Ashley Atkins Edmonds v. Christopher Miller

2022 Ark. App. 495, 655 S.W.3d 908
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 7, 2022
StatusPublished

This text of 2022 Ark. App. 495 (Ashley Atkins Edmonds v. Christopher Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ashley Atkins Edmonds v. Christopher Miller, 2022 Ark. App. 495, 655 S.W.3d 908 (Ark. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Cite as 2022 Ark. App. 495 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION II No. CV-22-65

ASHLEY ATKINS EDMONDS OPINION DELIVERED DECEMBER 7, 2022 APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE ASHLEY COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 02DR-12-147]

CHRISTOPHER MILLER HONORABLE LAURIE A. APPELLEE BRIDEWELL, JUDGE

AFFIRMED

ROBERT J. GLADWIN, Judge

Ashley Edmonds appeals the Ashley County Circuit Court’s order granting appellee

Christopher Miller’s change-of-custody motion and changing the surname of the parties’

minor child. Ashley argues that (1) she was entitled to the presumption in favor of relocation;

(2) even if the presumption did not apply, it was not in the child’s best interest to change

custody; and (3) the trial court erred by changing the child’s surname. We affirm.

I. Facts

On May 2, 2012, the minor child was born, and on May 29, Christopher filed a

paternity petition claiming to be the child’s father and asking that the child’s surname be

changed to “Miller.” Ashley agreed that Christopher is the child’s father but resisted the

name change. After a hearing, the trial court issued an order on January 7, 2013, establishing

that Christopher is the child’s father and awarding “joint custody of the minor child with [Ashley] to have physical custody.” Christopher was ordered to pay child support, specific

visitation was established, and the request for a name change was denied.

On February 11, 2021, Christopher moved to change custody, enjoin Ashley from

relocating, and change the child’s surname. He alleged that since the paternity order, the

parties have shared “roughly equal physical” custody of the child and that Ashley’s intention

to move to Crossett from El Dorado would frustrate their joint-custodial arrangement. He

alleged a material change in circumstances in that Ashley had failed to appropriately address

the medical, dental, and educational needs of the child. He claimed that Ashley had

subjected the child to a sometimes violent relationship between her and her husband, had

moved many times, and had failed to participate in or attend the child’s school functions

and events. He asked that the child be given his surname, “Miller”; that his child-support

obligation be terminated; and that Ashley be ordered to pay child support.

A hearing was held on September 20, and in its “Findings of Fact and Conclusions

of Law,” the trial court summarized the facts and testimony. The court found in pertinent

part as follows:

[Christopher] enjoyed between 50% to 60% of the time with [the child] between the first grade through the first semester of the third grade. This continued until Ashley unilaterally cut him off in January of 2021 and forced a return to the 2013 order. . . . Ashley’s return to the 2013 order by her own testimony was detrimental to [the child]. In addition, the time sharing could not be duplicated when [Ashley] moved over an hour away in May 2021 . . . to Ashley County.

While Ashley testified that [the child] did not spend as much time with [Christopher] as [he] claimed, her own testimony was inconsistent and controverted by most of the evidence. Ashley admits that [the child] became accustomed to his time with his father and enjoyed it.

2 In March, [Ashley] pulled [the child] out of regular JCCS [Junction City Charter School] where he was beginning his third nine weeks of third grade, and placed him in JCCS virtual school. When school concluded in May, [Ashley] left Union County and moved [the child] to Ashley County, mooting [Christopher’s] request for an injunction. By the time of trial, she had enrolled [the child] in Anderson Elementary in Crossett.

During the years in El Dorado, the Court finds that Ashley not only relied upon, but completely defaulted to Christopher’s wife, Carrie, to handle all of [the child’s] educational needs. . . .

In spite of overwhelming evidence to the contrary, Ashley denies that she ever knew that [the child] tested positive with indicators for dyslexia or that a 504 Plan was implemented for [the child] in the first grade. It is incredulous to this Court, in view of the testimony of Carrie Miller , School Counselor Belva Cannon, and Second Grade Teacher Connie Hammett, that by the time [the child] finished the third grade, [Ashley] still did not know about her child had tested positive for dyslexia. . . . Part of the 504 Plan included assistance for [the child] by going to a resources class while in school where he received help with his class room work, 30–45 minutes a day, five days a week. [Ashley] knew nothing about this.

. . . The record proves [Ashley’s] aversion to driving [the child] to school and the Court can only conclude that [Ashley’s] motive for virtual school, in light of her fallout with the Millers, was based on the best interest of [Ashley] not [the child].

. . . As [the child] begins fourth grade, he now has all Cs and one A [as opposed to his A/B average at JCCS]. No evidence was shown to the Court that the Crossett schools have a clue that [the child] has any learning difficulties or that he qualifies for classroom modifications under any 504 Plan. The Court has no confidence that [Ashley] will be able to ‘work with him’ as she claims to pull these grades up.

....

. . . [Ashley] seems to see nothing wrong with counseling [the child] to punch other kids in the mouth if he thinks he is being bullied at school. . . . There seems to be no thought process as to the ramifications to [the child] if he acts on these impulses in a school setting.

. . . [Ashley] lied to this Court about her disciplinary practices with [the child]. . . . [T]he Court must wonder about the credibility of [Ashley’s] other testimony.

3 Further, it is noted that Christopher and [the child] lost their extra time together for no good reason well before [Ashley] moved to Crossett because of [Ashley’s] anger. . . .

While her reasons for stopping the extra days were very clear, Ashley’s reasons for moving were not. . . .

Ashley said her main reason for the move is to get out from under a $1,000 rent payment in El Dorado even though the trailer payment is $1,423 per month. . . .

Ashley also did not work in El Dorado; she does not work now. . .. On the other hand, her husband still works some 60 hours per week in El Dorado and commutes between El Dorado and Crossett to his job. . ..

[Ashley] further opposes changing [the child’s] last name to “Miller.” In 2013, [Ashley’s] last name was “Atkins.” Since that time, her last name has changed to “Edmonds.” Her daughter’s last name is “Edmonds.” [The child] is the only one in the household with the last name of “Atkins.” [Christopher’s] argument for a name change is that in his household, [the child’s] half-brother’s last name is “Miller.” The only person with substantial ties to the name of “Atkins” is the minor child’s grandfather who has just been released on early parole from federal prison after conviction of embezzlement of approximately $400,000 from Georgia Pacific and right now, resides with [Ashley]. [Christopher] argues that the name of “Atkins” now has a negative association because of his grandfather’s conviction involving the largest employer in Ashley County, that no one in the child’s immediate family is named “Atkins,” and that if he is living with [Christopher], it would make more sense and be less confusing for [the child] if he has the same name as his father and his brother, who attends the same school.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2022 Ark. App. 495, 655 S.W.3d 908, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashley-atkins-edmonds-v-christopher-miller-arkctapp-2022.