Hayduk v. Hayduk

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 2022
Docket2018-001833
StatusPublished

This text of Hayduk v. Hayduk (Hayduk v. Hayduk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayduk v. Hayduk, (S.C. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Court of Appeals

Matthew J. Hayduk, Appellant,

v.

Emily Rudisill Hayduk, Respondent.

Appellate Case No. 2018-001833

Appeal From Greenville County Tarita A. Dunbar, Family Court Judge

Opinion No. 5889 Heard June 16, 2021 – Filed January 12, 2022

AFFIRMED

David Alan Wilson, of Wilson & Englebardt, LLC, of Greenville, for Appellant.

J. Falkner Wilkes, of Greenville, for Respondent.

LOCKEMY, A.J.: Matthew Hayduk (Husband) appeals the family court's order dismissing his action for divorce based on his failure to meet the residency requirements of section 20-3-30 of the South Carolina Code (2014) and awarding attorney's fees to Emily Hayduk (Wife). We affirm.

FACTS

Husband and Wife married in Maine on June 25, 2011. They had two children: Child 1, born in August 2011 and Child 2, born in October 2014 (collectively, Children). On June 23, 2017, Husband filed a complaint for divorce on grounds of adultery and sought separate support and maintenance, child support, child custody, and visitation. He alleged he and Wife separated on September 10, 2016. In addition, Husband asserted he was a resident of Greenville County, South Carolina.1

After Wife failed to answer, Husband filed an affidavit of default on August 2, 2017; however, the record does not indicate an entry of default. On August 7, 2017, Wife moved to dismiss Husband's complaint for lack of personal jurisdiction. Wife argued Husband failed to meet the residency requirements of section 20-3-30 and the court lacked jurisdiction of the issues pertaining to Children under section 63-15-330 of the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (UCCJEA).2 The family court held a hearing on April 3, 2018, and April 13, 2018, to address these jurisdictional issues. At the outset, Wife conceded Husband served her in South Carolina.

From the time the couple married in June 2011 until early 2014, they lived with Wife's parents—the Rudisills—in Eden, North Carolina. For a short period from early to late 2014, Wife, Husband, and Child 1 lived in a home on East Meadow Road in Eden; Wife's friend had inherited the home and allowed them to live there rent-free provided they paid the taxes and maintained the property. However, Wife and Husband had to move out sooner than expected when the homeowner decided to rent to a paying tenant instead. At that point, they moved back in with the Rudisills.

Wife explained that in 2011, while she was pregnant with Child 1, she and Husband began looking at homes in Eden and planned to purchase one. Wife stated she and Husband found a home on Center Church Road in Eden and made an arrangement with the homeowner that if they paid the back taxes, the home would belong to them. She stated they obtained an ownership interest in the home when they paid the back taxes in cash at the Rockingham County Courthouse in 2011 and the owner of record allowed them to renovate and live in the property; however, Wife acknowledged this interest was not recorded. Wife explained the home needed renovation to make it "livable," and the renovation process took longer than expected.

1 Wife filed a separate action in North Carolina on July 7, 2017, seeking emergency ex parte custody of Children. 2 See generally S.C. Code Ann. §§ 63-15-300 to -394 (2010). Section 63-15-330 sets forth the circumstances under which a South Carolina family court has jurisdiction in a child custody proceeding. Child 2 was born in October 2014. Wife explained that in December of 2014, she, Husband and Children traveled to South Carolina to visit Husband's parents at their home on Ansley Court in Greer and they stayed there until the spring of 2015. They then returned to Eden and moved into the home on Center Church Road. Wife explained that although the home needed more work, enough had been done to make the home habitable. She testified they moved all of their belongings and furniture into the house on Center Church Road, the four of them stayed there regularly, and Husband kept all of his vehicles there.

Wife testified Husband's mother eventually came to own the home and deeded the home to Wife on October 5, 2015. Wife acknowledged, however, that there was no recorded deed showing this. Wife stated that when they originally acquired the Center Church Road home, her understanding was that she, Husband, and Child 1 would live there "for a couple [of] years, flip and sell [it] and move closer to Greensboro." Wife explained Greensboro was about a forty-five-minute drive from Eden. She stated she and Husband "had always talked about wanting to be closer to Greensboro" because it was a larger city, was where Children went to school, and where Husband would have to fly out of for his work with Delta.

Wife testified she enrolled Child 1 in preschool in Eden for the 2015–2016 school year. During the summer of 2016, Wife went to training in Charlotte for a Montessori teaching position and continued to live at the Center Church Road home. Wife began teaching at the Greensboro Montessori School in the fall of 2016 and Children were both enrolled there. Wife testified she and Husband separated in September 2016 and she moved all of her things out of the home and moved back to the Rudisills' with Children. She stated all of Husband's belongings were still in the home after she moved out and that Husband's visitation with Children always occurred at the home on Center Church Road. She averred Husband gave her no indication that his home was actually not with Wife but with his parents in South Carolina.

Wife testified that through 2016, she and Husband were heavily involved in Rockingham County politics. She stated Husband encouraged her to run for the Rockingham County School Board in 2014. Wife testified Husband was on a committee for the Rockingham County Republican Party and accompanied her to all of the Republican Party events in Rockingham County. She stated he donated to the campaigns of several North Carolina politicians and was "extremely involved in Rockingham County and North Carolina politics." Regarding Wife's tax returns, she testified Husband controlled their financial life and she was "not privy to any kind of tax returns, other than the ones that he filed for [her] when [she] was working in Eden." She stated those were North Carolina tax returns. Wife acknowledged she signed a South Carolina tax return for Children after she and Husband separated, but she stated he told her to sign it and she felt she had no choice but to do so.

Rinda Rudisill, Wife's mother, testified that from June 2011 until 2014 Wife, Husband, and Child 1 lived at the Rudisills' home in Eden, North Carolina. Rudisill testified that in December of 2014, Wife, Husband, and Children left to visit his parents in South Carolina for Christmas. According to Rudisill, they extended their stay in Greer because Husband "got mad at" Wife's father and they did not return until about June of 2015. She testified that when they left, they took only suitcases with what they would need for the trip and nothing indicated they were leaving for a long time. Rudisill stated Wife's father replaced the wiring and plumbing in the Center Church Road home and Wife, Husband, and Children moved into the home when they returned to Eden. Rudisill averred Wife and Husband's long-term plan was to stay at that home. Rudisill testified Husband never gave her the impression he considered the Center Church Road home to be his second home. She recalled Wife, Husband, and Children lived at the home until September 2016 when Wife and Children moved back with the Rudisills.

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Bluebook (online)
Hayduk v. Hayduk, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayduk-v-hayduk-scctapp-2022.