Keino Hayle v. Jennifer Tinker Ingram

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedApril 14, 2022
DocketA22A0721
StatusPublished

This text of Keino Hayle v. Jennifer Tinker Ingram (Keino Hayle v. Jennifer Tinker Ingram) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keino Hayle v. Jennifer Tinker Ingram, (Ga. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

FIRST DIVISION BARNES, P. J., BROWN and HODGES, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. https://www.gaappeals.us/rules

April 14, 2022

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A22A0721. HAYLE v. INGRAM.

BARNES, Presiding Judge.

Keino Hayle, the biological father of the minor child, E. T., appeals from the

trial court’s final order awarding permanent custody of the child to the maternal

grandmother, Jennifer Tinker Ingram, and granting him supervised visitation. The

father contends that there was insufficient evidence to support the trial court’s

custody determination. For the reasons discussed below, we affirm.

“When reviewing an order in a child custody case, we view the evidence in the

light most favorable to the trial court’s decision.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.)

Richello v. Wilkinson, 361 Ga. App. 703, 704 (865 SE2d 571) (2021). So viewed, the

record reflects that the mother and father of E. T. had an on-again, off-again

relationship and were never married. Their relationship was marked by “constant fighting,” and the father verbally and physically abused the mother, who suffered

from ongoing substance abuse and mental health issues. During one episode of

physical abuse witnessed by a maternal aunt, the mother and father were in an

argument, and the father grabbed the mother by the wrist and neck and began

strangling her. During other episodes witnessed by the aunt, the father held the

mother down and grabbed her and would not let her go. The aunt also heard the father

“engage in a lot of gas lighting” and call the mother names, tell the mother that she

needed drugs, and repeatedly scream at the mother that she needed to abort the child

once she became pregnant.

When the child was born in December 2017, the mother tested positive for

drugs. The father was away attending college in North Carolina and did not attend the

birth. After the mother’s positive drug test, the child was placed in the temporary

custody of the maternal grandmother under a safety plan developed by the

Department of Family and Children Services (“DFCS”), and the mother and father

were allowed only supervised visitation.1 During one supervised visit at the

1 DFCS filed a dependency petition, which was later dismissed for reasons unclear from the record.

2 grandmother’s home, the grandmother heard the mother screaming for her, ran to see

what was wrong, and saw the father strangling the mother in front of the child.

Approximately three months after the child’s birth, the mother and father ended

their relationship. The grandmother offered the father supervised visits with the child,

but he refused. While the father sent some gifts to the child, he provided no financial

support. The father continued to reside in North Carolina after graduating from

college. He began a relationship with a new girlfriend, and they moved in together.

In November 2018, the father was arrested for assaulting his new girlfriend. She told

the police that the father hit her multiple times in the back of the head with a closed

fist, causing a bump to form. The assault charge was dismissed at the request of the

girlfriend.

In December 2018, the grandmother filed a petition in the Superior Court of

Catoosa County seeking temporary and permanent custody of the child. The father

answered and filed a counterclaim in which he sought to legitimate the child and

obtain custody.2 The mother, who was then incarcerated, did not participate in the

custody proceedings.

2 The father’s paternity was established through DNA testing conducted by DFCS.

3 In September 2019, when the child was 21 months old, the trial court held a

temporary custody hearing. Among other things, the grandmother testified about the

father’s verbal and physical abuse of the mother that she witnessed. Additionally, the

grandmother’s counsel introduced into evidence the police incident report for the

November 2018 assault that included the girlfriend’s statement describing how the

father physically assaulted her. The father also testified at the hearing and denied

abusing the mother or his girlfriend. The father’s girlfriend, who was pregnant with

their son, testified as well and denied that the father assaulted her.

Following the temporary hearing, the trial court entered an order legitimating

the child, granting the grandmother temporary custody of the child and the father

supervised visitation, and ordering the father to pay child support. After entry of the

temporary custody order, the father delayed contacting a supervised visitation center

to arrange for visitation and fell behind on paying child support. In September 2020,

the father was arrested a second time for assaulting his girlfriend. She told the police

that the father punched her in the face and struck her arm, causing swelling and

bruising. The girlfriend later denied that she had been assaulted by the father, and the

charge was dismissed.

4 In May 2021, when the child was three years old, the trial court conducted the

final custody hearing. When the hearing began, the trial court stated that it would take

into account the evidence introduced at the temporary hearing in reaching its final

custody decision, and the parties agreed that the exhibits introduced at the temporary

hearing would be included as part of the record for the final hearing. The hearing then

proceeded forward, and the maternal grandmother and maternal aunt testified

regarding, among other things, the incidents they witnessed where the father

physically abused the mother. The grandmother further testified that she would be

concerned with the physical and long-term emotional health of the child if placed

with the father in light of his abusive behavior. The aunt, who was a social service

worker with experience working with family violence victims, testified that the

grandmother had a strong bond with the child, and that she would be uncomfortable

with the child spending time unsupervised with the father in light of “his history with

family violence.” Further, the grandmother’s counsel introduced into evidence

additional police records associated with the father, including the September 2020

police incident report in which the father’s new girlfriend described how the father

assaulted her that day. The father and his girlfriend also testified at the hearing, and

both denied that he assaulted her in September 2020.

5 Following the hearing, the trial court entered its final order awarding

permanent custody to the grandmother and supervised visitation to the father. The

trial court made several factual findings, including that the father “continues a

practice of family violence/domestic abuse that was prevalent with the . . . mother and

with other partners” and that his home thus was not a “safe environment.” The trial

court expressly determined that there was clear and convincing evidence that the child

would suffer either physical harm or significant long-term emotional harm if custody

were awarded to the father, and that awarding permanent custody to the grandmother

would best suit the happiness and welfare of the child and would be in the child’s best

interest. The father now appeals from the trial court’s final order, challenging the

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