Jeremy Jones v. Jessica Anne Shelton

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 2, 2024
Docket55,959-CA
StatusPublished

This text of Jeremy Jones v. Jessica Anne Shelton (Jeremy Jones v. Jessica Anne Shelton) 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
Jeremy Jones v. Jessica Anne Shelton, (La. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Judgment rendered October 2, 2024. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 2166, La. C.C.P.

No. 55,959-CA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

JEREMY JONES Plaintiff-Appellant

versus

JESSICA ANNE SHELTON Defendant-Appellee

Appealed from the Third Judicial District Court for the Parish of Lincoln, Louisiana Trial Court No. 62,147

Honorable Thomas Wynn Rogers, Judge

CUMMINS & FITTS, LLC Counsel for Appellant By: Daniel C. Cummins Jessica L. Fitts

RICK L. CANDLER

CARMOUCHE, BOKENFOHR, Counsel for Appellee, BUCKLE & DAY Jessica Anne Shelton By: John N. Bokenfohr

KEESHA MASON BORDELON Counsel for Appellee, State of Louisiana, Department of Children and Family Services

Before PITMAN, THOMPSON, and ROBINSON, JJ. THOMPSON, J.

An acrimonious custody dispute between parents over their only child

resulted in the father seeking domiciliary custody and filing multiple

motions for contempt, alleging the mother had repeatedly violated the

court’s custody orders. At trial, the court heard witnesses and examined the

evidence presented by both parties and undertook a careful examination of

the evidence and a thorough application of the La. C.C. art. 134 factors. The

trial court determined that the best interest of the child was to award the

parents joint custody and named the mother as domiciliary parent. The

father appealed. For the following reasons, we affirm the trial court’s ruling.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Jeremy Jones (“Jeremy”) and Jessica Shelton (“Jessica”) are the

parents to a six-year-old child, C.J. Jeremy and Jessica were married in

2007 and divorced in 2010. Sometime after their divorce, they reestablished

their relationship, and C.J. was born in July of 2017. It appears the parties

had a cordial relationship from 2017 through the end of 2018. Jeremy was

working out of town and exercised visitation with C.J. during this time.

There was a break in Jeremy and Jessica’s relationship in November of

2018, allegedly due to Jeremy’s relationship at the time with his now wife,

Bailey. Jeremy relocated to North Carolina, and the parties dispute the

amount of time Jeremy visited C.J. Jeremy contends he saw C.J. monthly

from 2018 until the summer of 2020, and Jessica alternatively argues that

Jeremy was essentially absent during this time period. The parties agree that

on May 1, 2019, they entered into an extrajudicial custody agreement, which named Jessica as the custodial parent and gave Jeremy specific periods of

visitation.

By the summer of 2020, Jeremy, his wife, Bailey, and her three

children returned to Ruston, Louisiana. Jessica lived in Covington,

Louisiana with C.J. Jeremy had custody of C.J. for half of the summer and

began exercising regular and frequent visitation. In December of 2021,

Jeremy, Bailey, and Jeremy’s adult daughter stayed with Jessica and C.J. to

celebrate Christmas. Jeremy took C.J. from Covington, Louisiana back to

Ruston, as he and Jessica had planned. Jeremy left Covington concerned

about C.J.’s wellbeing after the evening spent at Jessica’s house. The

original plan was for Jeremy to return C.J. on January 2, 2022, but that date

was pushed back when Jessica contracted Covid. They agreed to exchange

C.J. on January 7, 2022. In the interim, C.J. contracted Covid, and the

parties agreed to again push the exchange date back one more week. On

January 18, 2022, Jeremy filed a petition in Lincoln Parish for legal custody

of C.J. in response to the concern he had about Jessica’s ability to care for

her after their December visit to her home. He refused to return C.J. to

Jessica’s custody.

Jessica moved from Covington to East Baton Rouge Parish and filed

her own separate petition for custody in that parish. On February 23, 2022,

without notifying Jeremy, Jessica drove from Baton Rouge to Ruston,

checked C.J. out of her school in Ruston, and returned with her to Baton

Rouge. On March 24, 2022, Jessica filed, in the Lincoln Parish proceedings,

exceptions of no right of action, lis pendens, improper venue, and forum non

conveniens in this matter. A hearing was held in Lincoln Parish on April 14,

2 2022, and the trial court denied Jessica’s exceptions. The court ordered that

the custody hearing would take place in Lincoln Parish. That court issued an

interim order, decreeing that C.J. would stay with Jessica contingent on her

returning to school, with Jeremy having custodial periods. The court order

detailed that Jeremy would have custody from Friday at 5:00 p.m. until

Sunday at 5:00 p.m., with the parties meeting halfway at the Alexandria

police department for the exchange. Jeremy would have custody of C.J. the

entire summer. The court ordered that neither party should have overnight

guests of the opposite sex that are not related by blood or affinity while C.J.

was in residence. Finally, the court ordered that the parties would have

unsupervised telephone communications with C.J. when the child is with the

other parent between the hours of 6:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m.

On July 13, 2022, in the Lincoln Parish proceedings, Jessica filed a

motion for penalties for failure to give notice of relocation pursuant to La.

R.S. 9:355.6, a motion to enforce extrajudicial custody agreement, and

motion to change venue to proper jurisdiction of East Baton Rouge Parish.

On January 25, 2023, Jeremy filed in the Lincoln Parish proceedings a

petition for ex parte emergency custody, arguing that Jessica’s behavior had

been neglectful, irresponsible, reckless, and unpredictable. He described

how Jessica refused to allow telephone calls between himself and C.J. and

an incident when she refused to allow him to see C.J. during his allotted

custody time. He described her multiple failed drug tests, chronic lateness,

and the significant amount of school that C.J. had missed while in her care.

The trial court issued another interim order, dated January 20, 2023,

ordering that Jeremy would have Christmas visitation with C.J., that Jeremy

3 would have every other weekend visitation, that the retrieving parent must

pick up from the other parent’s home, and that Jessica must submit to a ten-

panel urine drug screen. On February 6, 2023, Jessica answered Jeremy’s

petition for ex parte emergency custody and filed a reconventional demand

arguing that she should have sole custody of C.J. Jessica contended that

C.J.’s stepsister was molesting C.J. at Jeremy’s house and that she had

instituted a Department of Child and Family Services (“DCFS”)

investigation into the matter.

By interim order dated March 22, 2023, the trial court dismissed each

of the petitions for emergency custody and ordered that Jeremy shall

continue to have his regular visitation with C.J., as long as she stayed

overnight at her grandparents’ home. It further ordered that C.J. could be

around her stepsibling, just not alone with her, and that Jeremy was entitled

to every other night telephone calls with C.J. for a maximum of 15 minutes

between 6:00 p.m. and 6:45 p.m. Jeremy filed an amended petition for ex

parte emergency custody on May 26, 2023, adding additional exhibits and

updated information from his previous petition.

On July 17, 2023, a bench trial was held in Lincoln parish. Jessica

was the first witness to testify.

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Related

Chauvin v. Chauvin
69 So. 3d 1192 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2011)

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Bluebook (online)
Jeremy Jones v. Jessica Anne Shelton, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeremy-jones-v-jessica-anne-shelton-lactapp-2024.