David Eversole v. Rita Eversole

2021 Ark. App. 114
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 10, 2021
StatusPublished

This text of 2021 Ark. App. 114 (David Eversole v. Rita Eversole) 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
David Eversole v. Rita Eversole, 2021 Ark. App. 114 (Ark. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Cite as 2021 Ark. App. 114 Elizabeth Perry ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS I attest to the accuracy and integrity of this document DIVISION II 2023.06.22 15:11:43 -05'00' No. CV-19-542 2023.001.20174 Opinion Delivered March 10, 2021 DAVID EVERSOLE APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE SALINE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 63DR-16-61]

RITA EVERSOLE HONORABLE KENNETH CASADY, APPELLEE JUDGE

AFFIRMED

N. MARK KLAPPENBACH, Judge

David Eversole appeals from the Saline County Circuit Court’s order denying his

motion for a change in custody as well as his motions for contempt and modification of

child support. Eversole also appeals the circuit court’s attorney-fee award to appellee Rita

Eversole (now Miller). We previously ordered rebriefing due to deficiencies in Eversole’s

abstract. Eversole v. Eversole, 2020 Ark. App. 387. The parties have now submitted

substituted briefs. We affirm.

The parties have one daughter, PE, who was born in 2010. They divorced in the

state of Georgia in 2012. In conjunction with the divorce, the court entered a “parenting

plan” wherein the parties agreed on custody, visitation, and child support. The agreement

provided for joint legal custody with Miller as the primary physical custodian. The

agreement contemplated Miller and PE relocating to Arkansas and granted Eversole four

days of visitation each month in addition to other holiday and summer visitation. The agreement also gave both parents unlimited telephone access to PE for reasonable lengths of

time. In March 2014, Eversole filed a petition to register the Georgia decree and parenting

plan in the Polk County Circuit Court and sought to modify the parenting plan. He

requested that he be granted custody of PE for at least one half of the year until she starts

school. In December 2014, the Polk County Circuit Court entered an order finding that

Eversole had failed to provide sufficient evidence of a material change in circumstances.

However, the court did modify his child support and summer visitation, and it ordered that

the parties set a schedule for video calls with PE three times a week. Eversole appealed, and

this court affirmed the circuit court’s order. Eversole v. Eversole, 2015 Ark. App. 645, 476

S.W.3d 199.

In early 2016, the case was transferred to Saline County due to Miller’s relocation

there, and Eversole filed a motion to modify the decree and a motion for contempt. He

alleged that Miller had violated provisions of the parenting plan regarding joint decision-

making, had interfered with his FaceTime video calls with PE, and had refused to coparent

with him. He also alleged that he was entitled to a modification of his child support and to

relief regarding his obligation to provide insurance for PE. The parties attended mediation

in December 2016 and entered into a memorandum of understanding. Per the

memorandum, Eversole’s FaceTime visitation was scheduled to take place on Mondays,

Wednesdays, and Saturdays at 6:00 p.m. for up to one hour unless ended earlier by PE.

In January 2017, Eversole filed a motion for change of custody and a motion for

contempt, which expanded on the allegations in his prior motion. A temporary order was

entered in June 2017 providing that PE receive counseling, changing summer visitation,

2 and ordering that phone contact continue per the memorandum of understanding. Eversole

filed an amended motion for change of custody and motion for contempt in May 2018 again

making substantially similar allegations. Eversole also filed a motion for a reduction in child

support requesting either a reduction or, alternatively, a termination of his child support due

to his monthly visitation expenses.

The final hearing was held in January 2019. Eversole testified that communication

had always been a problem since the divorce. He communicates with PE primarily through

FaceTime video calls, and he communicates with Miller almost exclusively through text

messages. Eversole said that he kept a copy of every text message between him and Miller

and had provided them during discovery. He said that he had recorded every FaceTime

with PE “because she is exhibiting a lot of concerning behaviors and it has been my hope

that [Miller] would discuss these issues with me.” He said that the current problem, which

started after mediation, was PE’s hanging up on him.

During his testimony, Eversole played audio and video clips from his FaceTime

recordings. 1 He said that prior to March 2016, Miller would hold the iPad for PE’s

FaceTime calls, and Miller would often not like something he said and terminate the call.

Seven clips were played from calls in 2015 when PE was four and five years old. The calls

ended abruptly when Miller either terminated them herself or prompted PE to terminate

the calls. In one call, Miller tells PE to tell Eversole that a bear he sent her was stiff and

1 Before the first clip was played, the attorney ad litem noted that the clips Eversole planned to play had been cut down significantly from the full videos produced in discovery. The attorney ad litem stated that in his opinion, the portions that were cut were not favorable to Eversole. The court responded that it would take that into account.

3 scratchy. After Eversole tells PE, “I don’t know why your mom is being like this,” Miller

terminates the call. In other calls, arguments ensue after Eversole asks PE why she is being

weird and when Miller requests that he change the subject because he is upsetting PE.

Eversole introduced text-message exchanges that occurred after these calls in his attempts to

resolve the situation, but the texts usually ended in an argument and Miller not responding

to requests to restart the call. He said that he believed Miller was trying to alienate him

from PE.

Eversole testified that after the memorandum of understanding, his calls were made

without Miller in the room with PE. He played five clips from calls in 2017 in which PE

hangs up on him. In texts, he asks Miller to have PE restart the call, but Miller states that

PE says she is done talking and has the right to end calls per the memorandum of

understanding. Eversole testified that he does not have a problem with PE ending calls

early, but he wants her to be respectful and not just hang up on him. He was concerned

that because Miller would refuse to restart the calls or discuss the situation with him

afterwards, he was unable to address problematic behavior with PE until several days later.

On cross-examination, Eversole acknowledged that PE got upset in some of the video clips

he played, but he denied any blame for that. During the attorney ad litem’s cross-

examination, a longer version of a clip from Eversole’s direct examination was played in

which, prior to Miller’s prompting PE to terminate the call, PE tells Eversole that she is

tired of talking, and Eversole tells PE that she hurt his feelings.

Eversole testified that before calls were scheduled, he would text Miller when he

wanted to FaceTime, and she, at times, would not respond for up to five days. Eversole

4 introduced into evidence a chart he made documenting every day he requested to speak to

PE and whether the request was granted. He calculated the number of times he was denied

three calls a week as ordered by the Polk County Circuit Court. He claimed that there

were twelve violations in 2015, twelve violations in 2016, seven violations in 2017, and one

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David Eversole v. Rita Eversole
2020 Ark. App. 387 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2020)

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2021 Ark. App. 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-eversole-v-rita-eversole-arkctapp-2021.