Krista Pickren v. Roy William Campbell, III

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 24, 2025
DocketA25A0458
StatusPublished

This text of Krista Pickren v. Roy William Campbell, III (Krista Pickren v. Roy William Campbell, III) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Krista Pickren v. Roy William Campbell, III, (Ga. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

THIRD DIVISION DOYLE, P. J., MARKLE and PADGETT, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. https://www.gaappeals.us/rules

June 24, 2025

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A25A0458. PICKREN v. CAMPBELL.

DOYLE, Presiding Judge.

Roy Campbell III filed for divorce against Krista Pickren, and Campbell moved

to enforce the parties’ prenuptial agreement. The trial court granted Campbell’s

motion before entering the divorce decree, and Pickren filed an application for

discretionary appeal, which this Court granted. In three related enumerations of error,

Pickren contends that the trial court erred by enforcing the prenuptial agreement

because Campbell had an undisclosed relationship with another romantic partner

when the agreement was executed. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

The record shows that the parties began their romantic relationship in 2015,

when they were both married to other people. They were each aware that the other was married when they started their relationship. In June 2015, Campbell’s then-wife

filed for divorce, which divorce was finalized in 2016. Pickren and her then-husband

also eventually divorced.

In 2018, Campbell proposed to Pickren. Campbell prepared a prenuptial

agreement and financial disclosure,1 both of which Pickren reviewed. Pickren retained

an attorney to represent her with respect to the prenuptial agreement. After reviewing

the agreement with her attorney, Pickren deliberated for a week about the terms of the

agreement, particularly its alimony waiver provision, before signing it. The alimony

waiver provision pertinently states as follows:

Notwithstanding Georgia law to the contrary, each Party agrees that it is and will remain in the best interest of both Parties and his or her respective families and after born children, if any, that the Parties each waive rights to alimony in order to avoid future litigation in any divorce and, in particular, litigation over issues of alimony, conduct, fault evidence, and the causes of separation. The Parties agree that all such matters shall remain private, confidential, irrelevant, and not admissible in evidence in any future action between the Parties for divorce or otherwise.

After executing the prenuptial agreement, the parties married in October 2019.

1 In the years during which the parties lived together prior to their marriage, Campbell was transparent with Pickren about his financial circumstances. 2 Pickren and her two children from her previous marriage then moved into Campbell’s

home. Throughout her marriage to Campbell, Pickren was unemployed, and Campbell

paid for all of Pickren’s personal expenses. Additionally, Campbell paid for all of the

expenses of Pickren’s children from her prior marriage.

In February 2023, Campbell informed Pickren that he was unhappy in the

marriage, had been seeing someone else, and wanted a divorce. Pickren responded by

suggesting that they could work through the issue and that it was “not a big deal.”

Thereafter, Campbell and Pickren attempted to reconcile; however, Campbell

ultimately decided to end the marriage.

In April 2023, Campbell filed a complaint for divorce. In her answer, Pickren

contested the enforceability of the prenuptial agreement on the basis of Campbell’s

undisclosed relationship with another romantic partner. Campbell moved to enforce

the prenuptial agreement. In June 2023, Pickren filed a demand for a jury trial.

In September 2023, the trial court specially set a hearing on Campbell’s motion

to enforce the prenuptial agreement. Despite her jury demand, Pickren did not object

to the trial court hearing and deciding the motion; in fact, she subpoenaed witnesses

to the hearing. On November 1, 2023, the trial court convened the hearing at which

3 both parties appeared, testified, called witnesses, and introduced evidence.2

At the hearing, Campbell testified that his relationship with the other romantic

partner, Crystal Denham, started after he had married Pickren. Denham also testified

to this effect; however, Pickren, Campbell’s ex-wife, and Campbell’s adult daughter

testified that Campbell had admitted to each of them that his relationship with

Denham predated his marriage to Pickren. Pickren further testified that she would not

have signed the prenuptial agreement had she known about Campbell’s relationship

with Denham.

In December 2023, the trial court entered an order granting Campbell’s motion

to enforce the prenuptial agreement. The trial court found that the parties had started

their romantic relationship when they were both married to other people; that prior

to the marriage, Campbell was open with Pickren about his financial condition; that

during the prenuptial negotiations, Campbell had fully disclosed his financial

condition; that Pickren had reviewed the prenuptial agreement with counsel, on

whose advice she carefully considered the agreement before signing it one week later

of her own volition; that during their marriage, Campbell paid for nearly all of

Pickren’s and her children’s expenses; that despite Campbell’s and Denham’s

2 At the hearing, Pickren did not object to the trial court hearing evidence on, or ruling on the enforceability of, the prenuptial agreement. 4 denials, Campbell and Denham were in a romantic relationship prior to Campbell’s

marriage to Pickren; that Campbell did not disclose this relationship to Pickren during

the prenuptial negotiations; and that Campbell’s relationship with Denham was an

issue of conduct, fault evidence, or the causes of separation that the parties had agreed

would be irrelevant and inadmissible in any divorce action per the prenuptial

agreement.

As to Pickren’s claim that the agreement was the product of the nondisclosure

of a material fact in that Campbell had failed to disclose his romantic relationship with

Denham, the trial court noted that Pickren had offered no legal authority in support

of the proposition that an undisclosed romantic relationship constitutes a material fact

sufficient to invalidate a prenuptial agreement. The trial court further found that the

alimony waiver provision of the agreement indicated that the parties did not consider

issues of conduct, fault evidence, or the causes of separation to be material, and that

Campbell’s relationship with Denham was such an issue. Accordingly, the trial court

found that Campbell’s failure to disclose this relationship did not constitute the

nondisclosure of a material fact sufficient to justify setting aside the prenuptial

The trial court found that the terms of the prenuptial agreement were not

5 unconscionable, particularly because they provided for Pickren to receive a property

settlement payout of $112,500 pursuant to the divorce, and Pickren had not claimed

that the agreement was unconscionable.

Finally, the trial court found that Pickren had neither claimed nor presented any

evidence or testimony that the facts and circumstances had changed since the

execution of the prenuptial agreement so as to make its enforcement unfair or

unreasonable.

In March 2024, Pickren filed a waiver of jury demand, and after Pickren waived

her jury demand, the trial court held a final hearing on the divorce. Pickren then

timely filed an application for discretionary appeal, which we granted, and this appeal

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Krista Pickren v. Roy William Campbell, III, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krista-pickren-v-roy-william-campbell-iii-gactapp-2025.