In the Matter of the Adoption of Minor Children, William Kyle Murphy v. Lauren Taylor Murphy

2025 Ark. App. 551
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 12, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 551 (In the Matter of the Adoption of Minor Children, William Kyle Murphy v. Lauren Taylor Murphy) 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.

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In the Matter of the Adoption of Minor Children, William Kyle Murphy v. Lauren Taylor Murphy, 2025 Ark. App. 551 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 551 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION II No. CV-24-609

IN THE MATTER OF THE ADOPTION Opinion Delivered November 12, 2025 OF MINOR CHILDREN APPEAL FROM THE WASHINGTON WILLIAM KYLE MURPHY COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT APPELLANT [NO. 72PR-24-41]

V. HONORABLE DOUG MARTIN, JUDGE LAUREN TAYLOR MURPHY APPELLEE AFFIRMED

WAYMOND M. BROWN, Judge

Appellant William Murphy appeals the order of the Washington County Circuit

Court granting appellee Lauren Murphy’s petition for single-parent adoption of the parties’

two children, MB (D.O.B. 10-11-15) and MG (D.O.B. 04-17-18). The circuit court found

that appellant’s consent to the adoption was not needed and that the adoption was in the

best interest of the children. Appellant argues on appeal that (1) the circuit court’s justifiable-

cause finding was clearly erroneous because appellee interfered with appellant’s ability to

contact his children; (2) the preponderance of the evidence does not support the circuit

court’s best-interest finding and is, therefore, clearly erroneous; (3) the circuit court

improperly shifted the burden of proving a lack of justifiable cause to the party resisting the adoption (appellant); and (4) the circuit court abused its discretion by refusing to consider

appellant’s motion for reconsideration. We affirm.

The parties were divorced in Texas by a decree filed on September 24, 2019. The

decree stated that the parties had entered into an agreement whereby they were appointed

joint managing conservators of the children. The children were to reside with appellee, and

appellant was granted visitation the first weekend of each month with the ability to enjoy

other weekends if notice requirements were met. At the time of the divorce, appellant was

residing in Arkansas. Appellee subsequently moved to Arkansas with the children at the

beginning of 2020. Appellant hired an attorney in December 2023 to register the Texas

divorce decree. He also filed a motion for contempt against appellee. Appellee was served

with the contempt action that same month, and on January 16, 2024, she filed a petition for

single-parent adoption alleging that appellant’s consent was not needed and that the

adoption was in the children’s best interest. Appellant filed an answer on January 25 denying

the material allegations of appellee’s petition and asking the circuit court to deny the

petition.

The adoption hearing took place on April 22. Appellant testified that he is MB and

MG’s father and that he was opposed to appellee’s single-parent adoption. He stated that

appellee improperly withheld visitation from him. To support his position, he introduced

text messages to appellee dating back to April 2023, wherein he received no response at all

from appellee. He said that he purchased gifts for the children, but they were returned;

however, he did not have any returned mail with him. He testified that he and appellee were

2 divorced on August 16, 2019, and at that time, the children were to remain with appellee,

and he was granted visitation of at least one weekend a month. He said that based on the

divorce decree, visitation with the children was to take place at his residence, but he moved

from that specific residence in December 2019. He stated that appellee moved to Arkansas

and that he knew where she lived for the last four years. He admitted that he told appellee

in February 2020 that he was going to get a lawyer to reopen the case, but he never did. He

also admitted that he sent a text message that same month telling appellee that he could not

afford to see his children. He stated that he threatened to reopen the cases on several

occasions but did not follow through with it. He also stated that he threatened to show up

at appellee’s residence with the police on June 6, 2023, to get his children but he did not go.

Appellant said that since the divorce, he never went to appellee’s residence to pick up the

children for visitation and that he never filed any reports alleging that appellee interfered

with his visitation. Appellant testified that he filed a contempt motion in Arkansas but

admitted that he did not ask for extra visitation or for modification of his arrangement. He

stated that he thought that by filing the foreign judgment in Arkansas, he would at least get

the state minimum for visitation. He said he didn’t want to reopen the case until he was

stable. He stated that he last saw the children in person in 2019 and that he last spoke to

them via FaceTime in June or July 2020.

Appellant stated on cross-examination that although he knew appellee’s address, he

did not just show up because he did not want to be charged with trespassing or something

domestic. He testified that he sent text messages to appellee between April 2023 and January

3 16, 2024, with no response from her. He stated that appellee had been nonresponsive to

his text messages longer than that, but he no longer had access to those messages. He said

that his video communication with the children ended when he no longer had an iPhone

because appellee told him the Duo mobile app took up too much storage on her phone, and

she deleted it. He also said that visitation with his children ended when appellee moved

back to Arkansas, approximately an hour away from him. He admitted that he fell on hard

times and was even homeless for a period of time in 2021. He stated that even though he

threatened to take appellee back to court, his finances would not allow him to do so. He

testified that he registered the judgment from the Texas divorce decree and filed a contempt

complaint because appellee was not abiding by the Texas court’s order. He stated that he

has been paying child support since the divorce, resulting in over $44,000 being paid to

appellee for the benefit of the children. He said that he has never gone over a year without

making the payments. Appellant stated that appellee’s petition for single-parent adoption

should be denied because he had “never been allowed to be their father” and that “every

attempt that [he] made to be a part of their lives has been met with a wall.”

On redirect, appellant admitted that he was never told by appellee that he would be

arrested if he showed up to her residence. He also stated that he did not receive any warning

from the local authorities to stay away from her property.

Appellee testified that she has lived in Fayetteville since February 2020. She stated

that she wanted the circuit court to grant her petition because she had been the children’s

primary caregiver since birth. She said that she believed that the single-parent adoption was

4 in the children’s best interest because “they have thrived, they have been stable, loved, very

healthy, [and] happy” over the last four years. She also stated that they had made friends

and were doing well in school due to the consistency she had been able to provide them

with. She opined that it was in the children’s best interest to maintain that consistency. She

said that appellant last scheduled a visit with the children in May 2020 but did not show up.

After that time, she stated that appellant’s contact had been inconsistent and sporadic. She

said that in 2021, appellant reached out only sixty-eight times to ask about the children. She

stated that when her phone could no longer support the Duo app, she told appellant to just

call the children, but he did not.

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