Joshua Judkins v. Kayla Judkins

2025 Ark. App. 524
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 29, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 524 (Joshua Judkins v. Kayla Judkins) 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
Joshua Judkins v. Kayla Judkins, 2025 Ark. App. 524 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 524 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION III No. CV-24-534

Opinion Delivered October 29, 2025

JOSHUA JUDKINS APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE SALINE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 63DR-22-268]

KAYLA JUDKINS HONORABLE BRENT DILLON APPELLEE HOUSTON, JUDGE

AFFIRMED IN PART; MODIFIED IN PART; REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART

MIKE MURPHY, Judge

Appellant Joshua Judkins appeals from the decree of divorce entered by the Saline

County Circuit court divorcing him from appellee Kayla Judkins. His arguments on appeal

are that the circuit court erred when it awarded Kayla primary custody of their minor child

and in holding him in contempt. We affirm the award of custody, but we agree with Joshua

that there are issues surrounding the contempt and therefore reverse and remand the same.

Joshua and Kayla were married in January 2019 and divorced by decree of the Saline

County Circuit Court in April 2024. The parties have one child together, MC, who was born

in 2015. Kayla filed for divorce on March 29, 2022, and the following two years during which

the divorce was pending were filled with acrimony and litigation. Pertinent to this appeal, during their separation leading up to the divorce, the parties

shared true week-on-week-off joint custody of MC pursuant to a temporary order entered

June 29, 2022. That order also required Joshua to pay Kayla $113 a month in child support

and to deposit the parties’ income tax refund into the court’s registry.

On December 20, 2022, Kayla filed a motion for contempt alleging that Joshua had

not deposited the income tax refund into the court’s registry, was behind on child support,

was interfering with her visitation with MC, and was harassing her. Shortly thereafter, on

December 28, the parties entered into a memorandum of understanding (MOU) through

mediation. The MOU maintained the weekly joint-custody arrangement and outlined some

additional details clarifying typical custodial logistics, like pick-ups, drop-offs, and holidays.

Under the MOU, the parties also shared legal custody, which was specifically defined to

mean shared and equal access to MC’s school, medical, and similar records. Kayla was

designated the final decision maker for educational issues, and Joshua the final decision

maker for medical decisions. It was signed by the parties, their attorneys, and the attorney

ad litem and filed with the court.

On January 6, 2023, the court entered an order that, among other things, ordered

Joshua to pay the tax refund into the registry of the court within ten days, and if he was “not

making child support payments, he [was] Ordered to start paying immediately.”

On March 20, Kayla filed another motion for contempt alleging several instances in

which Joshua significantly interfered with visitation and that he was still behind on child

support.

2 On July 19, Kayla moved to set aside the MOU, alleging that it was not in the best

interest of MC and that Joshua had not followed it. Alternatively she asked that it not be

incorporated into the divorce decree.

A final divorce hearing was held on April 18, 2024. Kayla testified that Joshua did

not deposit the entire amount of the tax refund into the court’s registry or start paying child

support when ordered as part of the temporary order. She said that it was not until the

court’s January 2023 order that he did either. Presently, he was $293.80 past due on child-

support payments.

Concerning custody and visitation, Kayla testified to several instances in which Joshua

was difficult or interfered with her visitation. She testified about one instance, around

Christmas 2022, when Joshua would not bring MC to the scheduled exchange. She further

testified that, on several occasions during her custodial weeks, Joshua checked MC out of

school and did not return him, forcing Kayla to meet later for an exchange. On one occasion,

Kayla specifically asked Joshua not to check MC out for lunch because she planned to visit

him at school; however, when she arrived, MC had already been checked out and was not

there.

Kayla also testified about spring break in 2023. It was Joshua’s year to have MC for

spring break. Joshua took MC out of state but would not tell Kayla where they were going.

The following spring break was supposed to be Kayla’s, but Joshua threatened to not “let”

Kayla have MC unless she provided him a paper copy of a calendar she had already shared

with him electronically. Kayla testified that Joshua enrolled MC in therapy but refused to

3 disclose the therapist’s name. She further stated that Joshua would manipulate summer

vacations to have MC three weeks in a row (Kayla did not retaliate by trying to do the same

thing “back”). On another occasion, Joshua threatened litigation unless his two older

daughters (from another relationship) were permitted to visit MC during Kayla’s visitation

time.

Kayla next described a situation in June 2023 when she was trying to pick MC up for

the start of her summer visitation, and instead of making MC available, Joshua scheduled

an activity for MC to do that day. When Kayla went to meet them at the activity, Joshua

shoved Kayla out of the elevator, and when Kayla went to physically pick MC up, Joshua

“grabbed” MC out of her arms. Kayla called security to help; the responding security officer

was Seargent Dustin Hamm, a police officer who worked security for the building when he

was off duty policing.

The following August, Kayla learned that the school district had rezoned some of the

schools. Previously, both her and Joshua’s homes were zoned for the same elementary school,

but after the rezoning that was no longer the case. Kayla, who had final say in educational

decisions under the MOU, decided she wanted MC to attend the school that corresponded

to her address. When Joshua found out, he unilaterally changed MC’s school to the one

assigned to his own address. When asked if she thought that the MOU could be modified

to incorporate her concerns, Kayla replied “No. Josh manipulates wording every step of the

way. There’s nothing that you could put on paper that he would follow. Not just with [MC],

with anything.”

4 Kayla called Seargeant Dustin Hamm, the security officer who responded to the June

2023 incident. In addition to working security, Hamm is also the sergeant over criminal

investigations at the Benton Police Department. Hamm testified that, on the day in question,

Kayla requested assistance, he looked at the court orders, and he concluded Kayla should

have had custody at the time but that Joshua was interfering. He said Joshua was adversarial

with him. Seargeant Hamm referred the matter to the prosecutor’s office, and Joshua was

ultimately charged with interfering with custody.

After Kayla rested, Joshua testified. His testimony was that Kayla interferes with his

phone visitation, will not allow him to have lunch with MC, and does not allow MC to have

any extracurricular activities. He said his only problem with the MOU was that it needed to

be more specific.

Joshua called his two daughters as witnesses. They testified they wanted to be able to

see MC more often. He also called his mother, Karen Judkins. She testified that she believes

the week-to-week visitation works well.

During closing argument, Kayla’s counsel asked that she be awarded primary custody.

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