Alyssa Baum v. Justin Aldava

CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 2025
Docket2024-SC-0182
StatusPublished

This text of Alyssa Baum v. Justin Aldava (Alyssa Baum v. Justin Aldava) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alyssa Baum v. Justin Aldava, (Ky. 2025).

Opinion

RENDERED: APRIL 24, 2025 TO BE PUBLISHED

Supreme Court of Kentucky 2024-SC-0182-DGE

ALYSSA BAUM APPELLANT

ON REVIEW FROM COURT OF APPEALS V. NO. 2023-CA-1038 JEFFERSON FAMILY COURT NO. 20-D-503107-001

JUSTIN ALDAVA APPELLEE

OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE THOMPSON

AFFIRMING IN PART, REVERSING IN PART AND REMANDING

This appeal involves the judicial powers of Kentucky’s courts to offer

protection to parents and children that have fled to this state to escape abuse

and to what extent, consistent with due process of law, our courts may enter

orders of protection against non-resident respondents over whom they cannot

assert personal jurisdiction.

We hold that a Kentucky court, regardless of whether it possesses

personal jurisdiction over a non-resident may issue domestic violence orders

(DVOs): (a) protecting both a petitioner and the parties’ children from domestic

violence; (b) awarding temporary child custody; (c) restricting a non-resident

respondent’s access to firearms within the borders of the Commonwealth; and (d) such orders may be recorded in the Law Information Network of Kentucky

(LINK) pursuant to KRS 403.751(2).

This opinion marks the second time the parties have been before this

Court on issues regarding the legal capacity of Kentucky courts to resolve child

custody and domestic violence matters when our courts do not have personal

jurisdiction over a respondent who resides out of state. Last year, in Aldava v.

Johnson, 686 S.W.3d 205 (Ky. 2024) (Aldava I), we affirmed the denial of a writ

of prohibition sought to prevent the Jefferson Family Court from issuing a

temporary custody order on the basis that it was proceeding outside its

jurisdiction. We ruled that when deciding where the child lived for purposes of

establishing home-state jurisdiction under the Uniform Child Custody

Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (UCCJEA), 1 the physical location of child in

Kentucky was the central consideration and Kentucky courts had “temporary

emergency jurisdiction” to resolve the temporary custody issue under the

UCCJEA. Id. at 213. We refer to those proceedings which culminated in Aldava

I as the “custody action”; the case now before us on appeal involves the

“domestic violence action.”

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

H.A. (child) was born in Texas in June 2019, to Justin Aldava and Alyssa

Baum. On December 10, 2019, Baum and child left Texas to stay with Baum’s

1 Kentucky adopted the UCCJEA through its enactment of Kentucky Revised

Statutes (KRS) 403.800 to 403.880. Texas has also codified the UCCJEA as Texas Family Code Chapter 152. The two enactments are largely identical.

2 family in Jefferson County, Kentucky. Baum returned to Texas with child on

or around March 28, 2020. The family remained in Texas for two months until

May 29, 2020, when they relocated to Yelm, Washington for Aldava’s work.

Aldava is a wind turbine blade technician, and his job frequently requires him

to relocate for indefinite periods of time. After completion of that job, on

October 3, 2020, Baum, Aldava, and child returned to Texas.

A few weeks later, shortly after an incident of domestic violence, Aldava’s

employer assigned him to another remote work project. Baum took that

opportunity to flee with child to her parents’ residence in Kentucky. Baum and

child arrived in Kentucky on November 22, 2020. Baum has maintained

residency in Kentucky with child since then.

Eight days after arriving in Kentucky, on November 30, 2020, Baum filed

a petition for a protective order against Aldava in the Jefferson Family Court

(the domestic violence action). In her initial petition, Baum sought an

Emergency Protective Order (EPO) and temporary custody of their minor child.

In her affidavit in support of such petition, she recounted the domestic violence

which occurred on October 12, 2020. Baum also stated Aldava had several

pending and/or past criminal charges, including misdemeanor domestic

violence charges, felony aggravated robbery, and he had an association with

organized crime through the Bandidos motorcycle club.

Baum testified that on October 12, 2020, she and child were riding as

passengers in a vehicle driven by Aldava. They were going to pick up Aldava’s

motorcycle from where it was being repaired. Aldava began verbally abusing

3 Baum and driving erratically including swerving into oncoming lanes. Once

Aldava retrieved his motorcycle, Baum drove away in the vehicle. She went to

the house of a friend who was willing to watch child for a few hours and then

proceeded to the location of a fifth-wheel camper owned by Aldava and Baum.

Aldava met her at the camper, became verbally abusive and, “elbowed [Baum]

in her eye and grabbed her so hard that it left bruises in the shape of [Aldava’s]

fingers.” Baum provided photos to the family court, taken several days after the

incident demonstrating those injuries.

The family court granted Baum’s EPO petition in the domestic violence

action on the same day it was filed, entering an ex parte EPO against Aldava.

The order was amended on December 10, 2020, specifically to grant temporary

custody of child to Baum. Multiple summonses were issued but all attempts at

service failed. Aldava was not served with the order until April 7, 2021.

On December 14, 2020, Aldava filed a custody petition in Texas asserting

“[n]o court has continuing jurisdiction of this suit or of the child the subject of

this suit.” Aldava’s petition failed to refer to the already entered EPO in

Kentucky or to request the Texas court analyze jurisdiction under the UCCJEA.

On March 2, 2021, Baum filed for custody of child in the Jefferson

Family Court (the custody action). Both the custody action and the previously

instituted domestic violence action were heard by the same family court. The

next day, on March 3, 2021, Baum requested that the family court conduct a

UCCJEA conference with the Texas court. For unknown reasons, that

conference did not occur promptly.

4 The family court held a domestic violence hearing on April 7, 2021,

without Aldava present. At the conclusion of the hearing, the family court

issued a DVO: (1) prohibiting Aldava from contacting Baum or the minor child

and from being closer to them than 500 feet; (2) prohibiting Aldava from

possessing firearms; and (3) granting temporary sole custody of the child to

Baum.

Aldava retained Kentucky counsel who filed a motion in September to

vacate the DVO pursuant to Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure (CR) 60.02. In

January of 2023, Aldava, having retained new counsel, filed a Motion to

Dismiss specifically arguing that the family court did not have personal

jurisdiction over Aldava. The family court did not set aside the DVO it had

previously entered, but scheduled a new hearing which would ultimately be

held on July 26, 2023.

On September 23, 2022, in the custody action, the parties appeared

before the family court to discuss jurisdiction under the UCCJEA. The family

court’s November 23, 2022, order referenced the UCCJEA telephone conference

between the family court and the Texas court and summarized that “[n]either

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