Krystal Saul v. Jeremy Saul

2023 Ark. App. 251
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedMay 3, 2023
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2023 Ark. App. 251 (Krystal Saul v. Jeremy Saul) 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
Krystal Saul v. Jeremy Saul, 2023 Ark. App. 251 (Ark. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Cite as 2023 Ark. App. 251 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION IV No. CV-21-558

KRYSTAL SAUL Opinion Delivered May 3, 2023 APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE POPE COUNTY V. CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 58DR-19-281] JEREMY SAUL HONORABLE GORDON W. “MACK” APPELLEE MCCAIN, JR., JUDGE

AFFIRMED

N. MARK KLAPPENBACH, Judge

This is an appeal from a 2021 divorce decree that granted a divorce to appellee Jeremy

Saul, divided marital property, awarded appellant Krystal Saul alimony for eighteen months,

gave legal and physical custody of the parties’ three-year-old daughter to Jeremy, gave Krystal

visitation rights, and awarded Jeremy attorney’s fees and costs against Krystal for her

contemptuous behavior. Krystal contends that the circuit court clearly erred (1) by not

awarding the parties joint custody; (2) by not “piercing the corporate veil” of Jeremy’s two

premarital businesses; and (3) by holding her in contempt and awarding Jeremy attorney’s

fees and costs against her. We affirm.

Krystal initiated this litigation in 2019. Krystal had been diagnosed with an

autoimmune disorder and had been awarded Social Security disability benefits; she did not

work outside the home. The parties have one daughter who was born in 2017, the only child of this marriage; each party has a son from previous marriages. The parties’ daughter has

some health issues, some eating issues, and some food and skin allergies.

Following a temporary hearing, the circuit court ordered that the parties share joint

custody of their daughter with alternating weeks of visitation; that the parties comply with

bi-weekly weigh-ins of the child at her pediatrician’s office; that Jeremy (a family physician)

pay $1,673 in monthly child support; that Jeremy pay the parties’ monthly mortgage on their

home in Russellville, health insurance, and credit-card payments; that Krystal and their

daughter could remain in the marital home; and that Krystal serve as the primary legal

custodian for medical decisions for the child. Over the next year, both parties filed a variety

of motions, including motions to compel discovery, for contempt, and for emergency ex

parte relief. In June 2020, the circuit court appointed Jeannie Denniston as attorney ad litem

for the child. Denniston requested psychological evaluations of the parties, and Dr. Glen

Adams was appointed to perform those evaluations.

The multi-day trial was conducted in February and March 2021. Ms. Denniston

provided written recommendations to the circuit court, concluding that Jeremy should be

awarded legal custody but that the parties should have joint physical custody. Each party

testified about the negative qualities of the other parent. Jeremy wanted full custody, and

Krystal wanted to continue joint custody. By Krystal’s own estimation, her daily life activities

were limited by her physical ailments: debilitating headaches; loose joints that often caused

discomfort and muscle spasms; nerve pain in her hands and feet; gastrointestinal distress;

and dizziness.

2 Dr. Adams opined that Krystal’s actions showed a chronic, entrenched pattern of

beliefs and accusations that were at times malevolent and directed toward Jeremy. Dr.

Adams opined that Krystal’s prognosis for substantive change is poor because of the very

limited insight she displayed during the interview and the chronic and severe features of the

pattern. He said that Krystal likely has a combination of legitimate psychological and

physiological concerns with some that were feigned, and it was hard to find the line between

truth and reality. Dr. Adams diagnosed Krystal as having unspecified personality disorder

with borderline and histrionic traits.

Dr. James Carter, M.D., testified that if Krystal’s reported physical conditions were

true, those conditions would significantly impair her basic activities of daily living and would

result in death in approximately ten years. Krystal’s alleged physical concerns include, but

are not limited to, carnitine deficiency disorder, chronic neutropenia, immune system

dysfunction, ADHD, auto-immune encephalitis, polyneuropathy, undifferentiated

connective tissue disease, primary osteoarthritis involving multiple joints, fibromyalgia,

gastroparesis, PTSD, generalized anxiety disorder, cataracts, MGUS, dysautonomia, and

Meniere’s disease.

At the end of March 2021, the circuit court entered a final divorce decree in which

it awarded custody to Jeremy. The court stated it had observed the demeanor of the witnesses

and had placed the burden of proof on the party opposed to joint custody, in this case,

Jeremy. Ultimately, the circuit court found Krystal proved “to be one of the most untruthful

individuals I have had in my Court.” The circuit court found the trial replete with Krystal’s

3 statements that were “clearly untrue to the degree that this Court has reason to be concerned

about the Plaintiff’s ability to overcome her tendency to embellish, obfuscate and blatantly

lie.” The circuit court took the attorney ad litem’s recommendation into consideration but

ultimately determined Jeremy was the parent who should have legal and physical custody of

the child. The circuit court noted that Krystal’s “disturbing lack of control regarding

truthfulness” was on full display, including her meritless accusations against Jeremy that her

disability was his fault to a certain extent and that he maliciously intended to harm her

medically; her lies about having completed bachelor’s degrees in psychology and art history

and near completion of a master’s degree in social work when the facts showed she does not

have a college degree and has never attended graduate school; and her odd claim that “after

a sexual assault years before marrying Jeremy, she lost the ability to play the piano or to speak

three other languages.”

The circuit court awarded alternating weekend and holiday visitation to Krystal. The

circuit court deviated from the child-support chart and found that no child support should

be awarded to either party but did order Jeremy to pay $1,000 in monthly spousal support

to Krystal for eighteen months, and it ordered him to pay for all medical costs and

extracurricular costs for their daughter. The circuit court found both of Jeremy’s premarital

businesses in dispute (Apollo Investments, Inc. and Sparta Corp., Inc.) to be his property

and not subject to division, except for certain personal and real property acquired during the

marriage in the name of Sparta Corp., Inc., which the circuit court divided equally between

4 the parties. Krystal retained her premarital home in Benton, Arkansas. The marital home

in Russellville was to be listed for sale and the proceeds divided evenly. 1

The circuit court held Krystal in contempt of court for four separate alleged

violations: (1) for revoking a HIPAA authorization allowing Jeremy to receive her medical

records; (2) for failing to acknowledge receipt of certain child-support payments from

Jeremy;2 (3) for allegedly causing extremely disparaging information about Jeremy to be

posted on a social media account; and (4) for refusing to execute the parties’ 2018 and 2019

income tax filings. Jeremy subsequently filed a motion for attorney’s fees and court costs for

her contemptuous behavior, and the motion was granted.

Krystal now appeals from the circuit court’s divorce decree and the circuit court’s

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2023 Ark. App. 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krystal-saul-v-jeremy-saul-arkctapp-2023.