Jonna v. Yaramada ( 2020 )


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  •               IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. COA18-1046
    Filed: 18 August 2020
    Wake County, No. 15 CVD 16510
    SRINIVAS JONNA, Plaintiff,
    v.
    SUDHA YARAMADA, Defendant.
    Appeal by plaintiff from orders entered 31 March 2017, 20 November 2017,
    and 8 December 2017 by Judge Lori Christian in Wake County District Court. Appeal
    by defendant by writ of certiorari from order entered 20 November 2017 by Judge
    Lori Christian in Wake County District Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 6
    February 2020.
    Plaintiff-appellant Srinivas Jonna, pro se.
    Blanco Tackabery & Matamoros, P.A., by Chad A. Archer, for defendant-
    appellee.
    Young Moore and Henderson, P.A., by Angela Farag Craddock, court-appointed
    amicus curiae.
    ZACHARY, Judge.
    Plaintiff-Appellant Srinivas Jonna (“Plaintiff-Father”) appeals from several
    orders entered in the parties’ domestic matter. He argues that the trial court erred
    by (1) incorrectly calculating his child support obligation; (2) denying his motions for
    a new trial; (3) sanctioning him under Rule 11 of the North Carolina Rules of Civil
    Procedure; and (4) granting Defendant-Mother primary physical custody of their
    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    minor child. Defendant-Appellee Sudha Yaramada (“Defendant-Mother”) petitions
    this Court to issue a writ of certiorari so that we may review whether the trial court
    correctly applied the North Carolina Child Support Guidelines (the “Guidelines”).
    For the reasons that follow, we vacate the 20 November 2017 child support
    order and remand for further proceedings. We reverse that part of the trial court’s 8
    December 2017 order imposing sanctions on Plaintiff-Father. The 31 March 2017
    custody order and that part of the 8 December 2017 order denying Plaintiff-Father’s
    Rule 59 motions are affirmed.
    I. Background
    The parties are Indian citizens and residents of Wake County, and the parents
    of one child, who was born in 2013. They were married in 2009, and separated in
    December 2015.
    On 10 December 2015, Plaintiff-Father filed an “Ex Parte Complaint/Motion
    for Temporary Custody and Injunctive Relief.” In support of his request for an ex parte
    order for custody, he alleged that
    Plaintiff[-Father] and Defendant[-Mother] agreed to
    separate for several days after [Defendant-Mother]
    attempted to strike [Plaintiff-Father] . . . . That
    [Defendant-Mother] has over the last year of the marriage
    exhibited irrational behavior to include; an attempted
    suicide, threats to “kill” [Plaintiff-Father], [Defendant-
    Mother] has force[ ] fed the minor child to the point of
    vomiting, continues to display bouts of anger and has
    threatened to leave the country and return to India with
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    the minor child against [Plaintiff-Father’s] wishes and in
    direct derogation of his parental rights.
    Plaintiff-Father sought “an immediate Protective Order granting [him] the
    temporary exclusive care, custody and control of the minor child,” together with an
    injunction prohibiting Defendant-Mother from having any contact with him or the
    child. That day, the trial court entered a protective order, but declined to grant
    Plaintiff-Father the relief he sought, instead restraining both parties from removing
    the child from the State of North Carolina.
    On    16   December    2015,   the    parties      executed   a   Memorandum   of
    Judgment/Order, which the trial court entered. The order provided, inter alia, that
    Defendant-Mother would have primary physical custody of the minor child, Plaintiff-
    Father would have secondary physical custody, and the parties would share legal
    custody, pending a full hearing on the matter. The parties agreed to alternate actual
    physical custody of the minor child on a weekly basis.
    On 16 February 2016, Defendant-Mother filed an answer and counterclaim
    seeking temporary and permanent legal and physical custody of the parties’ minor
    child. On 1 September 2016, the trial court entered a consent order executed by the
    parties, allowing Plaintiff-Father to care for the minor child while Defendant-Mother
    traveled to India, and providing that Defendant-Mother could exercise “make up”
    time with the child upon her return, with the regular custodial arrangement then
    resuming.
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    On 26 January 2017, the custody case came on for hearing. Both the parties
    were represented by counsel and presented evidence.
    Defendant-Mother testified that Plaintiff-Father’s allegations in his ex parte
    complaint/motion for temporary custody and injunctive relief concerning her mental
    instability and other issues were baseless. She also testified that she lives in a three-
    bedroom apartment with a roommate and that the minor child had his own room
    when he stayed with her, whereas Plaintiff-Father’s home was not suitable for the
    minor child. In addition, Defendant-Mother offered into evidence police reports of an
    incident of domestic violence and photographs of the injuries she sustained when
    Plaintiff-Father assaulted Defendant-Mother. According to Defendant-Mother,
    Plaintiff-Father would become aggressive at times, and “punch the walls and doors”
    when he lost his temper, as well as assault her.
    Defendant-Mother also testified that Plaintiff-Father has a “controlling
    attitude.” For example, in 2015, Defendant-Mother and the minor child visited India,
    and the child was scheduled to visit India with Plaintiff-Father immediately
    afterward. Because each flight from the United States to India takes 22 to 30 hours,
    and the minor child was an infant, Defendant-Mother tried to arrange for the minor
    child to stay in India for three days with his paternal grandparents until Plaintiff-
    Father arrived. Plaintiff-Father refused, insisting that the minor child return to the
    United States with Defendant-Mother, only to return to India with him 72 hours
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    later. Defendant-Mother explained that Plaintiff-Father “wants to have his way or no
    way.”
    The parties also disagreed on whether to have the minor child attend daycare.
    Defendant-Mother thought it was in the child’s best interest; Plaintiff-Father wanted
    the child to be cared for by his parents, who live with him in his home.
    Despite his allegations, Plaintiff-Father repeatedly stated at trial that the
    current shared custody arrangement was working well. He testified that his parents
    care for the minor child while he works, as well as when he plays cricket. Plaintiff-
    Father also testified about an ongoing legal issue in India between him and
    Defendant-Mother, in which he did not want the minor child involved, but said that
    he did not have any objection to either parent traveling with the minor child. When
    asked what action he wanted the trial court to take with regard to custody of the
    minor child, Plaintiff-Father stated, “I think the current arrangement [alternating
    weeks] is working very well, and we both communicate well about the child.”
    At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court announced that “physical
    custody primarily is going to be with [Defendant-Mother]. [Plaintiff-Father] is going
    to have the child every other week from Thursday night to Monday night.” In
    addition, the trial court stated that the child would continue to attend daycare.
    Although Plaintiff-Father was represented by counsel, on 6 February 2017, he
    filed a pro se “Motion to Open Evidence” prior to the trial court’s entry of the child
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    custody order. In response, on 15 February 2017, Defendant-Mother filed a “Motion
    for Rule 11 Sanctions.” On 22 March 2017, counsel for Plaintiff-Father withdrew from
    the case.
    By order entered 31 March 2017, the trial court concluded that it would be in
    the best interest of the child for the parties to share legal custody, with Defendant-
    Mother having primary physical custody and Plaintiff-Father having secondary
    physical custody. As relevant to this appeal, the order provided that: (1) “[t]he minor
    child shall stay in daycare until he starts school for at least a half day, each weekday”;
    (2) “either parent may take the minor child to India for up to five consecutive weeks
    each year until he is in school”; (3) after the child starts school, “either parent may
    take the minor child to India for up to five consecutive weeks each year during
    summer break . . . or up to two consecutive weeks at any time during the year”; and
    (4) “[i]f a parent cho[o]ses not to travel to India with the child, he or she shall have
    two uninterrupted weeks’ vacation within the United States” with the minor child.
    On 11 April 2017, Defendant-Mother filed a motion for prospective and
    retroactive “child support consistent with the North Carolina Child Support
    Guidelines.”
    Through new counsel,1 Plaintiff-Father filed a Rule 59 motion, and on 22 May
    2017, Plaintiff-Father filed his “Amended Motion in the Cause” pursuant to Rule 59,
    1   It is unclear from the record when Plaintiff-Father retained another attorney in the matter.
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    seeking a new trial on the grounds of irregularity at trial, fraud, surprise, and newly
    discovered evidence. On 9 June 2017, Defendant-Mother responded to Plaintiff-
    Father’s amended Rule 59 motion with her motion for Rule 11 sanctions and a motion
    to dismiss.
    A hearing was held on 13 June 2017, at which the trial court addressed
    Plaintiff-Father’s amended Rule 59 motion for a new trial and Defendant-Mother’s
    motion for sanctions. After hearing the arguments of counsel, the trial court stated,
    “I don’t find any grounds under Rule 59; quite frankly, I find that this is frivolous,
    and I am going to find that pursuant to Rule 11, [Plaintiff-Father] is going to pay the
    attorney’s fees for [Defendant-Mother].”
    On 25 July 2017, the trial court held the child support hearing. Plaintiff-Father
    proceeded pro se, and Defendant-Mother was represented by counsel. On 20
    November 2017, the trial court entered its child support order, requiring, inter alia,
    that Plaintiff-Father (1) contribute $680.39 per month to the support of the parties’
    minor child beginning 1 August 2015; (2) pay arrearages of $5,539.18 to Defendant-
    Mother at the rate of $230.80 per month; and (3) pay 45% of the minor child’s
    uninsured health care expenses. The trial court also ordered that the parties
    exchange copies of their W-2s and other evidence of their income annually.
    By order entered 8 December 2017, the trial court denied Plaintiff-Father’s
    motion for a new trial and imposed sanctions on him. The trial court found that
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    Plaintiff-Father “ha[d] not forecast[ ] evidence that would change” its prior custody
    ruling, and that “[t]here [wa]s no basis for the Rule 59 motion filed by Plaintiff[-
    Father].”
    On 15 December 2017, Plaintiff-Father filed notice of appeal to this Court. On
    appeal, Plaintiff-Father challenges certain aspects of the child support order, the
    order denying his motion for a new trial and imposing sanctions, and the child custody
    order. On 25 November 2019, Defendant-Mother petitioned this Court to issue a writ
    of certiorari, in order to review the child support order. We address each issue in turn.
    II. Child Support Order
    A.     Standard of Review
    “Child support orders entered by a trial court are accorded substantial
    deference by appellate courts and our review is limited to a determination of whether
    there was a clear abuse of discretion.” Mason v. Erwin, 
    157 N.C. App. 284
    , 287, 
    579 S.E.2d 120
    , 122 (2003) (citation omitted). “Under this standard of review, the trial
    court’s ruling will be upset only upon a showing that it was so arbitrary that it could
    not have been the result of a reasoned decision.” Biggs v. Greer, 
    136 N.C. App. 294
    ,
    296-97, 
    524 S.E.2d 577
    , 581 (2000) (citation omitted). “Where a party asserts an error
    of law occurred, we apply a de novo standard of review.” State ex rel. Lively v. Berry,
    
    187 N.C. App. 459
    , 462, 
    653 S.E.2d 192
    , 194 (2007) (italics omitted).
    B.     Child Support Obligation
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    Opinion of the Court
    Plaintiff-Father first argues that the trial court erred in calculating his
    retroactive child support obligation, and in ordering the parties to exchange financial
    information annually.
    1. Use of the Guidelines
    Plaintiff-Father contends that the “[t]rial court erred as a matter of law by
    using the Child Support Guidelines Worksheet to calculate the Retroactive Child
    support from December 2015 to April 11, 2017.” We disagree.
    Child support awarded for that period of time prior to the date on which a party
    files a complaint or motion for child support “is properly classified as retroactive child
    support.” Respess v. Respess, 
    232 N.C. App. 611
    , 628, 
    754 S.E.2d 691
    , 702 (2014)
    (citation omitted). Effective 1 January 2015, the Guidelines specifically authorize
    trial courts to use the Guidelines for calculating a retroactive child support obligation:
    In a direct response to Respess v. Respess, 
    232 N.C. App. 611
    , 
    754 S.E.2d 691
    (2014), the 2014 General Assembly
    amended G.S. 50-13.4(c1) to provide that the Conference of
    Chief District Judges shall prescribe uniform statewide
    presumptive guidelines for the computation of child
    support obligations, including retroactive support
    obligations[.]
    In cases involving a parent’s obligation to support his or
    her child for a period before a child support action was filed
    (i.e., cases involving claims for “retroactive child support”
    or “prior maintenance”), a court may determine the amount
    of the parent’s obligation (a) by determining the amount of
    support that would have been required had the guidelines
    been applied at the beginning of the time period for which
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    support is being sought, or (b) based on the parent’s fair
    share of actual expenditures for the child’s care.
    Guidelines, Ann. R. 2 (emphasis added) (revised 1 January 2015 and left unchanged
    as of 2019); see also N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-13.4(c1) (“Effective July 1, 1990, the
    Conference of Chief District Judges shall prescribe uniform statewide presumptive
    guidelines for the computation of child support obligations, including retroactive
    support obligations, of each parent as provided in Chapter 50 or elsewhere in the
    General Statutes . . . .” (emphasis added)).
    Thus, Plaintiff-Father’s assertion that the trial court erred by utilizing the
    Guidelines to calculate his retroactive child support obligation is meritless.
    2. Finding of Fact 9: Health Insurance Expense
    Plaintiff-Father also specifically challenges finding of fact 9, which provides,
    in pertinent part: “For the period December[ ] 2015 to January 2017 . . . [Plaintiff-
    Father] incurred an average of $156 per month for [health insurance coverage]
    expense[ ] for the minor child.” Plaintiff-Father argues that “[t]here is no competent
    evidence to support [the] [t]rial court’s finding,” and that “there is uncontroverted
    evidence” in the record that he paid $220 per month in 2015, and $231 per month in
    2016, and $156 per month in 2017 to maintain health insurance coverage for the
    minor child. We agree.
    At the child support hearing, Plaintiff-Father testified as follows:
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    THE COURT: How much are you paying for your child’s
    day -- healthcare?
    [Plaintiff-Father]: In the last three years, it’s been
    fluctuating, Your Honor, so I request that average be
    considered. So in 2015, I was paying $231; in 2016, I was
    paying $220; and this year I’ve been paying $156.
    THE COURT: It’s going down?
    [Plaintiff-Father]: It’s strange, it actually went down this -
    - and that’s why I said it’s fluctuating; it may go up next
    year, I don’t know.
    THE COURT: It’s 156 a month --
    [Plaintiff-Father]: $156 --
    THE COURT: -- or per pay period?
    ....
    [Plaintiff-Father]: I think it’s per month. And that’s why
    I’m pretty sure it will go up next year.
    In addition, Plaintiff-Father presented the trial court with written verification
    of the 2015 and 2016 cost of maintaining health insurance coverage for the minor
    child. Thus, the trial court’s finding in this regard was not supported by competent
    evidence.
    Accordingly, we remand the child support order to the trial court for
    appropriate findings of fact and a recalculation of Plaintiff-Father’s retroactive child
    support obligation, in which he is given proper credit for the expense of providing
    health insurance coverage for the minor child.
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    3. Work-Related Child Care Costs
    Plaintiff-Father next maintains that it was not “reasonably necessary” for
    Defendant-Mother to send the child to daycare during the period prior to February
    2017, and that the trial court erred by including this expense in the calculation of his
    retroactive child support obligation. We disagree.
    The Guidelines provide that “[r]easonable child care costs that are . . . paid by
    a parent due to employment . . . are added to the basic child support obligation and
    prorated between the parents based on their respective incomes.” Guidelines, Ann. R.
    4. Moreover, “[w]hen the court does not deviate from the Guidelines, an order for child
    support in an amount determined pursuant to the Guidelines is conclusively
    presumed to meet the reasonable needs of a child . . . and specific findings regarding
    a child’s reasonable needs . . . are therefore not required.” Guidelines, Ann. R. 1.
    Here, the minor child’s attendance at daycare was a point of contention at trial.
    Defendant-Mother asserted that the child benefited from attendance, while Plaintiff-
    Father claimed that the expense was unnecessary when his parents were willing and
    able to care for the child free of charge. However, it was undisputed that both parents
    were employed and that Defendant-Mother incurred the child care cost due to her
    employment, and Plaintiff-Father did not request that the trial court deviate from
    the Guidelines.
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    The trial court found in its child support order that since the date of separation,
    both parents have been employed, and that “[f]or the period December[ ] 2015 to
    January 2017 . . . the parties shared equal custodial time. Furthermore, during this
    period . . . Defendant[-Mother] incurred an average of $700 per month for work-
    related day care expenses for the minor child[.]” Father has not raised any challenge
    to these findings of fact on appeal.
    Having found that Defendant-Mother incurred child care costs due to her
    employment, the trial court properly included this work-related child care expense in
    the calculation of Plaintiff-Father’s child support obligation. As explicitly provided in
    the Guidelines, when the child support obligation is calculated in accordance with the
    Guidelines, “specific findings regarding a child’s reasonable needs . . . are . . . not
    required.” Guidelines, Ann. R. 1. Thus, in light of the trial court’s other findings, it
    was not required to make a specific finding of fact that the work-related child care
    expense was necessary.
    Accordingly, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by including Defendant-
    Mother’s work-related child care expense in its retroactive child support calculation.
    This argument is overruled.
    C.     Exchange of W-2 Forms
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    Lastly, Plaintiff-Father maintains that the trial court “exceeded its authority
    in ordering the [p]arties to exchange their W[-]2s every year.” This argument is
    without merit.
    First, Plaintiff-Father fails to furnish this Court with a legitimate argument
    as to why this portion of the order exceeded the trial court’s authority. Nor does he
    set forth any argument as to why this constitutes an abuse of the trial court’s
    discretion. It was Plaintiff-Father’s duty “to challenge findings and conclusions, and
    make corresponding arguments on appeal. It is not the job of this Court to create an
    appeal for Plaintiff-[Father], [or] to supplement an appellant’s brief with legal
    authority or arguments not contained therein.” Lasecki v. Lasecki, 
    257 N.C. App. 24
    ,
    47, 
    809 S.E.2d 296
    , 312 (2017) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
    Thus, this argument is abandoned.
    In addition, ordering the parties to a child support action to exchange financial
    information annually is well within the inherent authority of the court to administer
    justice. The Guidelines “are based on the ‘income shares’ model[.]” Guidelines, Ann.
    R. 2. “The income shares model is based on the concept that child support is a shared
    parental obligation and that a child should receive the same proportion of parental
    income he or she would have received if the child’s parents lived together.” Guidelines,
    Ann. R. 2. Because it is necessary to have the parties’ financial information in order
    to determine the parental support obligation, it is not uncommon for North Carolina
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    courts to order that parties periodically exchange financial information. Plaintiff-
    Father’s argument lacks merit.
    D.     Summary
    The trial court erred in calculating Plaintiff-Father’s retroactive child support
    obligation. Accordingly, we vacate the 20 November 2017 child support order, and
    remand to the trial court for additional findings of fact regarding the cost of health
    insurance coverage for the minor child, and a recalculation of Plaintiff-Father’s
    retroactive child support obligation.
    III. Rule 59(a) Motion
    In the present case, Plaintiff-Father moved the trial court for a new trial
    pursuant to Rule 59(a)(1), (2), (3), and (4). On appeal, he argues that the trial court
    erred in denying his motion for a new trial under Rule 59(a)(1), (3), and (4), asserting
    that (1) there was an “irregularity” at trial because “[i]nadmissible and prejudicial
    hearsay evidence” was used by the trial court in reaching its conclusions of law; (2)
    he “and his attorney were ‘surprised’ and ‘shocked’ to hear [Defendant-Mother]
    completely contradicting her statement in the Consent Order . . . and asking for sole
    custody and making various false allegations” at trial; and (3) he is now in possession
    of evidence to which he did not have access prior to trial. After careful review, we
    conclude that the trial court’s denial of Plaintiff-Father’s Rule 59(a) motion does not
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    “amount[ ] to a substantial miscarriage of justice.” Worthington v. Bynum, 
    305 N.C. 478
    , 487, 
    290 S.E.2d 599
    , 605 (1982).
    A.      Standard of Review
    A party may move the trial court for a new trial, or to alter or amend a
    judgment, under one or more of the nine grounds found in Rule 59(a). N.C. Gen. Stat.
    § 1A-1, Rule 59(a). For motions brought under Rule 59(a)(1)-(6) and (9), “a motion for
    new trial is addressed to the sound discretion of the trial court, and its ruling will not
    be disturbed absent a manifest abuse of that discretion.” N.C. Indus. Capital, LLC v.
    Clayton, 
    185 N.C. App. 356
    , 371, 
    649 S.E.2d 14
    , 25 (2007) (citation omitted). A trial
    court’s discretion regarding a motion under Rule 59 is “practically unlimited.” Pearce
    v. Fletcher, 
    74 N.C. App. 543
    , 544, 
    328 S.E.2d 889
    , 890 (1985) (citation omitted).
    “Consequently, an appellate court should not disturb a discretionary Rule 59 order
    unless it is reasonably convinced by the cold record that the trial judge’s ruling
    probably amounted to a substantial miscarriage of justice.” 
    Worthington, 305 N.C. at 487
    , 290 S.E.2d at 605.
    B.      Irregularity at Trial
    Plaintiff-Father argues that the admission into evidence of what he describes
    as inadmissible and prejudicial hearsay amounted to an irregularity depriving him
    of a fair trial.
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    Rule 59(a)(1) states that a new trial may be granted for “[a]ny irregularity by
    which any party was prevented from having a fair trial[.]” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1,
    Rule 59(a)(1). Although the language of Rule 59(a)(1) is broad, “[n]ew trials are not
    awarded because of technical errors. The error must be prejudicial.” Sisk v. Sisk, 
    221 N.C. App. 631
    , 635, 
    729 S.E.2d 68
    , 71 (2012) (citation omitted), disc. review denied,
    
    366 N.C. 571
    , 
    738 S.E.2d 368
    (2013). Moreover, “[t]he party asserting the error must
    demonstrate that he has been prejudiced thereby.”
    Id. (citation omitted). Here,
    Plaintiff-Father fails to demonstrate an error by which he was
    prejudiced. Plaintiff-Father argues on appeal that he “was prejudiced from having a
    fair trial by admitting these hearsay [police] reports into evidence, which misled the
    [t]rial [c]ourt[.]” However, Plaintiff-Father also maintains that the “[p]olice reports
    were produced to corroborate the purported domestic violence.” His contention makes
    the point that because Defendant-Mother testified without objection to the domestic
    violence, as well as the injuries she suffered, the admission of the police reports
    cannot have prejudiced his case to the point where he could not have a fair trial.
    Assuming, arguendo, that the police reports were improperly admitted, Defendant-
    Mother’s testimony was itself ample substantive evidence of the acts, and thus, would
    not constitute an irregularity warranting a new trial.
    In addition, Plaintiff-Father makes no argument that he was prejudiced by the
    admission of the photographs. “It is not the duty of this Court to peruse . . . the record,
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    constructing an argument for appellant.”
    Id. at 635, 729
    S.E.2d at 72 (citation
    omitted).
    This argument therefore lacks merit.
    C.     Accident or Surprise
    Plaintiff-Father also claims that he is entitled to a new trial on the basis of
    Rule 59(a)(3), which provides that a new trial may be granted for “[a]ccident or
    surprise which ordinary prudence could not have guarded against[.]” N.C. Gen. Stat.
    § 1A-1, Rule 59(a)(3). He asserts that he was not prepared for the evidence introduced
    by Defendant-Mother at trial in support of her efforts to gain primary physical
    custody, as he was under the impression that the parties agreed to share joint legal
    and physical custody of the parties’ child. He argues that he and “his attorney were
    ‘surprised’ and ‘shocked’ to hear . . . Defendant[-Mother] completely contradicting her
    statement in the Consent Order . . . and asking for sole custody and making various
    false allegations.”
    We note, however, that in her answer and counterclaim for child custody,
    Defendant-Mother specifically alleged that it was “in the best interest of said minor
    child that his care, custody and control be placed” with her, and she sought the
    “primary physical and legal care, custody and control of the said minor child.” She
    also testified at trial that she wanted primary legal and physical custody of the
    parties’ child because she “ha[d] been the primary caregiver of the child ever since he
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    was born.” Defendant-Mother’s agreement to share custody on a temporary basis,
    pending a full hearing on custody, did not constitute a waiver of her express claim for
    primary custody.
    That Defendant-Mother sought primary legal and physical custody of the
    parties’ minor child at the custody trial was not “surprise which ordinary prudence
    could not have guarded against[.]”
    Id. Plaintiff-Father is not
    entitled to relief on the
    basis of this argument.
    D.   Newly Discovered Evidence
    Finally, Plaintiff-Father argues that a new trial is warranted under Rule
    59(a)(4), because he has “[e]vidence that could not be procured prior to trial.”
    Rule 59(a)(4) provides that a new trial may be granted on the grounds of
    “[n]ewly discovered evidence material for the party making the motion which he could
    not, with reasonable diligence, have discovered and produced at the trial[.]”
    Id. § 1A- 1,
    Rule 59(a)(4). Plaintiff-Father concedes that the evidence to which he refers was
    not newly discovered after trial, but asserts that it was inaccessible prior to trial. He
    maintains that it therefore “satisfie[s] the requirements of Rule 59(a)(4) for [n]ew
    trial.”
    The first item addressed by Plaintiff-Father is a recording that was stored on
    his computer hard drive, which he alleges would tend to show that Defendant-Mother
    threatened him and the child, and that she was abusive. Plaintiff-Father does not
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    dispute Defendant-Mother’s contention that he knew that the information was on his
    computer, and simply waited until after trial to hire an expert to access that
    information. Hence, the recording was not newly discovered evidence, nor was it
    inaccessible.
    The second item of evidence at issue was daycare “drop off” records, which
    Plaintiff-Father alleges on appeal would tend to show that he dropped the child off at
    daycare 74% of the time.2 Plaintiff-Father asserts that he requested the daycare
    records, but that Defendant-Mother would not allow the daycare to release the
    information to him until after trial.
    Although Defendant-Mother may have told the daycare not to respond to
    Plaintiff-Father’s requests for information, he does not address the fact that the
    information he sought from the child’s daycare could have been obtained by subpoena
    prior to trial. The daycare records were not newly discovered and were not
    inaccessible, and Plaintiff-Father’s failure to subpoena the daycare records evidences
    a lack of due diligence.
    It is undisputed that the evidence was not newly discovered; it is also evident
    that it was not inaccessible prior to trial. See Ar-Con Constr. Co. v. Anderson, 5 N.C.
    App. 12, 20, 
    168 S.E.2d 18
    , 23 (1969) (“There was no showing that appellant did not
    have full knowledge of the facts referred to in its motion at the time of the hearing on
    2 He alleged in his amended Rule 59 motion that the daycare records would show that
    Defendant-Mother did not have the child in daycare full-time starting in mid-December 2016.
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    the plea in bar, and no showing as to why, in the exercise of due diligence, appellant
    had failed to present evidence concerning such facts at the time of that hearing.”).
    Plaintiff-Father has failed to demonstrate the existence of newly discovered material
    evidence that he could not have discovered and produced at the custody hearing.
    Thus, the trial court properly denied a new trial on this ground as well.
    E.     Summary
    Plaintiff-Father failed to establish that the trial court abused its discretion in
    denying his Rule 59(a) motion. Accordingly, we affirm that part of the trial court’s 8
    December 2017 order denying Plaintiff-Father’s Rule 59(a) motion.
    IV. Rule 11 Sanctions
    Plaintiff-Father next contends that the trial court erred in imposing Rule 11
    sanctions against him for filing three post-hearing motions that he maintains were a
    proper attempt to obtain appropriate post-trial relief from the custody order pursuant
    to Rule 59. After careful consideration, we conclude that the trial court erred in
    sanctioning Plaintiff-Father for filing these motions.
    A.    Standard of Review
    Our standard of review for Rule 11 sanctions is well established: “The trial
    court’s decision to impose or not to impose mandatory sanctions under . . . Rule 11(a)
    is reviewable de novo as a legal issue.” Turner v. Duke Univ., 
    325 N.C. 152
    , 165, 
    381 S.E.2d 706
    , 714 (1989) (italics omitted). “[A]n appellate court must determine
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    whether the findings of fact of the trial court are supported by sufficient evidence,
    whether the conclusions of law are supported by the findings of fact, and whether the
    conclusions of law support the judgment.” Johns v. Johns, 
    195 N.C. App. 201
    , 206,
    
    672 S.E.2d 34
    , 38 (2009) (citation omitted). “If the appellate court makes these three
    determinations in the affirmative, it must uphold the trial court’s decision to impose
    or deny the imposition of mandatory sanctions under . . . Rule 11(a).” 
    Turner, 325 N.C. at 165
    , 381 S.E.2d at 714.
    In reviewing a trial judge’s findings of fact, we are “strictly
    limited to determining whether the trial judge’s underlying
    findings of fact are supported by competent evidence, in
    which event they are conclusively binding on appeal, and
    whether those factual findings in turn support the judge’s
    ultimate conclusions of law.” State v. Williams, 
    362 N.C. 628
    , 632, 
    669 S.E.2d 290
    , 294 (2008) (quoting State v.
    Cooke, 
    306 N.C. 132
    , 134, 
    291 S.E.2d 618
    , 619 (1982)); see
    also Sisk v. Transylvania Cmty. Hosp., Inc., 
    364 N.C. 172
    ,
    179, 
    695 S.E.2d 429
    , 434 (2010) (“ ‘[F]indings of fact made
    by the trial judge are conclusive on appeal if supported by
    competent evidence, even if . . . there is evidence to the
    contrary.’ ” (quoting Tillman v. Commercial Credit Loans,
    Inc., 
    362 N.C. 93
    , 100-01, 
    655 S.E.2d 362
    , 369 (2008))).
    Auto. Grp., LLC v. A-1 Auto Charlotte, LLC, 
    230 N.C. App. 443
    , 447, 
    750 S.E.2d 562
    ,
    566 (2013).
    B.    Analysis
    Rule 11 of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure provides, in pertinent
    part:
    Every pleading, motion, and other paper of a party
    represented by an attorney shall be signed by at least one
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    attorney of record . . . . A party who is not represented by
    an attorney shall sign his pleading, motion, or other paper
    . . . . The signature of an attorney or party constitutes a
    certificate by him that he has read the pleading, motion, or
    other paper; that to the best of his knowledge, information,
    and belief formed after reasonable inquiry it is well
    grounded in fact and is warranted by existing law or a good
    faith argument for the extension, modification, or reversal
    of existing law, and that it is not interposed for any
    improper purpose, such as to harass or to cause
    unnecessary delay or needless increase in the cost of
    litigation. . . . If a pleading, motion, or other paper is signed
    in violation of this rule, the court, upon motion or upon its
    own initiative, shall impose upon the person who signed it,
    a represented party, or both, an appropriate sanction[.]
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 11(a).
    Appellate review “of sanctions under Rule 11 consists of a three-pronged
    analysis: (1) factual sufficiency, (2) legal sufficiency, and (3) improper purpose.” Auto.
    
    Grp., 230 N.C. App. at 447
    , 750 S.E.2d at 566 (citation and internal quotation marks
    omitted). “A violation of any one of these prongs requires the imposition of sanctions.”
    Id. For each prong,
    the trial court must make findings of fact and conclusions of law.
    McClerin v. R-M Indus., Inc., 
    118 N.C. App. 640
    , 644, 
    456 S.E.2d 352
    , 355 (1995).
    To assess the sufficiency of the factual basis of a pleading, this Court must
    determine “(1) whether the plaintiff undertook a reasonable inquiry into the facts and
    (2) whether the plaintiff, after reviewing the results of his inquiry, reasonably
    believed that his position was well grounded in fact.” In re Thompson, 
    232 N.C. App. 224
    , 230, 
    754 S.E.2d 168
    , 173 (2014) (citation omitted). An appraisal of the legal
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    sufficiency of a pleading requires that we look “first to the facial plausibility of the
    pleading and only then, if the pleading is implausible under existing law, to the issue
    of whether to the best of the signer’s knowledge, information, and belief formed after
    reasonable inquiry, the complaint was warranted by the existing law.” Bryson v.
    Sullivan, 
    330 N.C. 644
    , 661, 
    412 S.E.2d 327
    , 336 (1992) (citation and internal
    quotation marks omitted). Lastly, to evaluate the improper purpose prong, we must
    review the evidence to ascertain whether the pleading was filed for “any purpose
    other than one to vindicate rights . . . or to put claims of right to a proper test.” Mack
    v. Moore, 
    107 N.C. App. 87
    , 93, 
    418 S.E.2d 685
    , 689 (1992) (citation and internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    It must be noted, however, that “just because a plaintiff is eventually
    unsuccessful in [his] claim, does not mean the claim was inappropriate or
    unreasonable.” Grover v. Norris, 
    137 N.C. App. 487
    , 495, 
    529 S.E.2d 231
    , 235 (2000).
    In the instant case, after the trial court announced its decision to grant
    Defendant-Mother primary physical custody of the parties’ child, Plaintiff-Father
    filed a pro se motion to “open evidence.” Defendant-Mother responded with a motion
    for sanctions. The trial court allowed Plaintiff-Father’s trial attorney to withdraw,
    and Plaintiff-Father hired second counsel who promptly filed a Rule 59 motion, and
    soon thereafter, an amended Rule 59 motion, on essentially the same grounds as
    alleged by Plaintiff-Father in his pro se motion. Plaintiff-Father then took a dismissal
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    of his pro se motion. Defendant-Mother responded to the amended Rule 59 motion by
    filing a second motion for sanctions, asserting that Plaintiff-Father was improperly
    seeking to introduce evidence that he never provided in discovery or during trial, and
    that his motions were not well grounded in fact, were not filed in good faith, and were
    interposed for an improper purpose. Defendant-Mother alleged that Plaintiff-Father
    was “merely upset with the [trial c]ourt’s decision.”
    The trial court agreed with Defendant-Mother, finding that Plaintiff-Father’s
    three motions were “not supported by the facts or the law,” and “were filed in bad
    faith.” Concluding that “[t]his is a frivolous action under the meaning of Rule 11 of
    the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure,” the trial court assessed Plaintiff-Father
    $3,131.00 in attorney’s fees, payable to Defendant-Mother.
    On appeal, Plaintiff-Father maintains that he acted in good faith with regard
    to all three motions, and through counsel with regard to the Rule 59 and amended
    Rule 59 motions. Plaintiff-Father asserts that he was properly attempting to obtain
    relief from the trial court’s custody order in each motion by (1) convincing the trial
    court that it erred in the admission of evidence over his objection, to his prejudice, (2)
    exposing Defendant-Mother’s misrepresentations to the trial court, and (3) bringing
    newly discovered evidence to the trial court’s attention.
    1. Sufficiency of the Factual and Legal Bases
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    The evidence does not support the trial court’s assessment of sanctions against
    Plaintiff-Father on the ground that his post-trial motions had no basis in fact or law.
    Plaintiff-Father first filed his pro se motion to open evidence, which Defendant-
    Mother’s counsel describes as essentially asserting the same facts as in the Rule 59
    and amended Rule 59 motions filed by his second attorney. There is no dispute that
    Plaintiff-Father sought the same relief in his pro se motion as in the Rule 59 motions.
    At the Rule 59 hearing, Plaintiff-Father’s second attorney told the trial court that
    Plaintiff-Father came to her and asked that she help him. She then “spoke to him . .
    . at length,” went “through all the evidence,” and took “a bit of time on this and . . .
    looked at the order.” Presumably, Plaintiff-Father’s second attorney considered those
    facts, determined that the facts were sufficient to warrant a legally sound motion
    under Rule 59, and then drafted, signed, and filed the Rule 59 and amended Rule 59
    motions. Thereafter, Plaintiff-Father dismissed his pro se motion. There are no
    allegations that Plaintiff-Father misled his attorney regarding the facts or
    circumstances of his case.
    In light of the substantial similarity of Plaintiff-Father’s dismissed pro se
    motion, the Rule 59 motion, and the amended Rule 59 motion, we will focus our
    analysis on the Rule 59 motions.
    It is well established that “a represented party may rely on his attorney’s
    advice as to the legal sufficiency of his claims[.]” 
    Bryson, 330 N.C. at 663
    , 
    412 S.E.2d -
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    at 337. Where Plaintiff-Father did not misrepresent the facts to his counsel, it was
    not unreasonable for Plaintiff-Father to believe, on the basis of his attorney’s superior
    knowledge and skill, together with her willingness to undertake the pursuit of the
    Rule 59 motion on his behalf, that his motions were well grounded in fact and in law.
    This Court addressed a similar issue in Grubbs v. Grubbs, 
    252 N.C. App. 265
    ,
    
    796 S.E.2d 822
    , 
    2017 WL 892564
    (2017) (unpublished). In Grubbs, the defendant
    sought Rule 11 sanctions for allegedly improper motions interposed in a domestic
    matter. Grubbs, 
    2017 WL 892564
    , at *7. The trial court concluded that the verified
    motions were “not well grounded in fact, and not warranted by existing law and [were
    interposed] for an improper purpose,” and imposed Rule 11 sanctions against the
    plaintiff as well as her attorney.
    Id. at *11.
    We determined that, absent an improper
    motive, Rule 11 sanctions should not be assessed against a client who relies in good
    faith on the advice of counsel:
    It is the rare client who understands the strategy and
    tactics of domestic litigation, as it is practiced in District
    Court. The [d]efendant asks us to impute the knowledge of
    the effects of these motions to [the attorney’s] client, [the
    p]laintiff. It is more likely [the attorney] prepared the
    affidavit for his client and she signed it on advice of
    counsel. . . . . Without a specific finding from the court
    which shows [the p]laintiff had knowledge of the effect of
    signing the motion would have on court proceedings and
    took this action to gain some temporary tactical advantage,
    we are unpersuaded that a signature alone would support
    Rule 11 sanctions against a client acting on an attorney’s
    advice.
    - 27 -
    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    Id. at *15.
    Grubbs is an unpublished opinion and is not, therefore, binding legal authority.
    See N.C.R. App. P. 30(e)(3). Nevertheless, we find its reasoning persuasive, and we
    hereby adopt it.
    In that Plaintiff-Father acted on the advice of counsel, and there is no evidence
    that he misled counsel as to the relevant facts or posture of the case, the assessment
    of sanctions against him on the grounds that his motions were not well grounded in
    fact or were not warranted by existing law is not merited. Therefore, in the present
    case, the trial court’s findings do not support the imposition of Rule 11 sanctions on
    these bases against Plaintiff-Father.
    2. Improper Purpose
    Nonetheless, a violation of any one of the three prongs under a Rule 11 analysis
    will support the imposition of sanctions. 
    Williams, 127 N.C. App. at 423
    , 490 S.E.2d
    at 240-41. Thus, we now review the improper purpose prong of the Rule 11 analysis.
    An improper purpose is “any purpose other than one to vindicate rights or to
    put claims of right to a proper test.” Persis Nova Constr. Inc. v. Edwards, 195 N.C.
    App. 55, 63, 
    671 S.E.2d 23
    , 28 (2009) (citation omitted). Our Supreme Court has
    determined that “[p]arties, as well as attorneys, may be subject to sanctions for
    violations of the improper purpose prong of Rule 11.” 
    Bryson, 330 N.C. at 656
    , 412
    S.E.2d at 333. “[A] represented party . . . will be held responsible if his evident
    - 28 -
    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    purpose is to harass, persecute, otherwise vex his opponents, or cause them
    unnecessary cost or delay.”
    Id. at 663, 412
    S.E.2d at 337.
    The existence of an improper purpose is determined from the totality of the
    circumstances. See 
    Mack, 107 N.C. App. at 93-94
    , 418 S.E.2d at 689. “[T]he relevant
    inquiry is whether the existence of an improper purpose may be inferred from the
    alleged offender’s objective behavior.”
    Id. at 93, 685
    S.E.2d at 689. The burden is on
    the movant to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the pleading has been
    interposed for an improper purpose. Auto. 
    Grp., 230 N.C. App. at 447
    -48, 750 S.E.2d
    at 566-67.
    In the present case, Defendant-Mother asserted that Plaintiff-Father filed the
    pro se motion, and later the Rule 59 and amended Rule 59 motions, because he was
    “merely upset with the [trial c]ourt’s decision[.]” This is usually the case in the wake
    of a custody trial and, standing alone, does not constitute an improper purpose.
    Indeed, it is likely that at least one party in any custody trial, if not both, will be
    unhappy with the trial court’s decision. It is not uncommon for counsel to then file a
    Rule 59 motion seeking to present additional evidence. See, e.g., Faulkenberry v.
    Faulkenberry, 
    169 N.C. App. 428
    , 431-32, 
    610 S.E.2d 237
    , 239-40 (2005); Senner v.
    Senner, 
    161 N.C. App. 78
    , 84-85, 
    587 S.E.2d 675
    , 679 (2003). Here, Defendant-Mother
    offered no evidence to the trial court that Plaintiff-Father interposed his motions “to
    gain some temporary tactical advantage,” to cause unnecessary expense or delay, or
    - 29 -
    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    to advance some other improper motive. Grubbs, 
    2017 WL 892564
    at *15. As the
    parties seem to agree, Plaintiff-Father’s purpose was to get more evidence before the
    trial court and obtain equally shared physical custody of the parties’ minor child,
    rather than to personally or financially injure Defendant-Mother or to delay the
    proceedings.
    Defendant-Mother had the burden of proving that the motions were filed for
    an improper purpose in violation of Rule 11, which she failed to satisfy. Therefore,
    the evidence does not support the finding of fact that Plaintiff-Father filed the
    motions in bad faith.
    Accordingly, that part of the trial court’s 8 December 2017 order imposing
    sanctions is reversed.
    V. Child Custody Order
    Plaintiff-Father next argues that “[t]he trial court erred as a matter of law in
    awarding primary custody of the child to . . . Defendant[-Mother],” and challenges
    several of the trial court’s findings of fact. Specifically, he asserts that findings of fact
    9, 10, 15, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 24, and 27 are not supported by competent evidence.
    A.      Appellate Jurisdiction
    As a threshold matter, we must determine whether this Court has jurisdiction
    to review the child custody order. Although the child custody order was entered on
    31 March 2017, Plaintiff-Father filed notice of appeal to this Court on 15 December
    - 30 -
    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    2017—well beyond the ordinary period within which an appeal may be timely filed.
    See N.C.R. App. P. 3(c)(1). However, for the following reasons, the appeal is properly
    before this Court.
    “Any party entitled by law to appeal from a judgment or order of a superior or
    district court rendered in a civil action . . . may take appeal by filing notice of appeal
    with the clerk of superior court[.]” N.C.R. App. P. 3(a). The notice of appeal must be
    filed “within thirty days after entry of judgment.” N.C.R. App. P. 3(c)(1). “Failure to
    give timely notice of appeal . . . is jurisdictional, and an untimely attempt to appeal
    must be dismissed.” Booth v. Utica Mutual Ins., 
    308 N.C. 187
    , 189, 
    301 S.E.2d 98
    , 99-
    100 (1983) (per curiam).
    Nevertheless, where a party files a timely Rule 59 motion requesting a new
    trial, “the thirty-day period for taking appeal is tolled as to all parties until entry of
    an order disposing of the motion and then runs as to each party from the date of entry
    of the order[.]” N.C.R. App. P. 3(c)(3). A motion for a new trial pursuant to Rule 59
    “shall be served not later than 10 days after entry of the judgment.” N.C. Gen. Stat.
    § 1A-1, Rule 59(b).
    Entry and service of judgments are governed by Rule 58. “[A] judgment is
    entered when it is reduced to writing, signed by the judge, and filed with the clerk of
    court[.]”
    Id. § 1A-1,
    Rule 58. After entry, a copy of the judgment shall be served “upon
    all other parties within three days.”
    Id. § 1A-1,
    Rule 58. The trial judge may designate
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    one of the parties to “serve a copy of the judgment upon all other parties within three
    days after the judgment is entered.”
    Id. Moreover, “[a]ll time
    periods within which a
    party may further act pursuant to . . . Rule 59 shall be tolled for the duration of any
    period of noncompliance with this service requirement,” provided, however, that “no
    time period under . . . Rule 59 shall be tolled longer than 90 days from the date the
    judgment is entered.”
    Id. (emphasis added). Service
    and proof of service must comply
    with Rule 5 of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure.
    Id. In the present
    case, the trial court tasked Defendant-Mother’s attorney with
    drafting the order at the conclusion of the custody hearing. Between the date of the
    hearing and the date on which the order was entered, the trial court permitted
    Plaintiff-Father’s attorney to withdraw from the case. Thus, Defendant-Mother
    should have served the custody order on Plaintiff-Father, as he was not represented
    by counsel when the order was entered. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 5(b)
    (providing that “all pleadings subsequent to the original complaint and other papers
    required or permitted to be served[ ]” shall be served on the party “[i]f the party has
    no attorney of record”). However, on 31 March 2017, Defendant-Mother’s counsel
    served a copy of the order on Plaintiff-Father’s former counsel. Plaintiff-Father
    received notice of the judgment on 10 April 2017, by first class mail from his former
    counsel.
    - 32 -
    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    Defendant-Mother failed to abide by the service requirements of Rule 58 by
    serving the custody order on Plaintiff-Father’s former attorney rather than on
    Plaintiff-Father. Because “[a]ll time periods within which a party may further act
    pursuant to . . . Rule 59 shall be tolled for the duration of any period of noncompliance
    with this service requirement,” the deadline for Plaintiff-Father to serve his motion
    for a new trial on Defendant-Mother’s counsel was tolled until ten days after Plaintiff-
    Father’s receipt of the custody order on 10 April 2017, rather than ten days after
    entry of the custody order. D.G. II, LLC v. Nix, 
    213 N.C. App. 220
    , 225, 
    713 S.E.2d 140
    , 145 (2011) (citation omitted) (concluding that, after defendants’ failure to serve
    the plaintiff with the judgment, the ten-day period within which the plaintiff could
    serve its motion for new trial was not triggered until ten days after the plaintiff’s
    receipt of the judgment from the county courthouse, plus three days for service by
    mail).
    In the case at bar, Plaintiff-Father served his Rule 59 motion for a new trial on
    12 April 2017, two days after receiving a copy of the order. Thus, his motion was
    timely served. Moreover, we conclude that although Plaintiff-Father’s motion was
    ultimately unsuccessful, it was nevertheless sufficient to toll the thirty-day period for
    noticing an appeal. Because the trial court entered its order on Plaintiff-Father’s Rule
    59 motion and sanctions on 8 December 2017, his appeal to this Court on 15 December
    2017 was timely.
    - 33 -
    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    B.     Standard of Review
    On review of a child custody matter,
    the trial court’s findings of fact are conclusive on appeal if
    supported by substantial evidence, even if there is
    sufficient evidence to support contrary findings.
    Substantial evidence is such relevant evidence as a
    reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a
    conclusion. Unchallenged findings of fact are binding on
    appeal. The trial court’s conclusions of law must be
    supported by adequate findings of fact. Absent an abuse of
    discretion, the trial court’s decision in matters of child
    custody should not be upset on appeal.
    Carpenter v. Carpenter, 
    225 N.C. App. 269
    , 270, 
    737 S.E.2d 783
    , 785 (2013) (citation
    omitted).
    “Our trial courts are vested with broad discretion in child custody matters.
    This discretion is based upon the trial courts’ opportunity to see the parties; to hear
    the witnesses; and to detect tenors, tones, and flavors that are lost in the bare printed
    record[.]” Huml v. Huml, ___ N.C. App. ___, ___, 
    826 S.E.2d 532
    , 541 (2019) (citation
    omitted).
    C.     Child Custody Order
    In the instant case, Plaintiff-Father contends that the following findings of fact
    are not supported by competent evidence: 9, 10, 15, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 24, and 27.
    9. Plaintiff[-Father] filed a complaint seeking emergency
    custody in this case in 2015 with an allegation that
    Defendant[-Mother] threatened to kill herself and other
    allegations against her. However, he took the stand during
    this hearing and testified there were no problems and that
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    the parties should share joint custody. The court finds this
    troubling and that if the allegations in the complaint were
    of a real concern to Plaintiff[-Father], he would have
    testified as such and attempted to convince the court that
    Defendant[-Mother] is a problem. Therefore, the [c]ourt
    finds that Plaintiff[-Father’s] claims in the complaint about
    Defendant[-Mother are] not credible.
    10. Plaintiff[-Father] committed acts of domestic violence
    against Defendant[-Mother], including one incident where
    he left a scar on her forearm. He also punched holes in the
    wall.
    ....
    15. . . . Plaintiff[-Father] spends significant time playing
    cricket. The [c]ourt has no issue with Plaintiff[-Father]
    enjoying himself and blowing off steam; however, if he is
    going to be out seven or eight hours playing cricket or some
    other activity, the child should be with his mother if she is
    available to provide care.
    ....
    17. Defendant[-Mother] was the primary caretaker of the
    child prior to the parties’ separation.
    18. Since the separation, . . . Defendant[-Mother] has taken
    care of the child while in her care and it is unclear to the
    [c]ourt whether Plaintiff[-Father] or his parents have been
    the primary caretaker while in his care.
    19. The court is concerned about . . . Plaintiff[-Father’s]
    request for emergency custody. The [c]ourt signed an ex-
    parte emergency custody order primarily to address the
    alleged threat that Defendant[-Mother] would remove the
    child from the country. Plaintiff[-Father] alleged that
    Defendant[-Mother] could telecommute from India, which
    was untrue and the [c]ourt also finds that . . . Plaintiff[-
    Father] continued with his façade in the Emergency
    - 35 -
    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    complaint that he is spending or wants to spend as much
    time with the child as possible. There is also no credible
    evidence presented at the trial of this matter that
    Defendant[-Mother] was a flight risk with the minor child.
    In fact, Defendant[-Mother] traveled to India with the child
    in 2015 and brought him back to North Carolina.
    20. Plaintiff[-Father] alleged family tensions and a
    property dispute in India as the reasons the minor child
    should not be allowed to be taken to India. The [c]ourt does
    not find this concern to be credible. They both traveled to
    India separately with the child in 2015. They both have
    family in India. Plaintiff[-Father] did not allege during the
    trial that he had any concern that Defendant[-Mother]
    would attempt to keep the minor child in India and not
    return [the child] to the United States.
    21. The [c]ourt is concerned that Plaintiff[-Father’s]
    mother and father may be a source of tension in . . .
    Plaintiff[-Father’s] home. The [c]ourt finds Defendant[-
    Mother’s] contention credible that the child’s paternal
    grandparents are more hostile than the maternal
    grandparents.
    ....
    24. In Plaintiff[-Father’s] home, the minor child has either
    been sleeping on the floor in [the] hallway or with
    Plaintiff[-Father’s] parents in their bed. Plaintiff[-
    Father’s] arrangement in his home is not suitable for a
    continued fifty-fifty physical custody schedule.
    ....
    27. While there is this litigious issue going on in India over
    real property there, the court does not find that there is any
    weight to the concern expressed by Plaintiff[-Father] . . . of
    this child being exposed to that. In fact, the [c]ourt believes
    that the child cannot be any more exposed to it than he
    already is living with the paternal grandparents in
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    Plaintiff[-Father’s] home. There should be no restrictions
    on either parent’s ability to travel to India with their minor
    child.
    A review of the record and trial transcript reveals that each of these findings
    is supported by competent evidence. We group the challenged findings by their
    underlying subject-matter.
    1. Findings Related to Plaintiff-Father’s Behavior
    Findings of fact 9, 10, 15, and 19 focus on Plaintiff-Father’s behavior, and each
    was supported by competent evidence at trial.
    Plaintiff-Father challenges findings of fact 9 and 19, regarding the veracity
    and sincerity of Plaintiff-Father’s allegations in support of his request for emergency
    custody. These findings were amply supported by competent evidence at trial.
    Plaintiff-Father’s fear that Defendant-Mother was suicidal, along with the other very
    troubling allegations of his complaint, was not consonant with his testimony that he
    was seeking “50-50 custody[ ] moving forward,” or his failure to testify regarding
    those allegations at trial.
    In addition, Plaintiff-Father’s concern that Defendant-Mother would flee to
    India with the child and telecommute was not supported by the evidence at trial.
    Plaintiff-Father did not dispute Defendant-Mother’s testimony that she could not
    telecommute from India. Indeed, in Plaintiff-Father’s opening statement, his counsel
    affirmatively explained that Plaintiff-Father’s “concern, at least as he set out in his
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    discovery responses, was not that [Defendant-Mother] would keep the child in India.
    That’s not the concern. It’s not a flight issue.”
    The trial court’s finding of fact 10, that Plaintiff-Father had committed acts of
    domestic violence, was also supported by competent evidence. Plaintiff-Father
    contends that this finding was based on erroneously admitted police reports.
    Assuming, arguendo, that the police reports were admitted into evidence in error,
    this finding was supported by ample other evidence at trial. Defendant-Mother
    testified that Plaintiff-Father punched the wall and hit her on a number of occasions,
    and that at least one of those acts of domestic violence occurred in the minor child’s
    presence. Plaintiff-Father did not testify to the contrary.
    Plaintiff-Father also challenges finding of fact 15, in which the trial court found
    that he “spends significant time playing cricket,” during which time Defendant-
    Mother should be permitted to care for the child rather than a third party. The parties
    both provided competent evidence to support this finding. Although he argues on
    appeal that “he spent less than 1% of his Custodial time in playing Cricket,” Plaintiff-
    Father testified that cricket matches can last anywhere from three to seven hours.
    Defendant-Mother and another witness also testified to the substantial amount of
    time that Plaintiff-Father spends playing cricket.
    In short, each of these challenged findings was supported by competent
    evidence.
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    2. Findings Related to Travel to India
    Findings of fact 20 and 27 address Plaintiff-Father’s concerns about “family
    tensions and a property dispute in India as the reasons the minor child should not be
    allowed to be taken to India.” Each finding was supported by competent evidence at
    trial.
    On appeal, Plaintiff-Father argues that, in not finding his concerns to be
    credible, the “[t]rial court’s reasoning here is defective,” because the trial court
    improperly judged “the credibility of [his] concern” and did not afford the affidavits
    he submitted from the tenants in India the weight to which he thinks they were
    entitled. However, while the tenants attested to the maternal grandmother’s verbal
    abuse of them in the presence of the child, Plaintiff-Father testified that he was not
    concerned about Defendant-Mother traveling with the child to India.
    “Although a party may disagree with the trial court’s credibility and weight
    determinations, those determinations are solely within the province of the trial
    court.” Kabasan v. Kabasan, 
    257 N.C. App. 436
    , 471, 
    810 S.E.2d 691
    , 713 (2018)
    (citation omitted). Accordingly, both of these findings are supported by competent
    evidence.
    3. Findings Related to the Minor Child’s Care
    Findings of fact 17, 18, 21, and 24 deal with the child’s care and living
    situation, and each finding was supported by competent evidence at trial.
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    The trial court found that Defendant-Mother cares for the child when he is in
    her physical custody, but that it was unclear whether Plaintiff-Father or his parents
    care for the child when he is in Plaintiff-Father’s physical custody. Defendant-Mother
    testified at trial that Plaintiff-Father’s parents were caring for the minor child more
    than Plaintiff-Father was admitting: Plaintiff-Father is not “taking care of the baby
    by himself. Even now, he is depending on his parents. So I doubt if he can put that
    extra effort as a single parent to take care of [the child] because he didn’t do it on his
    own . . . for about a year now,” since his parents moved to the United States. Finding
    of fact 18 is supported by competent evidence.
    Defendant-Mother’s testimony also supports finding of fact 21, that the
    paternal grandparents “may be a source of the tension in [Plaintiff-Father’s] home.”
    The trial court explicitly stated that it found Defendant-Mother’s “contention credible
    that the child’s paternal grandparents are more hostile than the maternal
    grandparents.” This is the trial court’s prerogative. See
    id. at 440, 810
    S.E.2d at 696.
    Thus, this finding is supported by competent evidence.
    Plaintiff-Father also challenges finding of fact 24, regarding the minor child’s
    sleeping arrangements while in the physical custody of Plaintiff-Father. He and his
    parents live in a 1,000 square foot, one-bedroom apartment, and his parents sleep in
    the bedroom. When questioned about the minor child’s sleeping arrangements,
    Plaintiff-Father testified that “we sleep in the bedroom, and sometimes we sleep in
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    the hall.” He explained that he would make a separate bed for the minor child if they
    were to sleep in the hall, but that most of the time the child stays in the bedroom and
    shares the bed with Plaintiff-Father’s parents. Plaintiff-Father asserted in his Rule
    59 motion—as well as on appeal—that “hall” in Indian culture actually refers to a
    living room. However, he failed to correct his testimony at the hearing, or to explain
    why that was materially different than sleeping in the hall. Hence, this finding is
    supported by competent evidence.
    Finally, although Plaintiff-Father’s challenge to finding of fact 17, that
    Defendant-Mother has been the primary caretaker for the child, appears to have been
    abandoned, it was supported by Defendant-Mother’s testimony that she “ha[d] been
    the primary caregiver of the child ever since he was born.” This finding is supported
    by competent evidence.
    4. Summary of Challenged Findings
    Each of the challenged findings of fact is supported by competent evidence.
    Indeed, many of the findings are based directly on Plaintiff-Father’s testimony. In
    sum, Plaintiff-Father generally contends that the trial court erred by overlooking
    evidence that he presented at trial, or by making a credibility determination with
    which he disagrees. These arguments go to the weight to be given to the evidence,
    and to evaluations of credibility which are within the discretion of the trial court.
    “[W]here the trial court’s findings of fact are supported by competent evidence, and
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    the findings of fact, in turn, support the trial court’s conclusions of law, the decision
    of the trial court will be affirmed. This Court will not reweigh the evidence.”
    Id. (citation omitted) (emphasis
    added). Plaintiff-Father’s challenges to these findings of
    fact must therefore fail.
    VI. Child Support Guidelines
    Lastly, we return to the child support order, in which the trial court found it
    “reasonable to use 125 overnights for [Plaintiff-Father] and 240 overnights for
    [Defendant-Mother] for purposes of calculations under the child support guidelines.”
    Defendant-Mother asserts that the trial court erred in using Worksheet B to calculate
    Plaintiff-Father’s prospective child support obligation. More specifically, she argues
    that “there was no evidence presented from which the trial court could find that 125
    overnights [with Plaintiff-Father] was a reasonable number of overnights to use” in
    determining Plaintiff-Father’s child support obligation.
    A.     Appellate Jurisdiction
    This matter is properly addressed by cross-appeal, in that Defendant-Mother
    “seek[s] affirmative relief in the appellate division[,]” Alberti v. Manufactured Homes,
    Inc., 
    329 N.C. 727
    , 739, 
    407 S.E.2d 819
    , 826 (1991), from a child support order that
    she contends was entered in error. See Harllee v. Harllee, 
    151 N.C. App. 40
    , 51, 
    565 S.E.2d 678
    , 684 (2002) (“[T]he proper procedure for presenting alleged errors that
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    purport to show that the judgment was erroneously entered and that an altogether
    different kind of judgment should have been entered is a cross-appeal.”).
    Although Defendant-Mother failed to timely cross-appeal from the child
    support order, this Court has the discretion to issue a writ of certiorari “in appropriate
    circumstances . . . to permit review of the judgments and orders of trial tribunals
    when the right to prosecute an appeal has been lost by failure to take timely action,”
    N.C.R. App. P. 21(a)(1), including review of the merits of a cross-appeal. See
    Ehrenhaus v. Baker, 
    243 N.C. App. 17
    , 32, 
    776 S.E.2d 699
    , 709 (2015). Defendant-
    Mother petitioned for writ of certiorari, and has shown good and sufficient cause for
    this Court to issue the writ. Accordingly, in our discretion, we allow the writ.
    B.     Standard of Review
    A trial court’s child support order is “accorded substantial deference by
    appellate courts and our review is limited to a determination of whether there was a
    clear abuse of discretion. To support a reversal, an appellant must show that the
    trial court’s actions were manifestly unsupported by reason.” Head v. Mosier, 
    197 N.C. App. 328
    , 332, 
    677 S.E.2d 191
    , 195 (2009) (internal quotation marks and
    citations omitted). “Failure to follow the [Child Support G]uidelines constitutes
    reversible error.” Rose v. Rose, 
    108 N.C. App. 90
    , 93, 
    422 S.E.2d 446
    , 447 (1992).
    C.     Child Support Guidelines
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    It is well settled that “[t]he court shall determine the amount of child support
    payments by applying the presumptive guidelines.           The Guidelines apply as a
    rebuttable presumption in all legal proceedings involving the child support obligation
    of a parent.” Hart v. Hart, ___ N.C. App. ___, ___, 
    836 S.E.2d 244
    , 251 (2019) (citations
    and internal quotation marks omitted). The Guidelines provide that Worksheet A is
    to be used “when one parent . . . has primary physical custody of all of the children
    for whom support is being determined. A parent (or third party) has primary physical
    custody of a child if the child lives with that parent (or custodian) for 243 nights or
    more during the year”; the use of Worksheet B is appropriate when both “[p]arents
    share custody of a child if the child lives with each parent for at least 123 nights
    during the year and each parent assumes financial responsibility for the child’s
    expenses during the time the child lives with that parent.” Guidelines, Ann. R. 5.
    Here, Defendant-Mother contends that the trial court erred in using
    Worksheet B to calculate Plaintiff-Father’s prospective child support obligation. She
    challenges finding of fact 10 as not being supported by competent evidence at trial:
    10. For the period February 2017 to July 2017 based upon
    the custody order entered by the [c]ourt, the court finds it
    reasonable to use 125 over nights for the [Plaintiff-Father]
    and 240 overnights for the [Defendant-Mother] for
    purposes of calculations under the child support
    guidelines.
    Defendant Mother argues that “the evidence presented suggested that the correct
    number of overnights was 261 for [Defendant-Mother] and 104 for [Plaintiff Father].”
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    The child custody order served as the basis for the trial court’s use of
    Worksheet B in calculating the prospective child support obligation. To accommodate
    the parties’ commitment to regularly travel to India with the minor child, the order
    permits each parent to have physical custody of the child for five weeks of
    uninterrupted international travel per year. Plaintiff-Father argued at the child
    support hearing that the use of Worksheet B to calculate his child support obligation
    was proper because of the annual five-week extended visitation period. Including the
    five-week extended visitation, Plaintiff-Father calculated that he had 128 days in
    2017, 129 days in 2018, and 124 days in 2019. However, the parties’ extensive travel
    plans do not necessarily justify the use of Worksheet B.
    It is not appropriate to use Worksheet B in cases involving extended visitation.
    The explicit instructions set forth on Worksheet B3 address the issue of extended
    visitation: “Worksheet B should be used only if both parents have custody of the
    child(ren) for at least one-third of the year and the situation involves a true sharing
    of expenses, rather than extended visitation with one parent that exceeds 122
    overnights.” Form AOC-CV-628, Side Two, Rev. 1/15 (emphases added).4 If the trips
    to India are extended visitation, rather than a “situation involv[ing] a true sharing of
    expenses” as contemplated by the instructions for Worksheet B, that travel time
    3  This Court has previously referenced the instructions on Worksheet B in determining
    whether its use was appropriate. See, e.g., Scotland Cty. Dep’t of Soc. Servs. v. Powell, 
    155 N.C. App. 531
    , 539, 
    573 S.E.2d 694
    , 699 (2002).
    4 The identical language remains in the January 2019 iteration of Worksheet B.
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    JONNA V. YARAMADA
    Opinion of the Court
    should not be included in determining the number of overnights the child would stay
    with each parent.
    Accordingly, we vacate the child support order, and remand for the trial court
    to make additional findings as to whether the number of overnights that the minor
    child has with Plaintiff-Father exceeds 122 overnights, and if so, whether that is the
    result of extended visitation or whether the custodial arrangement is a “situation
    involv[ing] a true sharing of expenses.” Whether additional evidence or a hearing is
    necessary, or whether the case may be decided based on the existing record, is in the
    discretion of the trial court.
    Conclusion
    For the reasons stated herein, we vacate the 20 November 2017 child support
    order and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We also
    reverse that part of the 8 December 2017 order imposing Rule 11 sanctions. The
    remainder of the 8 December 2017 order and the 31 March 2017 custody order are
    affirmed.
    AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART; VACATED IN PART AND
    REMANDED.
    Judges ARROWOOD and HAMPSON concur.
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