Evangeline Newton v. Byron Newton

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 16, 2025
Docket2024-CA-1196
StatusUnpublished

This text of Evangeline Newton v. Byron Newton (Evangeline Newton v. Byron Newton) 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
Evangeline Newton v. Byron Newton, (Ky. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

RENDERED: MAY 16, 2025; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals NO. 2024-CA-1196-MR

EVANGELINE NEWTON APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE A. CHRISTINE WARD, JUDGE ACTION NO. 21-CI-503464

BYRON NEWTON APPELLEE

OPINION AFFIRMING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: ACREE, CETRULO, AND TAYLOR, JUDGES.

ACREE, JUDGE: Evangeline Newton, pro se, appeals the Jefferson Circuit Court,

Family Court Division’s September 5, 2024 Order finding her in contempt for

failing to abide by the parenting schedule. We affirm.

The parties share joint custody of a minor child, T.N. The family

court previously found Evangeline in contempt for failing to abide by the parenting

schedule by order of record entered July 20, 2023. Evangeline appealed, and we affirmed. Newton v. Newton, No. 2023-CA-0940-MR, 2024 WL 4310856 (Ky.

App. Sep. 27, 2024).

However, while that appeal was pending, Byron filed a new motion

for contempt in April 2024. (Record (R.) 292). He alleged Evangeline was not

following the parenting schedule and filed a document listing various dates in 2024

indicating tardy exchanges and no-shows. (R. 294). The dates listed were:

January 3 (tardy), January 10 (tardy), January 25 (tardy), January 31 (no-show),

February 7 (tardy), February 21 (tardy), February 28 (no-show), March 1 (tardy),

and March 6 (tardy).

In a June 2024 filing, Evangeline did not dispute her failure to follow

the parenting schedule, but instead offered a myriad of justifications. (R. 313).

WhatsApp messages between the parties confirm Evangeline’s noncompliance and

the various justifications she gave Byron. (R. 378-98).

The family court conducted a hearing on Byron’s motion to hold

Evangeline in contempt on July 29, 2024. Evangeline was represented by counsel

at the hearing. She argued T.N.’s lack of cooperation was the primary cause of her

tardiness and no-shows. Evangeline also repeatedly argued any parenting time

Byron missed resulting from her noncompliance could be made up, even after the

family court stated the amount of time missed was not relevant, and that it was

-2- instead “just a matter of principle and trying to get somebody to follow the court

order.” (Video Record (VR) 7/29/24 at 3:13:50).

July 29 was a Monday. That same weekend, Evangeline was a no-

show to exchange T.N. and, on August 6, Bryon filed yet another motion to hold

Evangeline in contempt for not following the parenting schedule. (R. 467).

Evangeline filed a pro se response. She alleged Byron tore T.N.’s fingernail off

and hit him with an umbrella and that she had taken T.N. to the emergency room.

She claimed she denied Byron his parenting time because of what a medical

provider and child protective services (CPS) told her. (R. 471).

The court conducted a hearing on the motion on August 12.

Evangeline was once again represented by counsel. At the hearing, T.N.’s

guardian ad litem (GAL) took the position Evangeline is “routinely using CPS in

order to prevent [Byron] from having the visits, so every time he is to have a visit,

he does get a phone call [from CPS].” (VR 8/12/24 at 12:03:20). She also said she

talked to both T.N. and child protective services, and she had “no concerns . . . that

[T.N.] is being harmed at [Byron’s] house.” (VR 8/12/24 at 12:03:40). The GAL

was candid with the court: “I do think it’s just a matter of just willful disregard for

your court orders at this point.” (VR 8/12/24 at 12:03:50).

This prompted the family court to share its concerns with

Evangeline’s counsel:

-3- Obviously, you’ve gotten into this case more recently, but I will tell you, this has been a pattern. And so, hopefully, maybe you can talk to your client and help her to understand . . . she’s creating some serious concerns for the court by her pattern of behavior, in not following the court orders, circumventing the court orders, creating false concerns with child protective services, and it has been an ongoing pattern.

(VR 8/12/24 at 12:04:00). Nonetheless, the family court declined to set a contempt

hearing, noting that Evangeline did take T.N. to the hospital, but reminded

Evangeline she “needs to follow that court ordered schedule. It’s just been a

pattern.” (VR 8/12/24 at 12:06:40).

The family court subsequently ruled on Byron’s first contempt

motion, finding Evangeline in contempt based on the instances of noncompliance

from January to March. (R. 566). The family court rejected Evangeline’s

justifications, namely T.N.’s purported resistance and that on various days

Evangeline “did not feel well,” stating that it “did not find Evangeline’s testimony

credible” and that it did “not find Evangeline’s justifications sincere.” (R. 567).

Having found Evangeline in contempt, the family court imposed only a minor

sanction: one additional weekend of parenting time for Byron.

This appeal followed.

Within the burden-shifting framework of civil contempt, once a

presumption of contempt arises, it may be rebutted if “the alleged contemnor

[shows], clearly and convincingly, that he or she was unable to comply with the

-4- court’s order or was, for some other reason, justified in not complying.”

Commonwealth, Cabinet for Health and Family Services v. Ivy, 353 S.W.3d 324,

332 (Ky. 2011). If the alleged contemnor successfully rebuts the presumption, “the

trial court must make its determination from the totality of the evidence, with the

ultimate burden of persuasion on the movant.” Id. A trial court’s disposition of a

contempt motion is tested for an abuse of discretion. Meyers v. Petrie, 233 S.W.3d

212, 215 (Ky. App. 2007). “The test for abuse of discretion is whether the trial

[court’s] decision was arbitrary, unreasonable, unfair, or unsupported by sound

legal principles.” Id. (citations omitted).

The record is clear as to various instances of Evangeline’s

noncompliance with the parenting schedule from January to March 2024, as

illustrated by the WhatsApp messages between the parties. And because the record

is clear as to her noncompliance, Evangeline could only avoid a finding of

contempt by showing, “clearly and convincingly, that . . . she was unable to

comply with the court’s order or was, for some other reason, justified in not

complying.” Ivy, 353 S.W.3d at 332. The family court did not abuse its discretion

in determining Evangeline failed to carry her burden.

Evangeline’s pro se brief repeats arguments she made before the

family court, though it largely addresses matters outside the scope of our review –

-5- a review limited to the family court’s finding of contempt.1 In his first contempt

motion, Byron identified nine instances of noncompliance in a span of

approximately two-months. The frequency of Evangeline’s noncompliance

undercuts the believability she was always acting in good faith, particularly given

her previous contempt for noncompliance with the parenting schedule, as well as

the position taken by the GAL in this matter. Heavy traffic or needing to “stop and

get gas” (Appellant’s Brief 5) might explain an isolated instance of tardiness. But

they do not “clearly and convincingly” explain habitual noncompliance.

Nor was the family court “arbitrary, unreasonable, [or] unfair” in

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Related

Meyers v. Petrie
233 S.W.3d 212 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 2007)
Akers v. Stephenson
469 S.W.2d 704 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1970)
Commonwealth, Cabinet for Health & Family Services v. Ivy
353 S.W.3d 324 (Kentucky Supreme Court, 2011)

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Evangeline Newton v. Byron Newton, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evangeline-newton-v-byron-newton-kyctapp-2025.