Jared Young v. Anayh Tash

2025 Ark. App. 582
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 3, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 582 (Jared Young v. Anayh Tash) 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
Jared Young v. Anayh Tash, 2025 Ark. App. 582 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 582 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION I No. CV-24-775

JARED YOUNG Opinion Delivered December 3, 2025

APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE GARLAND COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 26DR-24-355]

ANAYH TASH HONORABLE CECILIA DYER, JUDGE APPELLEE AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART

WENDY SCHOLTENS WOOD, Judge

Jared Young has filed this one-brief appeal from the Garland County Circuit Court’s

judgment of paternity adjudicating him the legal father of his minor daughter, MC, born to

Anayh Tash on December 23, 2022. The court also awarded the parties joint custody and

set forth a detailed “parenting time” schedule, which does not award the parties equal time

with MC until MC completes kindergarten. On appeal, Young argues that the circuit court

erred in not awarding him primary custody. In the alternative, he asks this court to modify

the parties’ parenting time to be “nearly equal.” We affirm the court’s award of joint custody,

but we reverse and remand its determination of parenting time.

I. Facts

On May 2, 2024, Young filed a complaint for determination of paternity and custody

alleging that he is the biological father of MC and requesting primary custody subject to Tash’s right to reasonable visitation. He attached a copy of the DNA test results confirming

his parentage. Tash did not file an answer. On June 24, the circuit court entered an order of

default judgment pursuant to Young’s request and set a hearing for August 14.

Young testified at the hearing that he met Tash at a strip club where she was a dancer.

He did not know that his brief relationship with Tash had resulted in a pregnancy until he

received a letter from the Office of Child Support Enforcement in December 2023 stating

that it had opened a case for child support for MC. Young said that he executed an

acknowledgment of paternity and submitted to a DNA test on March 7, 2024, which

confirmed that he is MC’s biological father.

Young also said that he had unsuccessfully reached out to Tash in person and through

text “at least five times” to facilitate visitation and had sent money to Tash for MC when

Tash asked for it. He said that he was willing to “co-parent” with Tash but was requesting

primary custody out of concern for MC because Tash lives with a felon and does not have a

car. Young testified that he is employed, has a car, and has family living nearby to support

him and MC. He said that he is the manager at his family’s RV resort; lives in a thirty-seven-

foot camper on the family property next to his parents’ three-bedroom home; and lives next

door to his nieces. He said he works on the property next to the family homes, that his

schedule is flexible, and that his sister and parents could watch MC if he were unavailable

during the day. He admitted he has no other children, has never taken parenting classes or

read any parenting books, and has seen MC only once—at the paternity test.

2 Tash represented herself at the hearing and called her aunt, Latoria Robinson, as her

first witness. Robinson testified that Tash is a “great mom”; attentive to both MC and Tash’s

infant daughter born in April 2024; has all the necessities for the children; and makes sure

they are safe, happy, and healthy. She said that she keeps MC about once a month; sees Tash

and her children at family functions; and takes Tash to appointments and wherever else she

needs to go because Tash does not have a car. Robinson testified that their family members

are “close-knit,” all live close by, and all help provide transportation and other support to

Tash when she needs it. She said that Tash has been unemployed since the birth of her

second child in April, but she said that Tash was seeking employment and currently earns

money by cooking for friends. She said that Tash lives in a one-bedroom HUD apartment,

which has a bed for Tash and a crib for the babies. She said that she knows Delonce

Woodson, the father of Tash’s infant daughter, and that he currently shares Tash’s

apartment. Robinson testified that Woodson is employed, but she did not know where, and

that he is a good dad, very attentive to both children, and has a close bond with both. She

acknowledged that Woodson is a felon but said that it had “no bearings on who he is as an

individual,” that there are “just some things that happened in his life,” and that she found

Woodson to be loving and caring.

Tash’s stepmother testified next. She said that she lives five to ten minutes from Tash,

that Tash’s two children come to her house often, and that Tash is a good mother. She said

that MC is happy and learning. She said that she is available to help with the children and

get them to appointments when needed. She said that Woodson is a nice person, helps Tash

3 with the children, and comes to her house for events with Tash “as a family.” She said that

Tash and Woodson live together but had broken up, and Woodson was living with Tash in

order to help her with the children. She also testified that Young had never come to family

events.

Finally, the court questioned Tash. Tash testified that Young told her he would be a

good dad. She said that he had not been uncooperative or hostile, although she had some

concern about the firearms he keeps in his camper. She said that he owns a lot of firearms

and that he “3D prints” “ghost guns.” She was concerned that MC would be unsafe there.

She said that she is currently unemployed but cooks for friends to earn some money, receives

a HUD reimbursement allowance to help with her rent and utilities, and that she and the

children receive Medicaid. She believes that she is a good mother and said that she is very

attentive to her children. She said that she and Woodson live together, but Woodson sleeps

on the couch because they are no longer in an intimate relationship. She said that she was

beginning a medical billing and coding class at Gateway Allied Health on August 22 so that

she could then seek employment.

At the conclusion of the hearing, the circuit court told the parties that MC needed

both parents in her life, that no testimony had been introduced suggesting that the parties

had not acted “decent and civil” to each other, and that it was going to take the case under

advisement to consider what is in MC’s best interest. On August 22, the court entered a

judgment of paternity awarding the parties joint custody, specifically finding that the

presumption that joint custody is in the best interest of MC had not been rebutted by clear

4 and convincing evidence. The court then set forth a parenting-time schedule allowing Young

an hour each day of supervised visitation with MC for one week, two hours of unsupervised

visitation for the following week, and then from 2:00 to 6:00 p.m. on Saturday and 2:00 to

6:00 p.m. on Sunday on alternating weekends until MC is three years old. The court also

awarded Young four hours on the major holidays. From the time MC turns three until she

starts kindergarten, Young is allowed alternating weekends from 10:00 a.m. on Saturday

through 6:00 p.m. on Sunday in addition to four hours on the major holidays. During

kindergarten, Young is allowed alternating weekends from Friday after school through

Sunday at 6:00 p.m. in addition to alternating major holidays from 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.

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