Brent Keith Pendleton v. James Anthony Leverock

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 2007
Docket2008-CA-00093-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Brent Keith Pendleton v. James Anthony Leverock (Brent Keith Pendleton v. James Anthony Leverock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brent Keith Pendleton v. James Anthony Leverock, (Mich. 2007).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2008-CA-00093-SCT

IN THE MATTER OF THE DISSOLUTION OF THE MARRIAGE OF JAMES LEVEROCK AND DEANNA HAMBY: BRENT KEITH PENDLETON AND KIM RENEE PENDLETON

v.

JAMES ANTHONY LEVEROCK

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/09/2007 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. JAMES H. C. THOMAS, JR. COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: LAMAR COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANTS: RENEE M. PORTER ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: BRANDON L. BROOKS SHIRLEE FAGER-BALDWIN NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - DOMESTIC RELATIONS DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART - 12/03/2009 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

LAMAR, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Zachary Tyler Leverock (Zach) was born to Deanna Hamby and James Anthony

Leverock (Tony). Upon the couple’s separation, Deanna and Zach moved in with her foster

parents, the Pendletons. For the following two and a half years, Zach lived with the

Pendletons with no contact from Tony. Deanna died in a car accident, and at her funeral,

Tony told the Pendletons that he eventually wanted to take Zach back to Florida with him. The Pendletons filed a complaint for emergency temporary custody, termination of parental

rights, and for custody. A trial was held, and Tony received custody of Zach.

¶2. The Pendletons assert that the chancery court erred by refusing to: (1) terminate

Tony’s parental rights; (2) award the Pendletons custody after finding the best interests of

the child would be to remain in their care; (3) grant visitation; and (4) deem requests for

admission admitted despite an untimely response.

FACTS

¶3. Tony and Deanna met while they were enrolled in the Job Corps program. The two

married on May 24, 2002. Tony enlisted in the Army, and they moved to Fort Bragg, North

Carolina. Deanna gave birth to the couple’s son, Zach, on May 18, 2003, while Tony was

serving in Iraq. He returned from overseas when Zach was approximately four months old.

Three months later, on January 6, 2004, the couple separated, and Deanna and Zach returned

to Mississippi.

¶4. Deanna and Zach moved into the house with her foster parents, Brent and Kim

Pendleton, who began serving as Deanna’s foster parents when she was sixteen years old.

Deanna lived with the Pendletons sporadically upon her return from Fort Bragg, but Zach

lived almost exclusively with the Pendletons from that time until custody was awarded to

Tony in November 2007.

¶5. Soon after Deanna returned to Mississippi, Tony was “other than honorably

discharged” from the Army for failing repeated drug tests. He went back to his hometown

of Jacksonville, Florida, and moved in with his girlfriend Jennifer Cooper, Jennifer’s mother,

2 her mother’s boyfriend, and her sister. Tony and Jennifer had a child on May 24, 2005. He

remained legally married to Deanna at that time.

¶6. Tony admitted that he had no contact with Zach from the time Zach left Fort Bragg

in January 2004, until May 2006, except for a few moments in June 2004, when Deanna

traveled to Florida to give Tony divorce papers. According to the divorce papers, Deanna

was to have full legal and physical custody of Zach with Tony having reasonable visitation.

Tony also agreed to pay child support in the amount of $350 per month. The divorce papers

were not filed until January 2006, and the divorce was never granted. Tony did not exercise

any visitation nor did he pay any child support as specified in the divorce petition and

agreement.

¶7. Tragically, on May 13, 2006, Deanna was killed in a car accident in Laurel,

Mississippi. Tony came to her funeral and asked the Pendletons if he could see his son.

Zach did not recognize his father. After Deanna’s funeral, Tony indicated to the Pendletons

that he was interested in forging a relationship with the child. Tony testified that he simply

wanted to start spending time with Zach, and when Zach knew who his real father was, he

wanted to take him back to Florida. On May 18, 2006, the Pendletons filed a complaint for

emergency temporary custody and termination of Tony’s parental rights. Shortly after

returning from Deanna’s funeral, Tony moved with his girlfriend and their child into the

home of his father and stepmother in Florida.

¶8. On May 22, 2006, the chancery court awarded temporary custody to the Pendletons,

3 finding that they had been the primary caretakers of Zach for more then two years, and it was

in Zach’s best interests for the Pendletons to be vested with temporary custody. On July 25,

2006, the court appointed a guardian ad litem (GAL), ordered Tony to begin paying child

support, and indicated that once the GAL had evaluated Zach, a visitation schedule would

be set. The chancellor then devised a visitation schedule that gradually increased visitation

from a few hours every other weekend in Purvis, Mississippi, to two-week-long visitations

in Florida.

¶9. At trial, the Pendletons presented nine witnesses in support of their contention that

Tony had abandoned his son and that a substantial erosion of the relationship had occurred.

Tony’s mother, sister, and stepfather testified in favor of the Pendletons. Tony, his father,

and Dr. Pat Galloway, a family counseling expert, testified in favor of Tony. The GAL also

testified.

¶10. Tony admitted that he had never paid any child support, had never sent any type of

birthday or Christmas present, nor had he attempted to exercise any type of visitation since

his wife had left Fort Bragg, until the time he came to her funeral, approximately two and a

half years later. He maintained at trial that he did not know where Deanna was living, that

he had been unable to get in touch with her, and that he had never sent money or gifts

because he did not know where to send them.

¶11. Tony’s mother and sister both testified that they had been in continuous contact with

the Pendletons, Zach, and Deanna from the time Deanna and Tony had separated. This

contact consisted of visits to Mississippi as well as paying for Deanna and Zach to visit them

4 in Florida. Tony’s mother indicated she regularly had encouraged Tony to be more involved

with his child, but he had refused. She also testified that she had told Tony where Zach was

living and how to contact him and the Pendletons. Tony’s paternal grandparents were also

involved with Zach and went to visit Zach at the Pendletons’ residence several times a year.

Tony’s mother, sister, and grandparents all described a close, parent-child relationship

between the Pendletons and Zach. Tony’s father, with whom he lived after moving out of

his girlfriend’s house, painted a different picture of the Pendletons. He stated that the

Pendletons were uncooperative the one time he attempted to call them and check on Zach.

¶12. Evidence was presented that Zach was not easily coping with the increased contact

with his father and that the Pendletons had been taking him to therapy as the visitation

schedule allowed. Zach’s counselor testified for the Pendletons, claiming that Zach was

afraid of Tony’s stepmother because she allegedly had slapped him. Tony and his father

denied that Zach was having trouble adjusting to the prolonged visitation in Florida. The

GAL and the family counseling expert both testified that Tony had shown improvement in

his parenting skills and should be allowed to regain custody of Zach.

¶13.

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