Bryan Nicholas Stewart v. Kristin Stewart

2025 Ark. App. 97
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 19, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 97 (Bryan Nicholas Stewart v. Kristin Stewart) 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
Bryan Nicholas Stewart v. Kristin Stewart, 2025 Ark. App. 97 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 97 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION I No. CV-24-316

Opinion Delivered February 19, 2025

BRYAN NICHOLAS STEWART APPEAL FROM THE SALINE APPELLANT COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 63DR-20-162] V. HONORABLE KEN CASADY, JUDGE KRISTIN STEWART APPELLEE AFFIRMED

BART F. VIRDEN, Judge

Appellant Bryan Nicholas Stewart (“Nick”) appeals from the Saline County Circuit

Court’s order denying his request to reallocate parenting time such that he and appellee

Kristin Stewart spend equal time with their four children and denying his request to have

final decision-making authority. Nick argues that the trial court erred in requiring a material

change of circumstances given that the parties share joint custody of the children, and he

sought a reallocation of parenting time, not a change of custody. We affirm.

I. Background

The parties married in March 2006, and they have four children: a son (MC1) born

in 2007; a daughter (MC2) born in 2010; a daughter (MC3) born in 2014; and a daughter

(MC4) born in 2017. Kristin filed for a divorce, which was granted on June 2, 2020. The parties entered into a property-settlement agreement, which provided the following in

relevant part with regard to child custody:

a. The parties shall share joint custody of the minor children, with Mother as primary physical custodian.

b. The parties share legal custody of the minor children. Both parties shall have the right to participate in all major decisions affecting the child[ren]’s welfare, including education, non-routine medical treatment, major disciplinary measures, and social development. The parties shall discuss all such decisions and shall attempt to reach a mutual agreement based on the best interest of the child[ren]. In the event the parties cannot agree, Mother’s decision shall control.

c. Each party shall make all day-to-day decisions concerning the minor child[ren]’s welfare when the minor child[ren are] in his or her respective care.

In a section titled “parenting time,” the parties agreed to the following:

i. Mother shall have custody of the children, subject to Father’s visitation as set forth herein.

ii. Father shall have the children every other weekend from Friday after school through Monday when school resumes. If Father is working, he shall have the children when he is not at work. For example, if Father works until 8:00 p.m. on Friday, but does not work over the weekend, Father shall have the children from Saturday morning through Monday when school resumes.

iii. The parties recognize that Father has a demanding work schedule. If Father cannot exercise his scheduled visitation, the parties agree to work together to ensure that the children and Father have some time together, even if not the entire scheduled time.

On July 19, 2023, Nick filed a motion for reallocation of parenting time and

modification of decision-making authority. He cited Nalley v. Adams, 2021 Ark. 191, 632

S.W.3d 297, for the proposition that, when parties share joint custody, a material change in

2 circumstances need not be proved for an adjustment, or reallocation, of parenting time. Nick

nevertheless alleged that, since entry of the divorce decree, there had been a change in

circumstances warranting a reallocation of parenting time and listed various issues that had

arisen with each child, ranging from medical issues and school matters to hygiene concerns.

Nick alleged that it was in the best interest of the children to reallocate parenting time such

that both parties received equal time with the children. Nick further alleged that, due to the

issues raised in his petition, he should be granted final decision-making authority regarding

the children’s health, education, and extracurricular activities.

A hearing was held on January 12, 2024.1 Nick testified that around March 2022,

MC3 had a bladder issue that he was unaware of until he received a medical bill for the

treatment that she received. Nick stated that Kristin had not informed him of this medical

issue and that he had had to contact the hospital to get the records for more information.

When Kristin testified, she insisted that she had, indeed, informed Nick about the treatment

for MC3’s bladder issue before it occurred.

Nick testified that both MC3 and MC4 had not been getting their routine medical

visits for the past two years. Nick said that he had learned that the visits were scheduled but

1 The appellant’s brief shall contain a concise statement of the case and the facts without argument. Ark. R. Sup. Ct. 4-2(a)(6). The rule provides that the statement must identify and discuss all material facts and procedural information in the record. The rule further explains that information is material if it is essential to understand the case and decide the issues on appeal. Here, Nick’s counsel has given us a “Statement of the Case” consisting of procedural highlights without any facts. We encourage counsel to familiarize herself with Rule 4-2(a)(6) before submitting another appellate brief.

3 that they had then been canceled, and he rescheduled them. He admitted that he did not

know whether those missed visits had been made up at a later time.

Nick testified that MC1 had been experiencing headaches for the past three or four

years. He said that he has not been kept informed about MC1’s headaches and was not aware

that MC1 had missed a significant number of days from school. Kristin testified that MC1’s

absences were excused. She further testified that, despite his absences, MC1’s grades are

good—the same as before the parties’ divorce. She also said that MC1’s headaches had

resolved with glasses and less time spent playing video games.

Nick testified that MC2 had a severe rash that he noticed when he went to Kristin’s

house to drop off something. He said that the rash had been present since Wednesday but

that Kristin had not sought medical treatment for MC2 by the time he first saw the rash,

which was on Sunday. Nick stated that he had asked Kristin to take MC2 to see a doctor

that Monday but that MC2 was not seen until Tuesday. Kristin testified that MC2 had

developed the rash after going on an outing with Nick and his wife and that she had initially

thought that it was poison ivy, which she treated herself. She said that, when the rash spread,

she took MC2 to see a doctor that Monday.

Nick testified that MC1 takes medication for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder

(ADHD) and receives allergy shots but that Kristin had stopped both of them without

informing him. Nick said that he had questioned Kristin about MC1’s ADHD medication

but that she had claimed MC1 did not need it and was doing fine in school. Nick said that

he was unaware of any doctor recommending that the medication be stopped. Kristin

4 testified that she had stopped the ADHD medication on advice from MC1’s doctors at the

headache clinic. The trial court asked about resuming the ADHD medication after MC1’s

headache issue was resolved, and Kristin explained that MC1 had complained of feeling like

“a zombie.” She also said that he was doing well and seemed focused at school. Nick testified

that, since stopping the medication, MC1 had been falling asleep at school. Kristin conceded

that one teacher had contacted her about MC1’s falling asleep in class in the period after

lunch, which is when he typically took his ADHD medication.

Regarding the allergy shots, Nick said that the shots had stopped a year before the

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2025 Ark. App. 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryan-nicholas-stewart-v-kristin-stewart-arkctapp-2025.