Brittany Pelayo v. Wesley Sims

2020 Ark. App. 258, 600 S.W.3d 114
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedApril 22, 2020
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2020 Ark. App. 258 (Brittany Pelayo v. Wesley Sims) 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
Brittany Pelayo v. Wesley Sims, 2020 Ark. App. 258, 600 S.W.3d 114 (Ark. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Cite as 2020 Ark. App. 258 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS Reason: I attest to the accuracy and integrity of this document Date: 2021-07-06 14:05:19 Foxit PhantomPDF Version: DIVISION I 9.7.5 No. CV-19-797

BRITTANY PELAYO Opinion Delivered: April 22, 2020

APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE SEBASTIAN COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, V. GREEWOOD DISTRICT [NO. 66GDR-18-2596] WESLEY SIMS HONORABLE SHANNON L. BLATT, JUDGE

APPELLEE AFFIRMED

MEREDITH B. SWITZER, Judge

Brittany Pelayo and Wesley Sims are the biological parents of T.W.S. Brittany

appeals from the June 19, 2019 order that awarded custody of T.W.S. to Wesley and allowed

Wesley to move T.W.S. to Oklahoma. She raises nine points, most of which challenge the

circuit court’s findings regarding Wesley’s care and support of T.W.S., Wesley’s stability,

Brittany’s instability, T.W.S.’s best interest, and allowing Wesley to move T.W.S. to

Oklahoma. She further contends that the circuit court did not give due consideration to

the sibling relationship or to the attorney ad litem’s recommendation and that it did not

apply the correct statute in awarding back-due child support. Finally, she contends the

circuit court erred in denying her posttrial motions. We affirm.

I. Background

Brittany and Wesley never married, but they lived together until three months before

T.W.S. was born. Brittany left at that time because she found the living arrangements to be “intolerable.” According to Brittany, she and Wesley had a DNA test performed when

T.W.S. was born, which established Wesley as the father. Wesley lives in Oklahoma;

Brittany lives in Arkansas.

On November 20, 2018, Wesley Sims filed a complaint for paternity and custody.

Brittany answered. By order entered on February 13, 2019, the circuit court appointed an

attorney ad litem for T.W.S. On March 27, Brittany filed a motion to relocate outside

Arkansas. She explained in her motion that she is married to a member of the armed forces

who is in the drill-instructor program and stationed at Paris, Island, South Carolina; that she

had researched schools and pediatricians in the area and found suitable options; and that it

would be financially beneficial to the family to relocate and reside in one household.

T.W.S. was seven years old at the time of the May 22 hearing on the motions.

Brittany explained that she has another son, B., who is about five years older than T.W.S.

She explained that she and her wife, Michelle Cox, began their relationship after she broke

up with Kieren Cragle (formerly L. Cragle) in October, and they were engaged on

November 10; B. and T.W.S. met Michelle around November 12 or 14; and she and

Michelle were married on December 26, 2018. She testified that prior to Michelle, she had

been in an almost two-year relationship with Kieren; that during that time, Kieren was in

the process of transitioning from male to female; that the relationship terminated on October

19 or 20, 2018, because Brittany asserted that Kieren was manipulative and controlling and

their fights had become physical—resulting in Kieren’s being arrested.

Brittany stated that she and a friend had gone to Florida in the aftermath of the

altercation with Kieren, and she ended her relationship with Kieren by telephone the second

2 night she was there. She met Michelle while in Florida through mutual friends. She stated

that Kieren is “a good person, a good parent, helped [her] take care [of her sons], and loved

them” but that it was the way Kieren treated her that caused her to end the relationship.

Brittany explained that T.W.S. went to preschool in Charleston, Arkansas, attended

kindergarten at Euper Lane, and was currently in first grade at Westwood in the Greenwood

School District in Fort Smith. She said she moved the boys from Euper Lane because B.

was getting bullied, but they were both “doing great now.” She said she was planning and

preparing to move to South Carolina so they could be a family with Michelle. She explained

her work history, which consisted of three jobs and a period of being a stay-at-home mom

since T.W.S.’s birth. She acknowledged she had been convicted of shoplifting and

fraudulent use of a credit card when she was living with Wesley and couldn’t buy food. She

has a speeding ticket and she accidentally rear-ended somebody “a few years ago,” but “the

other citations have been dropped.”

Brittany acknowledged that she does not have any complaints about Wesley’s

parenting. She explained that T.W.S. sometimes chooses a dress and pink shoes to wear,

along with other choices, and that she buys him dolls, purses, and wallets if he asks. She

tries to encourage him to be himself and be strong, but she does not believe she has

influenced his choices. She explained that T.W.S. was five when he met Kieren and that

he had liked those things before meeting Kieren.

She testified she hoped to go back to school in South Carolina to be a licensed health

and wellness coach. She explained that there were many programs available to start a

business through the military, that she planned to stay home and help the boys’ transition

3 through the move, and that she would work part time while they were at school and attend

her school in the evenings. She has no other family in South Carolina, and most of T.W.S.’s

family live in Oklahoma and Arkansas. She agreed that it is important for T.W.S. to be

close to Wesley’s family and explained that the South Carolina house has extra rooms for

guests. She said that she is open to all kinds of visitation if she is allowed to move and

“given custody.” She stated that Wesley had never tried to get visitation; that she

encouraged it every other weekend; that she has not tried to keep T.W.S. from Wesley;

that would not change with a move; that Wesley does not currently call T.W.S.; and that

she would not ordinarily object to Wesley’s request to take T.W.S. on vacation to Glacier

National Park in the coming summer, but for that summer she wanted T.W.S. to be able

to get adjusted to his new house and surroundings. She said she did not personally know

about South Carolina but had studied it.

Brittany explained that Michelle is a sergeant in the Marine Corps drill-instructor

school. She said that only two women have been picked for the position held by Michelle

and that her orders are to be there for three years. Brittany testified that Michelle is very

close to T.W.S. and B., that she calls every day and video chats with them, and that she is

very loving and nurturing.

Brittany testified about the relationship between B. and T.W.S.. She said that B. is

a hero to T.W.S.; T.W.S. wants to do everything like B.; they are so excited to be back

together after weekends with their dads; they play together all the time; they have sibling

arguments and T.W.S. sometimes annoys B. and B. can be bossy, but they are very close;

and it “would kill the boys” if they were separated.

4 She said that for the first year of T.W.S.’s life, Wesley did not spend much time with

him because Wesley lived in Oklahoma. Wesley would come see T.W.S. every week or

two weeks, and she would also take T.W.S. to see Wesley’s dad. Wesley did not ask, and

she would not have allowed overnights that first year, but after that there were overnight

visits, and for “the last couple of years it’s been about every other weekend.” She explained

that Wesley had only once kept T.W.S.

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2020 Ark. App. 258, 600 S.W.3d 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brittany-pelayo-v-wesley-sims-arkctapp-2020.