Kenneth Peyton Bryant v. Jennifer Hart Bryant

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 29, 2022
Docket2020-CT-00883-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Kenneth Peyton Bryant v. Jennifer Hart Bryant (Kenneth Peyton Bryant v. Jennifer Hart Bryant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kenneth Peyton Bryant v. Jennifer Hart Bryant, (Mich. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2020-CT-00883-SCT

KENNETH PEYTON BRYANT

v.

JENNIFER HART BRYANT

ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/29/2020 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. VICKI B. DANIELS COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: DESOTO COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: JERRY WESLEY HISAW ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: CHARLES E. WINFIELD ASHLYN BROWN MATTHEWS NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - DOMESTIC RELATIONS DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 09/29/2022 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

KITCHENS, PRESIDING JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. The parties had obtained a divorce in the Chancery Court of DeSoto County in 2016.

On June 3, 2020, Jennifer Bryant filed a motion in which she asked the chancellor, pursuant

to Section 17 of the property settlement agreement, which was incorporated into the divorce

decree, to determine which school the three minor children should attend: Hernando or Lake

Cormorant. The father, Kenneth Bryant, wanted the children to go to school at Lake

Cormorant because his wife, Alicia Bryant, was a teacher there. The chancellor decided that

it was in the children’s best interest to go to school in the Hernando public school district.

¶2. Kenneth Bryant appealed, and the Court of Appeals affirmed the chancellor’s decision. Bryant v. Bryant, No. 2020-CA-00883-COA, 2021 WL 5802520, at *4 (Miss. Ct.

App. Dec. 7, 2021). The Court of Appeals determined that the language of the property

settlement agreement authorized the chancellor to reevaluate the matter and that “[a] property

settlement agreement cannot deprive the court of its authority to modify support and

educational needs of a child.” Id.

¶3. We agree with the Court of Appeals. Therefore, we affirm.

STATEMENT OF FACTS

¶4. The Court of Appeals related the facts as follows:

Jennifer and Kenneth were married from August 2, 2009, until their divorce (based on irreconcilable differences) on March 30, 2016. Three children were born during their marriage: the eldest child was born in 2011, and twins were born in 2014. The divorce decree incorporated a Property, Child Support, and Child Custody Agreement (PSA) that set forth stipulations as to all matters concerning the minor children.

The PSA provided that Jennifer and Kenneth agreed to share legal and physical custody of the children, and there was a specific provision regarding the children’s education and where they could attend school. The PSA stipulated that if they could not agree about major decisions concerning the children, Kenneth had final decision-making authority. There was also a clause stating that the PSA could be submitted to the chancellor for “approval or disapproval.”

Kenneth and Jennifer had previously amended the terms of the PSA. On July 26, 2016, Jennifer filed a petition for contempt alleging that Kenneth had incessantly harassed her and the family since the entry of the divorce decree and that he threatened to withhold the minor children from her if she did not meet his demands. Kenneth responded, alleging that Jennifer had not provided him with a copy of her drug test results as commanded in the divorce decree. Additionally, he alleged that Jennifer denied him the right to speak with the children when they were in her custody. On May 30, 2017, the parties entered into an “Agreed Order Modifying Visitation” altering the parties’ weekly

2 periods of custody and limiting their means of communications to text messages and emails. This modification did not disturb the parties’ joint legal custody or the terms of the children’s private school and child care.

In 2020, when the actions giving rise to this appeal occurred, Kenneth and his wife Alicia, a teacher in Lake Cormorant, lived in Hernando, as did Jennifer and the children. Per the PSA, the eldest child had been enrolled in Magnolia Heights, a private school. The twins were to start kindergarten in the fall of 2020. A few months prior to this time, Kenneth informed Jennifer that he would be enrolling all the children in the Lake Cormorant public school system. In keeping with the PSA, Jennifer filed a motion requesting that the chancellor order the children to attend Hernando public schools.

Bryant, 2021 WL 5802520, at *1 (footnote omitted).

¶5. On July 20, 2020, a hearing on the motion was held. At the hearing, Kenneth Bryant

testified that he wanted the children to attend school at Lake Cormorant because that was

where his current wife, Alicia Bryant, was working as a teacher. He testified also that he did

not have any personal knowledge of Jennifer Bryant’s financial situation. During the hearing,

Kenneth Bryant maintained that his first choice for the school he wanted his children to

attend was Magnolia Heights. Jennifer Bryant testified that “[Kenneth Bryant] said that he

could not afford Magnolia Heights either” and that he was enrolling the children at Lake

Cormorant. Also, she presented the state rankings of the schools, which showed that

Hernando’s schools were ranked significantly higher than Lake Cormorant’s schools.

Regarding the parties’ ability to pay, the chancellor determined that there had been sufficient

evidence to trigger the language in the property settlement agreement because the mother

testified that the father “said he said he could not afford Magnolia Heights, either, which

implies that she couldn’t and he basically said he didn’t think she could and so that’s the

3 reason he wasn’t even considering Magnolia. So I’m going to consider . . . it already being

triggered.”

¶6. After hearing all of the testimony, the chancellor decided that

Quite honestly, both [parents] have some very valid points about each of your choices about the schools; however, the [c]ourt just feels like it’s going to be in the children’s best interest to go to school where they live, to go to school in Hernando. So I’m going to rule that the children get enrolled in Hernando school.

“At the request of Kenneth’s attorney, the chancellor also ordered that if Kenneth is able to

afford private school for all three children and if both parents decide that would be in the

children’s best interests, Kenneth would be solely responsible for all costs associated with

them attending private school.” Bryant, 2021 WL 5802520, at *2.

¶7. The father appealed, arguing that “the chancellor erred in ordering that his three minor

children must attend school in the Hernando school district or, in the alternative, that he must

pay for private school.” Id. He “argue[d] that the chancellor’s ruling to send all three children

to Hernando elementary school contradicts the language in the PSA that gave him the final

decision-making authority should he and Jennifer disagree on any major life decisions

affecting the children.” Id. at *3. The Court of Appeals determined that

[t]he [property settlement agreement] clearly gave the chancellor the authority to weigh in on all matters covered therein—specifically where the children attended school. A property settlement agreement cannot deprive the court of its authority to modify support and educational needs of a child. The decision-making power afforded Kenneth in this instance cannot and does not usurp that of the chancellor.

Id. at *4. Presiding Judge Wilson authored a dissent, joined in part by Chief Judge Barnes,

4 saying that he would reverse the chancellor’s decision because Kenneth Bryant was the final

decision maker and “was entitled to decide where the children should attend school, and there

was no legal basis for the chancellor to order the children to attend school in the Hernando

school district.” Id.

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Kenneth Peyton Bryant v. Jennifer Hart Bryant, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenneth-peyton-bryant-v-jennifer-hart-bryant-miss-2022.