Gwendolyn Diamond v. Decarrious Byrcious Jenkins

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 21, 2025
Docket56,330-CA
StatusPublished

This text of Gwendolyn Diamond v. Decarrious Byrcious Jenkins (Gwendolyn Diamond v. Decarrious Byrcious Jenkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gwendolyn Diamond v. Decarrious Byrcious Jenkins, (La. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Judgment rendered May 21, 2025. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 2166, La. C.C.P.

No. 56,330-CA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

GWENDOLYN DIAMOND Plaintiff-Appellant

versus

DECARRIOUS BYRCIOUS Defendant-Appellee JENKINS

Appealed from the Third Judicial District Court for the Parish of Lincoln, Louisiana Trial Court No. 61,300

Honorable Bruce Edward Hampton, Judge

LAW OFFICE OF SMITH, Counsel for Appellant NWOKORIE & SMITH By: Brian Smith

DECARRIOUS BYRCIOUS JENKINS In Proper Person

Before PITMAN, STONE, and STEPHENS, JJ. STONE, J.

This child custody matter arises from the Third Judicial District Court,

the Honorable Bruce E. Hampton, presiding. The plaintiff-appellant is the

child’s maternal grandmother, Gwendolyn Diamond (“the grandmother”).

The child’s biological mother, Tiffany Drayton (“the mother”), is deceased.

The defendant-appellee is the child’s biological father, Decarrious Jenkins

(“the father”), who has maintained “primary custody” of the child since May

20, 2022. The grandmother initiated the instant proceedings by filing a

petition for sole custody and an amended emergency ex parte petition for

temporary sole custody of the child, which would grant the father only

supervised visitation. The trial court denied the grandmother’s proposed

modification. We affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The mother and the father never married but lived together for a time.

Their child, born May 14, 2013, lived primarily with the mother until her

death on October 14, 2020. According to the grandmother, the father had

“little contact with the child and did not have a consistent relationship with

the child.”

After the mother died, the child began living with the grandmother;

the grandmother filed an ex parte petition for temporary and permanent sole

custody on October 29, 2020. The trial court issued an order granting

temporary sole custody to the grandmother and allowing the father

supervised visitation.

After some litigation, the parties entered a consent judgment for

permanent custody which decreed, “after the child gets out of school in May

of 2022, the custody/visitation will transfer to the father having primary custody of the minor child, D.D.1 (the ‘child’) with custody/visitation to the

grandmother, Gwendolyn Diamond.” This judgment, which was signed

May 20, 2022, gives the grandmother “custody/visitation” every other

weekend during the school year and the first two weeks of June, July, and

August, and provides rules specifying physical custody for holidays.

On August 29, 2022, the grandmother filed another petition for sole

custody and for contempt. She alleged that the father did not allow her the

“custody/visitation” provided in the consent decree and asked that he be

punished with an order that he pay “penalties [,] [court costs,] and attorney’s

fees and…spend time in jail.” The court received testimony from the child

in a Watermeier hearing.2 She indicated that she wanted to live with her

father. The court noted this on record during the trial on the instant matter

(i.e., the grandmother’s most recent petition for sole custody).

The court held a contradictory hearing on the grandmother’s August

29, 2022, petition; and on December 19, 2022, the court signed a judgment

which: (1) ordered that, when the grandmother is to take physical custody of

the child at 3 PM on a Friday during the school year, she is to do so at

Ruston Elementary School; (2) ordered that all other exchanges take place at

the Ruston Police department parking lot; (3) granted voluntary dismissal of

the grandmother’s August 29, 2022 petition for sole custody; and (4) held

the father in contempt and ordered him to pay attorney fees and court costs.

1 We are using the child’s initials in lieu of her name. 2 The child, if found competent to testify, may be interviewed in chambers on the record with both counsel present; the parents’ presence is not required. Watermeier v. Watermeier, 462 So. 2d 1272, 1273 (La. App. 5 Cir.), writ denied, 464 So. 2d 301 (La. 1985).

2 On May 22, 2024, the grandmother filed yet another petition for sole

custody. On June 5, 2024, she filed an amended ex parte petition for

temporary emergency custody. The court held a contradictory hearing on

June 24, 2024. The following paragraphs summarize the evidence adduced

at that hearing.

Since the consent judgment, the child has been living at the father’s

residence during his periods of physical custody. The father currently shares

a home in Downsville, Louisiana, with his girlfriend, Shakira. Three other

children also live there: a half-sister of the child and two unrelated children

of Shakira’s. The father works in Midland, Texas, which, according to him,

is approximately an eight-hour drive from his Downsville residence. He is a

truck driver for an oilfield company and is generally expected to work for at

least seven days at a time. However, he is not required to stay a full seven

days every time he goes to Midland for work. The father in effect admitted

to being gone for work during a significant amount of his physical custodial

time but maintained that he is generally home for over half of each month.

He also stated that the longest time he stayed gone for work was 21 days and

that this was an exception to allow him to earn extra money for Christmas

expenses.

On May 12, 2024, the grandmother had the child for Mother’s Day.

In view of the child’s impending birthday on May 14, the grandmother

promised the child a birthday gift upon her next visit. The next visit was per

the existing decree to begin on June 1, 2024. However, the previous night,

the father admittedly told the child that she “may” not be going to the

grandmother’s the next day; he explained to the court that he said this

because the grandmother is disrespectful to him and has cost him a lot of 3 money in litigation expenses. Nonetheless, the father testified that he was

out of town for work on June 1, 2024. Shakira brought the child to the

police station for the exchange at 8:30 AM. However, according to the

father, the grandmother was not there and did not communicate regarding

her absence. Shakira then dropped the child at Sharity’s house (i.e., the

child’s paternal aunt who assists with the child’s care).

The grandmother testified that, while at her aunt’s house that

morning, the child texted her that: (1) the father said the child and the

grandmother would never see each other again; and (2) she (the child) could

not live without the grandmother and would rather die. (The grandmother

did not introduce any of these alleged text messages into evidence.) The

grandmother reported this to the police. In response, Ruston police

conducted a wellness check and transported the child to a hospital

emergency room and then later to “Brentwood,” where the child remained

for approximately one week. The father testified that he was on “Facetime”

with his sister Sharity during the wellness check and that the police notified

him they were taking the child for medical attention. He also testified that,

upon learning this, he immediately left Midland and drove to the medical

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