Hays v. Hays

2017 Ark. App. 439, 526 S.W.3d 907, 2017 Ark. App. LEXIS 498
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 13, 2017
DocketCV-17-30
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2017 Ark. App. 439 (Hays v. Hays) 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
Hays v. Hays, 2017 Ark. App. 439, 526 S.W.3d 907, 2017 Ark. App. LEXIS 498 (Ark. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

ROBERT J. GLADWIN, Judge

hThe Faulkner County Circuit Court issued a divorce decree on October 21, 2016, denying permanent alimony to appellant Melissa Hundley Hays. On appeal, Melissa argues that the trial court abused its discretion by applying a public-policy argument to deny her request for permanent alimony. We affirm.

Appellee Jason Lee Hays and Melissa married on April 26, 2009, and no children were born of the marriage. Jason filed for divorce on March 17, 2016, and Melissa counterclaimed for separate maintenance, alleging that she was disabled, unable tó work, and had not worked during their marriage. Melissa sought temporary and permanent alimony, and she later amended her counterclaim to ask for a divorce. At the divorce trial, the parties stipulated that Melissa would be granted the divorce on her amended counterclaim, and Jason waived corroboration of grounds. The parties further stipulated that the home in which they had lived was Melissa’s premarital property.

12Janet Lee Hundley, Melissa’s mother, testified that her daughter is thirty-six years old and previously had only two short-term jobs, at Walmart and a veterinarian’s clinic, but she had not worked since she married Jason. Ms. Hundley said that Melissa and Jason had been together for seventeen years but had been married for only seven years. She said that Melissa is a visual learner and has an “information processing malfunction.” She said that when Melissa gets upset or gets “thrown” about something, she “just shuts down. She cannot function. She suffers from severe anxiety.” She said that Jason knew about Melissa’s disabilities, and she had explained to him that when Melissa mixes up her sentences, it is because of her learning style. She said that Melissa had done some light filing and copying under supervision for the family firm; however, she said that these skills would not translate into real-world jobs.

Ms. Hundley said that Melissa does not drink but that Jason does. Ms. Hundley said that Melissa takes medication for anxiety and that there were times, when Melissa and Jason were fighting, that she believed Melissa had overmedicated herself. She claimed that she had not seen this since Melissa and Jason had separated.

Ms. Hundley said that Jason had a new vehicle that he had purchased by trading in a truck that had been a gift to Melissa from her and her husband. She also described the condition of Melissa’s home when Jason left: it had paint all over the ceiling and carpet where Jason had begun to paint; there were holes in the wall; the cabinet doors were loose; electrical covers were broken; the dishwasher had no door; and there was only cold water connected to the washer.

IsOn cross-examination, Ms. Hundley said that Melissa could drive and that she had passed a driver’s test when she was seventeen. Melissa had gone to college for a year but could not make her “grades,” even with her mother’s tutoring. Ms. Hundley had not witnessed Melissa overmedicating since her separation from Jason, but she admitted that she had' not been with Melissa all the time. She also said that Jason had emailed her about concerns he had regarding Melissa’s overmedication. Jason had specifically asked Ms. Hundley to help him with this more than once. However, she said that she does not believe Melissa has a problem overusing prescription medications anymore. She admitted to having'asked Jason in a 2016 email to hide Melissa’s pills.

Ms. Hundley said that Jason had paid the mortgage payments on Melissa’s house but had not kept the house in good repair. She also said that because of her health issues, Melissa spent her time'playing video games, watching movies, and cleaning her house. She thought Melissa spent two or three hours per day playing video games. She said that- Melissa drove her car for grocery shopping, getting to Little Rock, or going to the doctor. She said that she trusted Melissa to deal with her doctors and to take her medications. She said that Jason would not go to couple’s counseling with Melissa in 2014, when Jason had filed for divorce the first time. After they had reconciled, Jason promised to be calmer with Melissa, and Melissa promised to find a job. She said that she had helped Melissa fill out application forms online, but Melissa could not find á job. She also had helped Melissa fill out a Social Security disability application, but Melissa’s application was denied.

Jason testified that he had paid the mortgage on the house when he was living with Melissa. He also admitted that he had caused the damage to the home depicted in | ¿photographs presented as evidence. He said that he knew of Melissa’s information-processing problem and had seen the effects of it. He said that when they had a conversation about uncomfortable things, Melissa would shut down. He said that Melissa has trouble, getting her point across and she mixes her words up in her sentences. He claimed that Melissa had always had these problems but that they had worsened.

Before he married Melissa in 2009, he had been with -her for twelve years. He was aware of her two small jobs and that they had not lasted. He said that Melissa had agreed to get a job after they married in 2009. However, from the time they were married, Melissa had never worked. He said that he thought Melissa could be a stocker at Kroger and that she wanted a job where she did not have to deal with people and could work on her own. He thought that she presented well and that someone would hire her.

Jason said that he drank to excess sometimes and that Melissa did not drink; He said that he has a girlfriend named Susan Lambert, who is unemployed, and that he does not support her. He said that Melissa was covered by health insurance through his employer. He agreed that.he had contributed more than $2000. a month to Melissa before June 2016,- However, he said that he had resisted paying spousal support because he thought Melissa needed to have something to do, and if he continued “to feed that,” he was worried for her health and safety. Jason said ,that he worked as, a conductor for Amtrak and suffered from PTSD because a girl had stepped in front of his train while he was training as an engineer. He also had injured his arm- in April 2015 and was off work for seven and a half months. Recently, he had been working two jobs to cover for another conductor, so he had been able to contribute more to Melissa. He thought that if Melissa could get a job, she could | ¿support herself. He paid $10,000 down on his new truck by trading in the 2013 truck he had owned with Melissa. They got the 2013 truck by trading in her truck to make the $1000 down payment. He owed $28,000 on his new vehicle.

On cross-examination, Jason said that Melissa played Dictionary and Trivial Pursuit and that she played video games that required complex thought. He said that these games took dexterity and that she was better- at them than he. Because of this, he thought she could hold down a menial, or higher-than-menial job. He had not seen any effort by Melissa in the last four to-five years to get a job. He said that Melissa-did not drink but did become intoxicated several. times a week when she took her medication. He said- that he had contributed money for Melissa’s care during, separation because he had not wanted her to struggle. He tried to keep Melissa’s bank account balance at $1000.

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Bluebook (online)
2017 Ark. App. 439, 526 S.W.3d 907, 2017 Ark. App. LEXIS 498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hays-v-hays-arkctapp-2017.