Joshua Jenkins v. Aurora Jenkins
This text of Joshua Jenkins v. Aurora Jenkins (Joshua Jenkins v. Aurora Jenkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
RENDERED: DECEMBER 12, 2025; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals
NO. 2024-CA-0887-MR
JOSHUA JENKINS APPELLANT
APPEAL FROM KNOX CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE STEPHEN MICHAEL JONES, JUDGE ACTION NO. 22-CI-00441
AURORA JENKINS; CABINET OF HUMAN RESOURCES, LEGAL DEPARTMENT; AND RICK DISNEY APPELLEES
OPINION AFFIRMING
** ** ** ** **
BEFORE: EASTON, KAREM, AND MCNEILL, JUDGES.
KAREM, JUDGE: Joshua Jenkins appeals pro se from the Knox Circuit Court’s
denying his complaint for visitation with his children. We affirm.
Jenkins has three children. He is currently serving a total sentence of
twenty years for one count of second-degree rape and one count of second-degree sodomy. The criminal charges did not involve his children. According to Jenkins,
the children are currently in the joint custody of their mother, his wife Aurora
Jenkins, and their paternal grandfather.
On November 15, 2022, Jenkins filed a pleading pro se in Knox
Circuit Court, styled “Complaint for Visitation with his Biological Children.” He
sought visitation with his children and requested to proceed in forma pauperis, for
appointment of counsel, and for a hearing. The circuit court entered a form order
which did not clearly indicate whether Jenkins qualified as a poor person pursuant
to Kentucky Revised Statutes (KRS) 453.190 for purposes of proceeding in forma
pauperis. Jenkins filed an appeal. On March 23, 2023, a panel of this Court of
Appeals vacated the circuit court’s order as inherently ambiguous. It remanded the
case for entry of a written order clearly specifying whether Jenkins was granted in
forma pauperis status and, if denied, written reasons why.
On remand, the circuit court entered an order granting the motion to
proceed in forma pauperis and waiving costs and fees. Jenkins filed a pleading
styled “Status of Pending Pleading,” arguing that even though he is incarcerated,
he is entitled to a hearing before his visitation rights with his children are denied.
He also requested the appointment of a guardian ad litem.
On May 1, 2024, the circuit court entered an order dismissing the
action with prejudice “based on the prior order of Knox Circuit Court Civil Action
-2- No. 19-CI-00263 entered on November 8, 2021, wherein this Court ruled that the
children shall continue to have no contact or communication with Joshua Jenkins.”
Jenkins filed a motion to reconsider. The circuit court denied the motion and this
appeal followed.
Jenkins argues that the circuit court was required to conduct a hearing
on his petition for visitation and that visitation should be determined based on the
best interests of the children and not be denied simply because he is incarcerated.
As a matter of law, incarceration alone does not justify the denial of a
right to visitation. Smith v. Smith, 869 S.W.2d 55, 57 (Ky. App. 1994). But there
is no indication that the circuit court denied Jenkins’s petition for visitation
because he is incarcerated. The court’s reason for denying the petition is plainly
stated: there is an order in place in another case, Knox Circuit Court Civil Action
No. 19-CI-00263, that Jenkins is to have no contact or communication with the
children.
Jenkins cannot seek visitation by means of this action when there is a
valid, binding order in the other case that forbids contact or communication with
the children. If Jenkins wishes to pursue visitation, he must seek to modify or
vacate the order in the other case.
For the foregoing reasons, the order denying Jenkins’s complaint for
visitation is affirmed.
-3- ALL CONCUR.
BRIEF FOR APPELLANT: NO BRIEF FILED FOR APPELLEES. Joshua Jenkins, pro se LaGrange, Kentucky
-4-
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