Durham v. Durham

120 S.W.3d 129, 82 Ark. App. 562
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedJune 18, 2003
DocketCA 02-1102
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 120 S.W.3d 129 (Durham v. Durham) 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
Durham v. Durham, 120 S.W.3d 129, 82 Ark. App. 562 (Ark. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Andree Layton Roaf, Judge.

This case involves a petition to relocate and a counterpetition for change of custody. Susan Durham appeals, arguing that the trial court erred in granting the change of custody to Timothy Durham based on her request to relocate with the parties’ children to Texas, and in denying her motion to relocate. We agree that the trial court erred and reverse and remand.

Susan Durham and Timothy Durham were awarded joint legal custody of their two minor children in their divorce decree entered December 20, 2000. Susan was awarded primary physical custody, subject to Timothy’s liberal visitation rights, which included every other weekend and two evenings a week, and child support. The divorce decree also contained a provision that the minor children not be removed from the jurisdiction on a permanent basis without obtaining the permission of the court.

On January 5, 2001, approximately two weeks after the divorce decree was entered, Susan filed a motion to relocate with the children to Houston, Texas, where she could live with her mother, seek employment, and possibly attend night school to earn a teaching certificate. Timothy filed an answer and a motion for contempt, alleging that he had been denied phone visitations with the children. Susan responded by filing a counter motion for contempt, alleging that Timothy had an overnight guest of the opposite sex with the children present, failed to transport the children to their activities during his visitation, had been late on numerous occasions during visitation, had not allowed Susan to keep the children when a babysitter was necessary during visitation, was in arrears on child-support payments, and finally that both parties were having difficulties with the visitation schedule then set by the court.

After a hearing in May 2001, the trial court entered an order on July 24, 2001, denying the motion to remove the children from the jurisdiction, finding that since the entry of the decree, there had not been a change in circumstances that would justify a modification. The court further determined that Timothy was behind in child support and ordered him to pay the child-support payments in advance.

In January 2002, Susan filed a second motion for permission to relocate with the children to Texas. She also filed a motion for modification of visitation and for an increase in child support. Timothy filed a response and a counterclaim requesting a change of custody. After a hearing on May 30, 2002, the trial court denied Susan’s motion to relocate with the children. The court then determined that Timothy should be awarded custody of the children subject to Susan having the identical visitation that Timothy previously had been granted. The court also ordered Susan to pay Timothy’s counsel $1,250 in attorney’s fees. Susan appeals from this order.

In the case before us, the alleged difficulties with custody arose not from the alternating weekend visitation, holiday visitation, or summer visitation, but from the extra two evenings per week that Timothy was allowed to visit the children. Timothy testified that he had between eleven to eighteen meetings a month because of his employment with the Quapaw Council, Boy Scouts of America. These meetings were always held between Monday and Thursday nights. Susan accommodated Timothy’s work schedule for a time before concluding that she and the children needed more structure in the visitation schedule. Susan testified that she was very often unable to schedule overtime with her work and that her children were severely limited in the after-school activities they could participate in because of Timothy’s erratic work schedule. The trial court stated in its decision that “she lived with him. She knows that he has these meetings with his job. This isn’t anything that has changed.” However, although Timothy’s professional responsibilities may not have changed, Susan’s status as a stay-at-home mother had clearly changed to that of an employed single parent.

Susan first sought approval to relocate to Texas with the children shortly after the entry of the divorce decree. At that time, she was unemployed, and child support was her only means of income. Both Timothy’s and Susan’s family live in Texas, and Susan testified that she and the children would benefit from this extended family support if she relocated. The trial court denied the first request, based in part upon Susan’s not making an effort to find a job in Arkansas.

Since the first relocation hearing, Susan has found a job working for Arkansas Blue Cross and Blue Shield making $8.60 per hour. With the child support she receives, Susan testified that she brought home between $1800-$2000 per month, that her rent was $550 per month and her utilities $400 a month, which left around $425 monthly disposable income to care for the children. During this time, Susan’s mother came from Texas and lived with her to assist with child care. She also allowed Susan the use of her vehicle to travel to and from work. At the time of the second hearing, Susan’s mother needed to return to Texas to care for Susan’s father, who had recently had a heart attack, and to maintain the family business. Without her mother to assist her, Susan testified that she would have to pay for child care and buy a vehicle. Susan testified that daycare for the youngest child and after-school care for the other minor children 1 would total about $580 a month. Neither Timothy nor Susan have family in Arkansas; both families reside within minutes of one another in Texas. Susan testified that when it became evident that her mother needed to return to Texas, she again sought permission to move. Susan testified that her mother had offered to let her and the children five in the family home rent free, and she stated that her mother had offered to take care of the children while Susan pursued a teaching degree at night and worked during the day. Susan’s mother testified that Susan had two jobs available to her in Texas, one with the family business and the other with a company where her sister is employed.

Timothy testified that he opposed the relocation and that Susan’s attempts to relocate had been stressful to him. He also testified that Susan was uncooperative in working out the weekday visitations. However, Timothy also testified that both sets of grandparents resided in the area to which Susan sought to relocate and agreed that extended family was important. He further testified that he could not afford to exercise his weekend visitation if she did relocate because of the distance to Houston and that he would consider looking for a job in the Houston area if Susan were allowed to relocate. Timothy also admitted to using a babysitter periodically, when the divorce decree gave Susan first opportunity to care for the children if the occasion arose.

In its ruling, the court stated:

These parties agreed to their custody arrangement, and in the last 18 months they’ve been in litigation for a year of it. The original motion was filed, what, about two weeks after the divorce was final, but we didn’t come to a hearing until May and the order wasn’t entered until July. So, then, we have another six-month reprieve and she again files. I could have played the tape from the hearing last year and it would have been almost identical to the testimony she gave today. She’s going to go work for her family.

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Bluebook (online)
120 S.W.3d 129, 82 Ark. App. 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/durham-v-durham-arkctapp-2003.