Kimberly Henderson v. Chad Simpson

2025 Ark. App. 40, 705 S.W.3d 15
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 29, 2025
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 40 (Kimberly Henderson v. Chad Simpson) 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
Kimberly Henderson v. Chad Simpson, 2025 Ark. App. 40, 705 S.W.3d 15 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 40 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION I No. CV-23-644

KIMBERLY HENDERSON Opinion Delivered January 29, 2025 APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE GARLAND COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 26DR-23-340]

CHAD SIMPSON HONORABLE LYNN WILLIAMS, APPELLEE JUDGE

REVERSED AND REMANDED

BRANDON J. HARRISON, Judge

Kimberly Henderson appeals an order denying a motion to set aside a final order

entered by default on Chad Simpson’s petition to establish paternity and custody. The order

found Chad was the natural father of Kimberly’s seven-year-old daughter M.C. and awarded

him sole custody and authority to deny Kimberly any visitation or contact with her. We

reverse the default judgment (order) and remand for further proceedings.

After Kimberly’s time to “plead or otherwise defend” in response to the petition had

passed, the circuit court held a hearing and then entered the final order in July 2023. Ark.

R. Civ. P. 55(a). Chad attended the hearing; Kimberly did not. In response to a question

from the court, Chad’s counsel confirmed that Kimberly never filed an answer. He said notice of the hearing had been mailed to her in June.1 After the bailiff sounded the hall,

this followed:

THE COURT: She has failed to appear; therefore, we have a default situation. We will grant paternity in the name of Chad Simpson. The Department of Health, Vital Statistics will change the birth certificate to reflect that he is indeed the father of this child. It is a child?

MR. TAPP: It is a child.

THE COURT: A child and custody will be at — with Mr. Simpson and visitation will be at his discretion. Anything further in this matter? I guess child support, have you been able to — we don’t have an [affidavit of financial means] or anything like that?

MR. TAPP: Your Honor, I don’t. I’m going to calculate her child support at $1,906 which is minimum wage for 40 hours a week.

THE COURT: Thank you. Anything further in this matter?

MR. TAPP: No, Your Honor.

The court heard no testimony; not even from the petitioner, Chad. It entered a final

order on July 13. In the order, the court found—having received no evidence and only

Chad’s bare-bones petition—that he “ha[d] overcome the burden of proof regarding the

presumption of joint custody for the minor child by clear and convincing evidence” and

awarded him “full legal and physical custody” of M.C. The order provided that Kimberly

1 Kimberly swore in an affidavit attached to her motion to set aside the judgment that the address to which the notice was mailed does not exist, as she had told Chad after a process server tried to serve her with the petition there, and she did not receive notice of the hearing. On those grounds, she moved to set the judgment aside under Arkansas Rules of Civil Procedure 55(c)(1) & (3) and 59(a)(1). Because we reverse under Rule 55(c)(4), we do not address this argument.

2 “shall have no contact or visitation with [M.C.] unless at the advance direction of the

Plaintiff.”

Within eight days, Kimberly moved to set aside the default judgment and for a new

trial.2 In her motion and attached affidavit, Kimberly said that before the court entered the

July order, she and Chad shared custody of M.C. on alternate weeks. One or two months

earlier, Kimberly’s older minor daughter had “made disclosures to [her] about sexual events

that happened between herself and [Chad] while she was visiting in his home with [M.C.].”

Kimberly contacted authorities and believed an investigation was pending. The affidavit

continues, “Chad is telling me that as long as we continue to pursue the allegations my

oldest daughter has made, he will not even allow me to talk to [M.C.] or allow her to be

around my oldest daughter.” Kimberly did not dispute that she was properly served with

the petition. She explained that she had not answered it because she spoke to Chad shortly

before the deadline and he told her they could come to an agreement to keep things out of

court. She was under the impression they were going to come to agreement and that she

“was just waiting on the paperwork.”

Chad filed an unverified response with no supporting evidence. Kimberly filed a

letter August 1 requesting a hearing on the motion. The court denied the motion expressly

on August 2, without explanation or a hearing. Kimberly timely appealed both orders.

2 Kimberly filed an amended motion the same day. It is identical to the motion in content, but it includes an affidavit omitted from the original filing. To simplify the narrative, we leave that procedural detail here and refer to the amended motion as “the motion” elsewhere.

3 Kimberly’s first (and dispositive) point on appeal is that the circuit court abused its

discretion by denying her motion without evidence and without determining M.C.’s best

interest—which is an “other reason justifying relief” from default judgment under Arkansas

Rule of Civil Procedure 55(c)(4). Jones v. Jones, 2019 Ark. App. 596, 591 S.W.3d 831. In

Jones, a mother obtained a temporary order of protection in Alabama based on allegations

that her Arkansas-based husband had threatened to kill her and her child and had physically

and sexually abused her in the child’s presence. Id. at 2, 591 S.W.3d at 832. Her husband

filed for divorce in Arkansas. The Arkansas court granted him sole custody after the mother

failed to file an answer. She moved to set the custody order aside (attaching the Alabama

papers) because (among other reasons) the need to consider the child’s best interest was an

“other reason justifying relief” under Rule 55(c)(4). The circuit court denied her motion

without addressing the abuse allegations.

A six-judge majority of this court held in that nine-judge appeal that the denial was

“a complete perversion of the premise that our courts are concerned with the best interest

of the child.” Id. at 7, 591 S.W.3d at 834. We noted that a statute required circuit courts

to consider alleged abuse when determining child custody, and “even create[d] a rebuttable

presumption that it is not in the best interest of a child to be placed in the custody of an

abusive parent if there is a pattern of domestic abuse.” Id. (citing Ark. Code Ann. § 9-13-

101(c)(1) & (2) (Repl. 2015)).

Kimberly points to Jones, and a different statutory presumption enacted after it was

decided: the mandatory (but rebuttable) presumption that an initial award of joint custody

is in a child’s best interest. Act 604 of 2021 (codified at Ark. Code Ann. § 9-13-

4 101(a)(1)(A)(iv)(a) (Supp. 2023)). The Act 604 presumption can be rebutted if the court

“finds by clear and convincing evidence that joint custody is not in the best interest of the

child.” Ark. Code Ann. § 9-13-101(a)(1)(A)(iv)(b)(1). In the July order, the court found

the presumption had been rebutted. The court found Chad had “overcome the burden of

proof regarding [that] presumption of joint custody . . . by clear and convincing evidence.”

But as we have stated, the transcript of the July hearing includes no evidence. And

the boilerplate, bare-boned allegations in Chad’s paternity petition were the minimum on

which a paternity judgment could rest, we think, but they cannot rebut the Act 604

presumption even if Kimberly’s default admitted them. The petition states that Chad “is

the natural father of the minor child born to the Defendant[.]” It asks that “after the Court

has established that he is the natural father of [M.C.] . . . that he be awarded custody of the

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2025 Ark. App. 40, 705 S.W.3d 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kimberly-henderson-v-chad-simpson-arkctapp-2025.