Kevin Jolliff v. Jessica Wilson

2021 Ark. App. 430, 636 S.W.3d 390
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 3, 2021
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2021 Ark. App. 430 (Kevin Jolliff v. Jessica Wilson) 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
Kevin Jolliff v. Jessica Wilson, 2021 Ark. App. 430, 636 S.W.3d 390 (Ark. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Cite as 2021 Ark. App. 430 Elizabeth Perry ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS I attest to the accuracy and DIVISION IV integrity of this document No. CV-20-676 2023.07.14 09:30:52 -05'00' 2023.003.20244 Opinion Delivered November 3, 2021

KEVIN JOLLIFF APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE MISSISSIPPI COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, V. CHICKASAWBA DISTRICT [NO. 47BDR-18-145 ] JESSICA WILSON APPELLEE HONORABLE BRENT DAVIS, JUDGE

AFFIRMED

WAYMOND M. BROWN, Judge

Appellant Kevin Jolliff appeals from the six-month order of protection entered

against him on August 13, 2020, in Mississippi County. The order of protection prevents

appellant from contacting appellee, Jessica Wilson, and the parties’ daughter, KS, for the

duration of the protection order. Appellant argues on appeal that the order of protection

should be reversed and remanded because (1) the circuit court abused its discretion in

disallowing exhibits and testimony without an inquiry into the competency of the child

witness; (2) the recording was admissible under the Arkansas Rules of Evidence; and (3) the

circuit court erred in concluding he was guilty of domestic abuse, because it was based on

speculation and conjecture. We affirm. Appellee petitioned the circuit court for an order of protection for herself and KS on

December 5, 2019. 1 In the petition, appellee stated she was seeking the protection order

following events that took place on November 28—Thanksgiving evening. Appellee

alleged that when she returned KS to appellant’s house on Thanksgiving, she followed KS

inside for a hug and kiss. However, she stated that afterwards, KS attempted to run up to

appellee and hug her again and that appellant put his arm out and shoved KS into the floor

onto her bottom. KS began screaming for appellee not to leave her, and appellant picked

KS up and took her into the bedroom. In the bedroom, appellant covered KS with blankets

up to her neck and placed his leg over KS to hold her down. Appellant yelled for KS to

“shut up” and struck the wall behind KS’s head several times. He also told KS that she is

just as “retarded as [her] mother is.” When appellee walked to the kitchen to tell appellant

not to speak to KS like that, appellant grabbed appellee by her shoulders and shoved her out

the front door, causing appellee to fall to her knees on the deck. As a result, appellee had

bruises on her shoulders and knees. Appellee left appellant’s residence and subsequently

attempted suicide by taking Benadryl. Appellee was taken to St. Bernards Medical Center

and then transferred to St. Bernards Behavioral Health. In the accompanying affidavit,

1 The evidence in the record shows that this was the third order of protection appellee sought against appellant. The first order of protection was sought in April 2018 after appellant blacked appellee’s eye with KS’s fishing pole. A temporary order of protection was entered; however, it was dismissed on May 4 at appellee’s request. Appellee sought a second order of protection in July 2019 after appellant grabbed her by the neck and threw her to the ground and climbed on top of her with his knees on her collarbone. Both appellee and appellant were arrested in June at the time of the incident. Although appellee was able to obtain a temporary order of protection against appellant, the case was dismissed in August because there was a no-contact order in place in the pending criminal case.

2 appellee stated that she and KS had suffered years of mental, physical, and emotional abuse

at the hands of appellant. She alleged that appellant is unpredictable and very violent. She

stated that she had had her lip busted, her eye blacked, and bruises left on her arms and

shoulders because of appellant’s abuse. She stated that KS has had bruises on her legs, back,

and arms. She said that appellant has denied KS food when she did not listen to appellant.

Appellee also stated that appellant is verbally abusive to her and KS. The circuit court

entered a temporary order of protection the same day.

A hearing was held to address appellee’s order of protection on December 20.

Appellee testified that she is twenty-nine years old and currently lives in Manila, Arkansas,

with her parents. She stated that she has lived with her parents since June, and prior to that,

she lived with appellant for approximately three years. Appellee testified that she and

appellant have one child together, KS. She said that although the hearing was to address

her most recent allegations of abuse, she had suffered systemic abuse for the duration of the

parties’ relationship. She testified in pertinent part about the events that took place on

Thanksgiving night when she returned KS to appellant’s home:

We were sharing her for Thanksgiving. We do not normally meet at his house for that. We usually meet at a gas station. We met at his house on this particular occasion. I was bringing my daughter back to him at his house. I was by myself. When I got to the door of his house, my daughter walked in and I walked in behind her to tell her goodbye. She walked into the middle of the living room floor. She began to cry when I was leaving and like, she wanted to give me a hug and Kevin stiff-armed her into the floor and stopped her from giving me a hug. He physically knocked her down, onto her bottom. Then she got up and was crying really, really hard and was screaming for me still. He grabbed her up and took her back to the bedroom and covered her up with blankets. When he picked her up and carried her off, I was standing in the doorway of the house.

When I could hear my daughter screaming, I walked to the kitchen. I could see into the bedroom from the kitchen.

3 I first heard her screaming, I could also hear him screaming. He was hitting a wall. I then proceeded into the house. At that point, I could see what was happening, and he was leaning over her, his right leg was over her body and he was hitting the wall and telling her to shut up, very loud, like hard enough to where, he was hitting the wall hard to where the stuff in the living room was moving. I told him to stop. I said please stop and then he come after me. He grabbed me by my shoulders forcibly enough to leave bruises and pushed me out the door. I had marks on my knees and across my forehead where he pushed me out the door and I hit the deck on his house. When I was pushed out the door I landed on my knees and my head hit the railing on the deck of the house. I left at that point.

Appellee introduced photos of the injuries she sustained that night. She stated that she left

KS with appellant because it was his time to have KS. She said that she was very upset

when she arrived home, so she took a lot of Benadryl. She stated that her dad took her to

the emergency room the next day and that she went to St. Bernards. She testified that she

is still attending therapy at St. Bernards for depression, anxiety, and bipolar disorder resulting

from the way she was treated by appellant. She stated that there were several domestic-

abuse incidents with appellant between her first and second petitions for orders of

protection. She said that when appellant was not physically violent toward her, he was

mentally violent. She also said that he would tell KS to shut up and go do certain things

and that he was physically abusive to KS. She testified about an incident in which appellant

turned out the bathroom light when KS tried to use the bathroom in the middle of the

night, resulting in KS getting in bed without using the bathroom. KS subsequently wet the

bed.

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