McCoy v. Kincade , 2015 Ark. LEXIS 612 ( 2015 )


Menu:
  •                                   Cite as 
    2015 Ark. 389
    SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS
    No.   CV-14-1059
    CHERI SUZANNE MCCOY                            Opinion Delivered:   October 29, 2015
    APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE BAXTER
    COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    V.                                   [NO. DR-2004-539-4]
    VERNON JEFFREY KINCADE                         HONORABLE GORDON WEBB,
    JUDGE
    APPELLEE
    AFFIRMED.
    RHONDA K. WOOD, Associate Justice
    This is an appeal from the circuit court’s modification of the parties’ custody
    agreement. Appellant, Cheri Suzanne McCoy, challenges the circuit court’s finding that
    there has been a material change of circumstances necessitating a modification in custody.
    McCoy argues that the circuit court primarily relied on the passage of time since the
    agreement, which standing alone is insufficient to support a material change in
    circumstances. We affirm the decision of the circuit court.
    McCoy and appellee, Vernon Kincade, divorced in 2004. They were awarded joint
    custody of the minor children, C.K. and A.K., who were then three and five years old. The
    circuit court approved their child-custody and property-settlement agreement, which
    provided that Kincade would have the children Sunday evenings through Friday evenings.
    McCoy had custody of the children Thursday evenings and the first three weekends of the
    month and the fifth weekend of any month with five weekends. McCoy had five weeks of
    summer visitation, which included two weeks in June, two weeks in July and one week in
    1
    Cite as 
    2015 Ark. 389
    August, none of which were to be consecutive. At the time of the entry of the agreement
    both parties resided in Mountain Home. However, approximately one month following
    the divorce, McCoy moved to Fayetteville, a distance of over 120 miles from Kincade and
    the children. Additionally, both parents had remarried since their divorce.
    In 2013, Kincade filed a petition to modify custody and visitation alleging that a
    material changes in circumstances had occurred. McCoy counterfiled for modification of
    the custody agreement.1 The circuit court, after hearing testimony from McCoy, Kincade,
    and the children, determined that there had been a material change of circumstances and
    that it was in the children’s best interest to be in the primary custody of Kincade. It awarded
    McCoy a slight variation of the prior custody arrangement on standard visitation.
    McCoy’s appeal to the court of appeals followed. The court of appeals affirmed the
    circuit court’s decision, and we granted McCoy’s petition for review from the court of
    appeals.
    When this court grants a petition for review of a decision from the court of appeals,
    we treat the matter as if it had been originally filed in this court. Singletary v. Singletary,
    
    2013 Ark. 506
    , 
    431 S.W.2d 234
    . We review appeals in domestic relation cases de novo
    and will not reverse the circuit court’s finding of fact unless it is clearly erroneous. 
    Id. In cases
    involving children, the circuit court is clearly in a superior and unique position to
    observe the parties and we give great deference to the court’s findings of facts. Stills v. Stills,
    
    2010 Ark. 132
    , 
    361 S.W.3d 823
    .
    1
    Notably, McCoy also alleged a material change of circumstances in her counter-
    petition for custody.
    2
    Cite as 
    2015 Ark. 389
    When a change of custody is sought in a joint-custody arrangement, the circuit court
    first must determine that there has been a material change of circumstances from the time
    the divorce decree originally was entered. Singletary v. Singletary, 
    2013 Ark. 506
    , 
    431 S.W.3d 234
    . Only after meeting that threshold will the court then consider what is in the
    best interest of the children. 
    Id. McCoy’s appeal
    challenges only the court’s finding that a material change of
    circumstances has transpired since the agreement. She does not dispute the circuit court’s
    determination that the change in custody is in the best interest of the children. McCoy
    argues the circuit court relied primarily on the passage of time since the custody agreement
    and that factor, standing alone, is insufficient to warrant a change of custody. However, the
    circuit court’s consideration of the passage of time was but one of several factors on which
    it relied in deciding there was a material change of circumstances. In any event, we
    previously have found that the passage of time is one factor the court may consider in finding
    a material change of circumstances. See Myers v. McCall, 
    2009 Ark. 541
    , 
    334 S.W.3d 878
    ;
    see also Hollinger v. Hollinger, 
    65 Ark. App. 110
    , 
    986 S.W.2d 105
    (1999).
    The most important material change of circumstances was McCoy’s move to
    Fayetteville, which the circuit court said altered the “fundamental nature of the original
    joint custody agreement . . . with the potential to significantly impact the children” when
    McCoy moved to Fayetteville. The court went further to explain, “the nature of the
    original custody agreement has changed in that the children have matured to a point in their
    lives where their school activities and the social interaction with their classmates has become
    3
    Cite as 
    2015 Ark. 389
    significantly more important.” The court found that a “significant change” occurred
    affecting the well-being of the children.
    Upon a de novo review of the record and giving deference to the circuit court’s
    finding of facts, we cannot say this finding was in error. McCoy’s move to Fayetteville
    clearly impacted the parties’ original custody agreement and was significantly impacting the
    children’s lives and well-being.     There was considerable evidence that the custody
    agreement, which provided McCoy with a vast majority of the weekend visitation,
    drastically affected the children because she no longer resided in the same city or even
    county.
    Although the parties attempted to make the custodial agreement work over the eight
    years following their divorce, it came to the point that Kincade believed the children’s
    weekends away from their activities and friends was harming their development. The
    children were missing a large number of social events that the circuit court, to whom we
    give deference, considered was materially affecting their well-being.
    For example, C.K., who was 14 years old and in the ninth grade, testified that he
    had always been involved in school athletics and had played football since the peewee
    league. He was the quarterback and a linebacker; however, the visitation schedule caused
    him to miss summer workouts and weekend games, which negatively impacted his practice
    and performance. He further testified that he had to quit baseball because his mother would
    not allow them to work the visitation around it. C.K. did not want to stop visiting his
    mother, but simply was asking for relief from three weekends a month to two weekends a
    month. A.K., who was 12 years old, also desired a more traditional visitation schedule,
    4
    Cite as 
    2015 Ark. 389
    which included staying with her mother in Fayetteville every other weekend. She testified
    to missing the Christmas play and being limited to activities she could join due to the
    visitation schedule. Ultimately, the evidence suggested that McCoy did not seem to grasp
    the importance of the children’s activities. Nor did she encourage participation by allowing
    the children to keep their social commitments in Mountain Home during her visitation.
    Both children testified that they now had a strained relationship with their mother in part
    due to the visitation schedule.
    The factors in this case are all factors that we have held are appropriate when
    determining if there has been a material change of circumstances. These factors include, but
    are not limited to, one parent’s relocation, the passage of time, remarriage of one or both
    parents, strained relationship between the parent and child, and the preference of the
    children. See Lewellyn v. Lewellyn, 
    351 Ark. 346
    , 
    93 S.W.3d 681
    (2002); Hollinger v.
    Hollinger, 
    65 Ark. App. 110
    , 
    986 S.W.2d 105
    (1999). All of these factors were present in
    this case and their combined effect supports the circuit court’s holding that there was a
    material change of circumstances.
    Affirmed.
    Special Justice HENRY KINSLOW joins.
    Special Justice JOSEPH C. SELF concurs.
    BAKER and HART, JJ., dissent.
    GOODSON and WYNNE, JJ., not participating.
    JOSEPH C. SELF, Special Justice, concurring. I concur in the majority
    opinion, as there was sufficient evidence presented to the circuit court to warrant a
    5
    Cite as 
    2015 Ark. 389
    modification of the divorce decree, but I would have decided the issue regarding the
    existence of a material change of circumstances on the pleadings of the parties alone.
    As mentioned in a majority-opinion footnote, after Kincaid filed his motion to
    modify the existing joint-custody order to receive an award of sole custody, McCoy filed a
    counterclaim, also asking for a modification that would award custody to her. I find that to
    be highly significant and determinative as to the issue about whether circumstances had
    materially changed.
    As the majority opinion recites, the original joint-custody arrangement in this matter
    was part of a “Child Custody and Property Settlement Agreement,” which was incorporated
    into the divorce decree. Thus, at the time of the divorce, the trial court did not take
    testimony and make a determination as to custody; rather, it simply approved the
    arrangement the parties represented would be best for themselves and their children. Ideally,
    that is how it should be; the parents are in a far better position to know what it best for their
    children than a judge, who only knows what can be presented within the bounds of the
    pleadings and rules of evidence about the parties and their children. If parties who are
    dissolving their marriage can come to an agreement regarding the welfare of their children,
    the likelihood of success is far better than having an arrangement imposed upon them. 1
    1
    Part of the rationale behind mediated agreements in divorce and custody matters is
    that parties are normally more satisfied about an arrangement they have agreed to as opposed
    to something imposed upon them, and thus more likely to cooperate within the spirit of
    the agreement rather simply comply with the letter of the decree.
    6
    Cite as 
    2015 Ark. 389
    After the motion, answer and counterclaim were filed, both parties had asserted they
    did not believe continued joint custody was feasible. Both were specific about why the
    arrangement was not working, and while each submitted different reasons for why things
    had changed, they were again in agreement—at least tacitly—it was time to modify the
    existing decree to a more traditional custody visitation order. “The mutual ability of the
    parties to cooperate in reaching shared decisions in matters affecting the child’s welfare is a
    crucial factor bearing on the propriety of joint custody,” Dansby v. Dansby, 
    87 Ark. App. 156
    , 
    189 S.W.3d 473
    (2004). Such reasoning applies whether it was an initial agreement at
    the time of the divorce or if subsequent developments caused the parties to be unable or
    unwilling to cooperate. It would have been extremely presumptuous of the trial court to
    see the pleadings of both parties and to hear their testimony only to then say “you are both
    wrong, you can still cooperate.” In Doss v. Miller, the court of appeals found: “There was
    a mountain of evidence in this case demonstrating that the parties could no longer cooperate
    in reaching shared decisions in matters affecting their children.” 
    2010 Ark. App. 95
    , 
    377 S.W.3d 388
    . The order continuing joint custody in Doss was reversed in light of the
    allegations each parent made against the other. The opinion recited the two versions of the
    allegations each made against the other, without a finding of which one was true; that each
    party had significant complaints against the other was sufficient for the joint-custody order
    to be modified. Such would have sufficed for me in this matter.
    This is not to say that one party can unilaterally end a joint custody arrangement
    simply by making allegations against the other. However, when both parties have come
    before a court alleging that joint custody is no longer working, even if each is citing different
    7
    Cite as 
    2015 Ark. 389
    reasons, I would find that fact alone sufficient for a trial court to find a material change in
    circumstances. Such a finding would eliminate the necessity of having each party lay out in
    detail why joint custody did not work in the past and allow the parties and the court to
    focus instead on what is in the best interest of the children going forward.
    We review child-custody cases de novo, but will reverse only if the circuit court’s
    findings are clearly erroneous or clearly against the preponderance of the evidence. Stehle
    v. Zimmerebner, 
    375 Ark. 446
    , 
    291 S.W.3d 573
    (2009). A finding is clearly erroneous when
    the reviewing court, on the entire evidence, is left with the definite and firm conviction
    that a mistake has been committed. 
    Id. In reviewing
    the circuit court’s findings that there
    was a material change in circumstances, I am left with a definite and firm conviction that a
    mistake has been made.
    I. Material Change in Circumstances
    On appeal, McCoy argues that the circuit court erred in finding that there was a
    material change in circumstances sufficient to warrant a modification of the original custody
    agreement. For a circuit court to modify the custody of children, it must first determine
    that a material change in circumstances has transpired from the time of the divorce decree
    and, then, determine that a change in custody is in the best interest of the child. Lewellyn
    v. Lewellyn, 
    351 Ark. 346
    , 355, 
    93 S.W.3d 681
    , 686 (2002) (citing Lloyd v. Butts, 
    343 Ark. 620
    , 
    37 S.W.3d 603
    (2001)). In order to avoid the relitigation of factual issues already
    decided, courts will restrict evidence in a modification proceeding to facts arising since the
    issuance of the prior order. Campbell v. Campbell, 
    336 Ark. 379
    , 985 S.W2d 724 (1999).
    Courts impose more stringent standards for modifications in custody than for initial
    8
    Cite as 
    2015 Ark. 389
    determinations of custody in order to promote stability and continuity in the life of the
    child.    Alphin v. Alphin, 
    364 Ark. 332
    , 
    219 S.W.3d 160
    (2005).          The party seeking
    modification of the custody order has the burden of showing a material change in
    circumstances. 
    Id. Based on
    these more stringent standards for modifications of child
    custody and because Kincade failed to meet his burden to demonstrate a material change in
    circumstances, the circuit court clearly erred in its determination that a material change in
    circumstances occurred.
    II. McCoy’s Relocation
    With the above standards in mind, we must consider whether the circuit court’s
    finding that McCoy’s relocation to Fayetteville constituted a material change in
    circumstances. In its September 20, 2013 letter opinion, the circuit court held as follows:
    [T]he parties entered into an agreement that was described as joint custody with the
    children spending each week during the school year with their father and the first
    three weekends of each month with their mother, the fourth weekend with their
    father (with their mother having time with the children that week on Thursday
    night), and the fifth weekend if there was one, with their mother. The Court
    approved this arrangement and the terminology that it was joint custody based on
    the Court’s understanding that both parties resided in Mountain Home and this
    arrangement was essentially a true joint custody arrangement with the children
    spending roughly equal time with both parents.
    The testimony at trial established that the arrangement has never been as the Court
    believed it was. Within a month the respondent, Ms. McCoy, had moved to
    Fayetteville. Once she did that the aspects of this agreement that the Court
    understood made it joint custody no longer truly existed. The parties apparently
    immediately made adjustments and rearrangements to the Court’s order and have
    lived with the original agreement, with modifications, for the past nine years. It is
    the Court’s finding that the fundamental nature of the original agreement of “joint
    custody” changed with the potential to significantly affect the well being of the
    children. To their credit, the parties have made it work for the past eight, going on
    nine, years until it came to affect the lives of the children as they grew older.
    9
    Cite as 
    2015 Ark. 389
    Here, a review of the record demonstrates that there was not a material change in
    circumstances. It is unclear how the “fundamental nature of the original agreement of ‘joint
    custody’ changed with the potential to significantly affect the well being of the children.”
    When McCoy moved to Fayetteville, the parties immediately modified the schedule to
    remove McCoy’s Thursday visitation; however, the remainder of the original order
    remained the same for almost nine years. The original child-custody agreement stated as
    follows:
    The general scheme of physical custodial time with the children set out above is
    subject to change by agreement of the parties. The parties commit to being flexible
    with each other so as to meet the children’s need to spend time with both of their
    parents.
    Based on the language of the original child-custody agreement, McCoy and Kincade
    were free to modify the physical custodial time with the children, which they did for almost
    nine years. Pursuant to the original custody agreement, the parties agreed to be flexible in
    order to meet the children’s need to spend time with both parents. The parties’ physical
    custodial arrangement, for the last nine years, demonstrates their compliance with the
    original child-custody agreement. The custodial arrangement has been consistent for almost
    nine years; therefore, McCoy’s move to Fayetteville did not amount to a material change
    in circumstances.
    Further, the circuit court found that the “initial move by the respondent to
    Fayetteville by itself did not significantly change the circumstances contrary to the children’s
    best interests, but it did significantly change the fundamental nature of the custody
    arrangement back in 2005 by making it no longer anything resembling a ‘joint custody’
    10
    Cite as 
    2015 Ark. 389
    arrangement with shared equal time between the parents.” However, the circuit court
    expressed its “admiration for the job done by both parents to this point” and expressed its
    belief that the “parents made the best of this changed circumstance until the present.”
    I cannot agree with the circuit court’s finding that McCoy’s move to Fayetteville
    constituted a material change in circumstances sufficient to warrant modification. As noted
    above, the circuit court repeatedly praised McCoy and Kincade for their ability to modify
    the original agreement for almost nine years, thus it is unclear, in the almost nine-year span
    of modifications, when McCoy’s move to Fayetteville transformed into a material change
    of circumstances.       McCoy’s move simply did not amount to a material change in
    circumstances.
    III. Maturation of the Children
    As to the circuit court’s second finding of a material change in circumstances, the
    circuit court stated,
    [T]he children have matured to a point in their lives where their school activities and
    the social interaction with their classmates has become significantly more important
    to them than it was in 2004 when they were four and seven years old. Now at
    twelve and almost fifteen, these two young people are having a very difficult time
    living a normal teenage social life, and developing and maintaining friends and
    activities that are all oriented around the school and the church where they primarily
    live. It appears that they are forced by their parent’s previous agreement, to go away
    almost every weekend and not have time to socially interact with their friends,
    schoolmates and church activities that come up on the weekends starting on Friday
    night.
    The Court considers this social interaction between young people and the activities
    that social interaction revolves around (sports, attending games and social events and
    church activities) to be essential to the healthy development of young people.
    11
    Cite as 
    2015 Ark. 389
    During the custody hearing, the children clearly expressed a preference to spend
    more time with their father. However, in Hobby v. Walker, our court of appeals correctly
    explained that a “child’s preference is certainly a factor to be considered by the trial court
    in deciding whether a change of custody is in a child’s best interest; however, the court
    must first determine that the threshold requirement of whether a material change in the
    circumstances of the parties has occurred since the last order of custody.” 
    2011 Ark. App. 494
    at 9, 
    385 S.W.3d 331
    , 336.
    The fact that the children have matured to the point where school and social activities
    have become more important to them does not amount to a material change in
    circumstances. The circuit court erroneously determined that the threshold requirement of
    a material change in circumstances had occurred. Because the threshold requirement of a
    material change in circumstances was not met in this case, it was erroneous for the circuit
    court to consider the children’s preferences, which is a factor to be considered in deciding
    whether a change of custody is in the best interest of the children. Stated differently, because
    the threshold requirement of a material change in circumstances was not met, the circuit
    court clearly erred in considering the preferences of the children. 
    Hobby, supra
    .
    The majority states that “the evidence suggested that McCoy did not seem to grasp
    the importance of the children’s activities. Nor did she encourage participation by allowing
    the children to keep their social commitments in Mountain Home during her visitation.”
    It is unclear how the modified custody arrangement will resolve the children’s conflicts with
    their social and school activities. Under the original agreement, McCoy had the children
    during the first three weekends of the month and any fifth weekend. However, under the
    12
    Cite as 
    2015 Ark. 389
    modified arrangement, McCoy was awarded standard every-other-weekend visitation. The
    modified arrangement will decrease the amount of time at McCoy’s by only one weekend
    per month plus the fifth weekend in months with an additional weekend. During his
    testimony, C.K. admitted that he would still miss out on activities even if the time spent
    with his mother was decreased to every-other-weekend visitation. Thus, it is unclear how
    the modified arrangement will remedy the children’s alleged conflicts with social and school
    activities.
    Today the majority is establishing dangerous precedent. As noted above in Alphin,
    courts impose more stringent standards in child-custody modifications than for initial
    determinations of custody. The more stringent standards are utilized in order to promote
    stability and continuity in the life of the child. 
    Alphin, supra
    . As a child matures, his interests
    in social and school activities are constantly changing. If a modification of a child-custody
    agreement is allowed to proceed on this basis, there will never be finality in Arkansas child-
    custody agreements.
    The circuit court clearly erred in finding that McCoy’s move to Fayetteville and the
    maturation of the children rose to the level of a material change in circumstances warranting
    a modification of child custody. Therefore, I respectfully dissent.
    HART, J. joins in this dissent.
    Taylor Law Partners, LLP, by: William B. Putman, for appellant.
    Emily Reed, for appellee.
    13