K.M. v. B.W.C.

CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedJuly 11, 2025
DocketCL-2025-0222
StatusPublished

This text of K.M. v. B.W.C. (K.M. v. B.W.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
K.M. v. B.W.C., (Ala. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Rel: July 11, 2025

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts, 300 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other errors, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published in Southern Reporter.

ALABAMA COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS SPECIAL TERM, 2025 _________________________

CL-2025-0222 _________________________

K.M.

v.

B.W.C.

Appeal from Limestone Juvenile Court (CS-12-900110.04)

MOORE, Presiding Judge.

K.M. ("the mother") appeals from a judgment entered by the

Limestone Juvenile Court ("the juvenile court") that, among other things,

modified the custody of K.R.M. ("the child") and declined to hold B.W.C. CL-2025-0222

("the father") in contempt of court. We affirm the judgment in part and

reverse the judgment in part.

Background

The child was born on April 6, 2012, to the mother and the father,

who were not married. According to the father, the juvenile court entered

an order on April 25, 2013, that incorporated an agreement of the parties,

pursuant to which, he said, the parties were awarded joint legal custody

of the child, the mother was awarded sole physical custody of the child,

subject to the father's graduated visitation schedule, and the father was

directed to pay child support to the mother. Before the commencement

of this action, the parties had been before the juvenile court on at least

two additional occasions, and, according to the father, the most recent

judgment was entered in March 2022 ("the 2022 judgment"). The father

acknowledged that the 2022 judgment awarded the mother sole physical

custody of the child and awarded him standard visitation, which he

exercised on the first and third weekends of the month, on Thursday

evenings after school until the following morning, and on rotating

holidays and which was to be supervised by the child's paternal

grandmother, G.C. ("the paternal grandmother"). Additionally, the 2022

2 CL-2025-0222

judgment awarded the mother $17,682.06, representing the father's

unpaid child-support arrearages.

On March 8, 2024, the father filed a petition to modify the child's

custody; he asserted, among other things, that the child "is desirous of

living away from the [mother's] current husband," that there is a

"contentious relationship between the child and her stepfather," and that

he had "recently bec[o]me aware that the stepfather [had] slapped the …

child in the face" and that that "may not have been an isolated incident."

The father sought an award of sole physical custody of the child and an

accompanying modification of child support. On March 22, 2024, the

mother, appearing pro se, filed an answer to the father's petition. On

April 29, 2024, counsel filed a notice of appearance on behalf of the

mother, and the mother filed an amended answer and a counterclaim in

which she sought an award of sole legal custody of the child, an order

prohibiting the child from using social media at the father's house, an

order calculating and awarding interest on the father's outstanding child-

support arrearage, and an order increasing the father's monthly

payments toward that arrearage. The father filed a reply to the mother's

counterclaim. On November 1, 2024, the mother filed a motion seeking

3 CL-2025-0222

to hold the father in contempt, in which she asserted that the father had

frequently visited the child unsupervised in contravention of the 2022

judgment.

On February 18, 2025, a trial was conducted; the mother was not

present at the trial, but she was represented by counsel. On March 3,

2025, the juvenile court entered a judgment modifying custody of the

child by awarding the father sole physical custody, subject to an award

of standard visitation to the mother. The juvenile court declined to award

child support and denied all remaining requested relief by the parties.

On March 4, 2025, the mother filed a postjudgment motion. On March

27, 2025, the mother filed her notice of appeal to this court. The mother's

notice of appeal was held in abeyance until April 1, 2025, when her

postjudgment motion was denied by operation of law.1 See Rule 1(B),

Ala. R. Juv. P., and Rule 4(a)(5), Ala. R. App. P.

1On March 5, 2025, the juvenile court entered an order setting the

mother's postjudgment motion for a hearing to be held on April 1, 2025. On that same day, in response to a motion filed by the mother, the juvenile court entered an order that we interpret as an order extending the 14-day period for ruling on the mother's postjudgment motion for an additional 14 days. See Rule 1(B)(1), Ala. R. Juv. P. On April 2, 2025, following the April 1, 2025, hearing, the juvenile court purported to enter an order denying the mother's postjudgment motion. Because the juvenile court's 14-day extension to rule on the mother's postjudgment 4 CL-2025-0222

Facts

The father admitted that the requirement in the 2022 judgment

that his visitation with the child be supervised by the paternal

grandmother, with whom he resides, had been based on his having

enrolled in a pretrial-diversion program. He testified that, over time, he

had observed that the child, who was 12 years old at the time of the trial,

was demonstrating negative emotions when she arrived at the father's

house for visitation after leaving the mother's house and again before

leaving the father's house to return to the mother's house. The father

stated that the child had expressed eagerness when the time came for

her to visit the father, "[l]ike she was being set free almost," and that she

had expressed sadness and had appeared "regretful" to return to the

mother and "didn't care to go back" to the mother's house.

The father testified that the mother had entered into a relationship

with another man ("the stepfather")2 shortly after the child was born,

motion expired on April 1, 2025, however, the motion was deemed denied by operation of law on that date. See Rule 1(B).

2Although both the mother and the father made references to the

mother's current "husband" and referred to him as the child's stepfather in their respective pleadings, the father testified that he was uncertain whether the mother and the stepfather are legally married. We refer to 5 CL-2025-0222

that the stepfather has an older daughter ("the stepsister"), that the

mother and the stepfather have a four-year-old son together ("the half

brother"), and that the child resides with the mother, the stepfather, the

stepsister, and the half brother. According to the father, at some point,

the child had expressed that she did not want to be around the stepfather;

he said that he had attributed the child's negative emotions to her home

life with the mother. He stated that, on one occasion before he filed his

modification petition, the child had arrived at his house for a visit and

had appeared uncomfortable and that, on another occasion, she had

shown him some bruising on the back of her leg. The paternal

grandmother also testified that she had occasionally seen bruises on the

child.

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