6, 2013, expressly provided that a “temporary hearing” was scheduled.
Notes
Both of them in paragraph three and later on in the order state that the order is the result of a temporary hearing. So it can only be temporary custody when you were at a temporary hearing. And there does not seem to be anything on the face of this order [that] changes it from a temporary hearing to a final.
The law does not prohibit a circuit court from entering a temporary order of visitation in favor of the father at the same time that he is found to be the father and reserving the issue of custody for a later time. Harmon, supra. The evidence established, and the circuit court correctly determined, that the June 11 order was temporary in nature, with the final issue of custody being reserved for a later date, as evidenced by the September 20, 2013 order setting a final hearing to determine the issues of “Custody, Visitation and Child Support.”
Because appellee filed his petition for custody before paternity was established and because the subsequent June 11, 2013 order was temporary in nature, appellee only had to meet the three requirements set forth in
Specifically, in regard to appellee‘s failure to meet his burden of proof, appellant argues that appellee did not demonstrate that he had assumed his responsibilities toward J.W. by providing care, supervision, protection, and support for the child as required by
The majority of appellee‘s argument for why he should be awarded custody was that appellant had denied his mother a visit in June 2013 and other visits in December 2013 while there was an ongoing investigation. He also expressed concern about appellant‘s mental stability and that of her mother, as well as appellant‘s prior attempts to find work and move out of state with J.W.
Based upon our review of the circuit court‘s orders and witness testimony, including that of appellant, it is clear that there was universal agreement that it would be in J.W.‘s best interest for appellee to have as much time with J.W. as possible. Appellant‘s only disagreement with the proposal of joint custody and seven-day per-week visits was that she felt it would confuse J.W. at this age, but she presented no evidence to substantiate her concern that permitting J.W. to share equal time with his parents would be confusing to him. Likewise, there was no evidence or testimony presented that J.W. was too young for his father to be awarded custody. The order setting joint custody was entered two weeks before J.W.‘s second birthday, and we note that this court has affirmed circuit court decisions to place young children with their fathers. See Sheppard, supra (ten-month-old child); Harmon, supra (three-year-old child).
We hold that the evidence and testimony at the hearing established (1) that appellant initially exhibited a lack of regard for appellee‘s opportunity and time to be with J.W. (2) that appellee met his statutory burden for an award of custody; (3) that appellee‘s request for joint custody provided both parties with meaningful interaction with J.W. which all of the witnesses testified was important and necessary; and (4) that an award of joint custody was in J.W.‘s best interest. It is undisputed that appellant testified at the final hearing that she was willing to follow the circuit court‘s orders in the future and desired to co-parent with appellee. Appellee also expressed a desire to co-parent with appellant. Based on the circuit court‘s opinion that both parties are “appropriate for the placement of the minor child in their care and custody,” and its determination to level the playing field by awarding joint custody, we affirm the circuit court‘s award of joint custody.
Affirmed.
Whiteaker and Hoofman, JJ., agree.
