Kevin McKeown v. Elizabeth Allison Estes

230 So. 3d 741
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedMarch 7, 2017
DocketNO. 2015-CP-01456-COA
StatusPublished

This text of 230 So. 3d 741 (Kevin McKeown v. Elizabeth Allison Estes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kevin McKeown v. Elizabeth Allison Estes, 230 So. 3d 741 (Mich. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

BARNES, J.,

FOR THE COURT:

¶ 1. After New York courts awarded Elizabeth Allison Estes physical custody of her son and authorized their move from New York City to Oxford, Mississippi, the New York County Family Court entered an order awarding visitation to the child’s father, Kevin McKeown, who remained in New York City. Among other things, the New York visitation order obligated Kevin to provide Allison with advance notice of his visitation, an itinerary, and the address where he would be staying with their son.

¶ 2. This appeal follows Allison’s successful complaint for contempt and modification of the New York visitation order. The Lafayette County Chancery Court found Kevin in contempt for his failure to fulfill the notice, itinerary, and address-disclosure requirements of the New York visitation order. The chancellor further held that Kevin’s visitation would be suspended until he disclosed his physical address. Additionally, the chancellor modified the visitation order so that Kevin would have to exercise his visitation in Mississippi if he did not fulfill the notice, itinerary, and address-disclosure conditions of his visitation.

¶3. Kevin appeals and claims that the chancellor should not have heard Allison’s complaint because he had taken preliminary steps to appeal the New York County *744 Family Court’s decision that Mississippi was the proper forum for Allison’s complaint. He also claims that the process server lied ábout personally' serving him with process. Finally, Kevin argues that the chancellor did not consider the child’s best interest. Finding no error, we affirm the chancellor’s judgment.

STATEMENT OF FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶4, In April 2012, a New York state court awarded Allison sole legal and physical custody of her son. After obtaining leave from the First Department of the New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division, Allison and her son moved to Oxford, where her family lived. Kevin McK. v. Elizabeth A.E., 111 A.D.3d 124, 129, 972 N.Y.S.2d 25 (N.Y. App. Div. 2013).

¶ 6. The New York County Family Court subsequently entered a visitation order. Along with visitation during certain holidays, Kevin received “eight uninterrupted weeks” of summer visitation. Kevin was obligated to provide Allison with notice regarding their son’s travel arrangements. And if either parent traveled with the child, he or she was obligated to provide the other with an itinerary for the trip, including contact information and the location where the child would be staying. If Kevin did not-have his own residence, he had to provide Allison with “an affidavit from the legal resident of the home where [the child] shall be staying indicating [the legal resident’s] willingness and availability” to have Kevin and his son as guests.

¶ 6. In November 2014, Allison filed a complaint in chancery court. She claimed that Kevin was in contempt of the New York visitation order because he would not give her an itinerary for his visitation or an affidavit from the. resident where he and the child would be staying during visitation. Allison also requested modification of the visitation order so that Kevin would be required to inform her of his physical address by giving her “a copy of his valid driver[’]s license ... prior to exercising any visitation.” . .

¶ 7. At least five summonses were issued for Kevin between November 14, 2014, and December 29,- 2014. All of them indicated that his mailing address was a post-office box in New York City, The record contains a process server’s return reflecting that Kevin had been personally served with process in New York City on February 6, 2015.

¶ 8. During an April • 2015 telephonic hearing, the chancellor and Judge Jane Pearl of the New York County Family Court discussed whether Mississippi was the proper jurisdiction for Allison’s complaint. Allison’s Mississippi and New York attorneys participated in the hearing; as did the child’s New York court-appointed attorney, and Kevin, who has consistently proceeded pro se. Ultimately, Judge Pearl “decline[d] continuing jurisdiction” because New York was an inconvenient forum for Allison’s complaint. Kevin has appealed Judge Pearl’s decision, but his appeal remains unresolved at this time.

¶9. In June 2015, Kevin sent a letter directly to the chancellor. According to the letter, Kevin “only learned yesterday of. certain purported Tilings” regarding Allison’s complaint. Kevin did not specify what “purported filings” he had recently discovered, nor how he had discovered them. 1 In any event, Kevin claimed that the New *745 York process server, attorney David Chi-dekel, had lied about personally serving him with process. He attached a 2003 article from the New York Daily News reporting a third-party claim that Chidekel had “admitted he was lying to help a client” in an unrelated criminal matter. Finally, Kevin’s letter indicated that he was appealing Judge Pearl’s decision that Mississippi was the proper forum for Allison’s complaint.

. ¶ 10. The chancellor, responded that Kevin should not contact him directly, but “should file whatever, pleading [he] desired” with the chancery clerk. The chancellor also said that Allison’s contempt action would “continue [in Mississippi] until [he] received] proper notice of [Kevin’s New, York] appeal ....” On August 14, 2015, the chancellor entered an order stating “[t]hat since June 26, 2016, [the chancellor had] received no Notice of Appeal” from Kevin. The order went on to state that the trial on Allison’s complaint was scheduled for August 28, 2015. The day before the trial, the chancery clerk received copies of the amended notice of appeal that Kevin had filed in New York.

„¶ 11. When Allison’s trial convened on August 28, 2015, Kevin did not attend. Allison’s lawyer discussed the fact that Kevin had just filed an amended notice of his New York.appeal with the chancery clerk. The chancellor commented that he had “no notice of anything from any lawyer or judge saying ... this case is stayed [or the New York Family Court’s] ruling is stayed pending the appeal,” and he did not know whether Kevin had perfected his New York appeal. After additional preliminary discussions with Allison's lawyer, the chancellor heard Allison’s testimony.

¶ 12. Allison testified that she did not want to reduce or modify the amount of Kevin’s visitation, but he • had not been complying with the New York visitation order. More specifically, she said that Kevin had not been providing her with adequate notice regarding when he planned to exercise his summer visitation. Although Kevin was obligated to inform her of when he would exercise his summer visitation by May 1, he did not send her notice until “the middle of June.” And the New York visitation order obligated Kevin to provide Allison with an itinerary, but he initially refused to do so. He later sent an itinerary with which he did not comply so Allison “never knew where [her son] was for a good portion of the month or so that he was” with Kevin.

¶ 13. Allison had made arrangements to pick her son up from the airport on the day Kevin said he would return him, but the night before, Kevin called and said their son would not be coming back that day. For the next week, Allison could not contact Kevin or her son.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ash v. Ash
622 So. 2d 1264 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1993)
Wilburn v. Wilburn
991 So. 2d 1185 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2008)
Sanderson v. Sanderson
824 So. 2d 623 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2002)
Cox v. Moulds
490 So. 2d 866 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1986)
Isom v. Jernigan
840 So. 2d 104 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2003)
Perriece Collins v. Toikus Westbrook
184 So. 3d 922 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2016)
Kenneth Moreland v. Brandi Moreland Greenwood Spears
187 So. 3d 661 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2016)
Cheryl Ogunbor v. Maleisha May
204 So. 3d 840 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2016)
Jaggers v. Magruder
129 So. 3d 965 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2014)
Gary E. White Attorney, P.A. v. Blackwell
96 So. 3d 733 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2011)
Virk v. Mississippi Department of Revenue
133 So. 3d 809 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2014)
Kevin McK v. Elizabeth A.E.
111 A.D.3d 124 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
230 So. 3d 741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kevin-mckeown-v-elizabeth-allison-estes-missctapp-2017.