Cody Dale Leonard v. Jennifer Rose Leonard

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 1, 2022
Docket2022 CA 000807
StatusUnknown

This text of Cody Dale Leonard v. Jennifer Rose Leonard (Cody Dale Leonard v. Jennifer Rose Leonard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cody Dale Leonard v. Jennifer Rose Leonard, (Ky. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

RENDERED: DECEMBER 2, 2022; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals

NO. 2022-CA-0807-ME

CODY DALE LEONARD APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM GRAVES CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE KEVIN D. BISHOP, JUDGE ACTION NO. 22-D-00031-001

JENNIFER ROSE LEONARD APPELLEE

OPINION AFFIRMING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: COMBS, LAMBERT, AND TAYLOR, JUDGES.

COMBS, JUDGE: This is an appeal from a Domestic Violence Order (DVO).

After our review, we affirm.

On April 18, 2022, the Appellee, Jennifer Rose Leonard (Jennifer),

filed a petition for an order of protection against her husband, the Appellee, Cody

Dale Leonard (Cody), on behalf of herself and the parties’ two minor children.

Jennifer alleged that on April 17, 2022, Cody attempted to persuade their son to ride on a four-wheeler with him after he (Cody) had been drinking. When Jennifer

refused to allow their son to do so, Cody “became angry, yelling and cursing. . . .

told [Jennifer] to get [her] things and leave the home.” Jennifer left with the

children and went to her parents’ home. According to the petition, Cody called

Jennifer later that evening and told her that if she did not return home with the

children within 30 minutes, Cody would “f**k [her] up. F**k your dad up and

f**k your whole world up.” Jennifer explained that Cody had been very angry and

erratic for several days prior to this occurrence:

Cody has a severe alcohol abuse problem that has been escalated over the past 11 years to the point that he has gotten medication to attempt to stop drinking. On numerous occasions he has attempted to get my children to ride with him on a four wheeler or vehicle while he was driving drunk. Cody also has significant mental health issues to the point that he has made numerous threats to kill himself. I AM SCARED FOR ME AND MY CHILDREN[.]

(Upper case original.) On April 18, 2022, the Graves District Court entered an

Emergency Protective Order (EPO). The matter was transferred subsequently to

Graves Circuit Court,1 which conducted a hearing on May 9, 2022.

Jennifer testified at the hearing. Cody had been very angry with her

on April 16, 2022. Jennifer heard a speakerphone call between Cody and their

1 According to the circuit court’s order ruling on Cody’s motion to vacate, the domestic violence case was transferred in accordance with the local rule after Cody filed a divorce action in Graves Circuit Court on April 22, 2022.

-2- daughter, who was 12 years of age. Cody said that he was not coming home, and

he asked their daughter to pack some clothes for him. The daughter was upset.

Cody returned home; he was “flipping” Jennifer off and calling her derogatory

names. According to Jennifer, their daughter, who was still awake, heard it. Cody

took some clothes and left for the night.

The next morning (Easter Sunday, April 17, 2022), Cody came home.

He seemed a little more normal, and they went to church and did their Easter

festivities. That evening, Jennifer went to the shop to check on Cody. A can of

beer was on a table. Cody was slurring his words, was stumbling, and was very

angry with Jennifer. Cody asked their eight-year-old son, who was with Jennifer,

to ride with him on a four-wheeler to go fishing on their property. Jennifer said

that their son could go fishing but that he would have to ride with her and that she

would stay with them. Cody refused and told their son to get out of the car and get

on the four-wheeler. Jennifer told her son to get in the car. Cody proceeded to yell

derogatory comments, telling Jennifer to “get her s**t and get the f**k out.”

Jennifer took the children and went to her mother’s house.

About 10:30 p.m. that night, Cody called Jennifer from his brother-in-

law’s phone, demanding to know where the kids were. Jennifer said that they were

with her mother. Jennifer testified that Cody said he wanted them home in 30

minutes or that he was going to “f**k me up, f**k my dad up, and f**k up my

-3- whole world.” Jennifer took that statement as a threat to her children because her

children are her whole world. Jennifer filed the EPO the next morning.

Jennifer further testified that Cody has had a severe drinking problem

for the last several years. Cody’s counsel objected to relevancy. The court

believed that her statement was relevant and stated that it would let Jennifer “go a

little bit, but not very far.” Following further discussion -- and objection --

regarding Cody’s drinking history and risk to the children, the court advised that it

would “sustain that [objection] for today,” directing Jennifer’s counsel to save that

line of questioning for the pendente lite hearing. The court asked Jennifer if she

understood Cody’s statements -- that he would f**k her, her dad, and her world up

-- as a threat to her personal safety. Jennifer responded, “Absolutely” -- so much

so, that she stayed up the whole night watching her kids.

On redirect, Jennifer testified that she was afraid when Cody was

telling their son to get on the four-wheeler. The court overruled Cody’s objection

to that testimony because the statements alleged that Cody was putting the child at

risk of serious physical injury if he were operating a four-wheeler while under the

influence. Jennifer further testified that she had had to pull her son off the four-

wheeler on a previous occasion when Cody was drunk. Thus, this was not the first

instance when something like this had happened.

-4- Cody called Michael Sean Richard, a neighbor, as a witness. Richard

was at the parties’ property talking with Cody on Easter Sunday. He was there

when Jennifer pulled up with her son and was there when they left. Richard did

not observe Cody slurring, drunk, or under the influence. However, Richard

testified that he had seen Cody take “maybe one or two shots of whiskey” before

Jennifer got there. On cross-examination, however, Richard testified that he was

not within earshot the whole time that Cody and Jennifer were having a discussion.

He does not know whether or not Cody and Jennifer were discussing the child’s

getting on the four-wheeler or not.

The court then asked Richard a few questions. He arrived there about

5:20 and left about 7:00 p.m. During that time frame, he saw Cody drink one to

two shots of whiskey. Richard testified that he has been around Cody when he has

been intoxicated. Richard had just started coming around again maybe two or

three months ago. A few years ago, Cody was intoxicated a lot -- essentially on a

daily basis. Over the past few months, Richard had been around Cody roughly five

or six times; Easter Sunday was the only day on which he saw Cody take a shot --

actually two shots on this occasion.

Next, Cody called his brother-in-law, Seth Jones, to testify. Jones is

married to Cody’s sister. Cody went to Jones’s house later that night. Jones was

watching television and was falling asleep. Cody asked to use the phone and made

-5- a call on speaker. Jones heard Cody say that he wanted his kids back home in 30

minutes or that she (Jennifer) would regret it. He also heard Cody say, “f**k you

all and f**k your whole family.” Jones could not hear what Jennifer said.

Cody also called Rachel Pickering, an investigator for the Cabinet for

Health and Family Services, as a witness.

Cody himself did not testify.

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Cody Dale Leonard v. Jennifer Rose Leonard, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cody-dale-leonard-v-jennifer-rose-leonard-kyctapp-2022.