KYLE DOUGHTY VS. JAYME BECK (FD-01-0687-15, ATLANTIC COUNTY AND STATEWIDE)

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedOctober 21, 2021
DocketA-2908-18
StatusUnpublished

This text of KYLE DOUGHTY VS. JAYME BECK (FD-01-0687-15, ATLANTIC COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (KYLE DOUGHTY VS. JAYME BECK (FD-01-0687-15, ATLANTIC COUNTY AND STATEWIDE)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
KYLE DOUGHTY VS. JAYME BECK (FD-01-0687-15, ATLANTIC COUNTY AND STATEWIDE), (N.J. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.

SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-2908-18

KYLE DOUGHTY,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

JAYME BECK, f/k/a JAYME L. DOUGHTY,

Defendant-Respondent. __________________________

Submitted March 30, 2020 – Decided October 21, 2021

Before Judges Ostrer, Vernoia, and Susswein.

On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division, Family Part, Atlantic County, Docket No. FD-01-0687-15.

Russell & Marinucci, PA, attorneys for appellant (Marla Marinucci, on the brief).

Respondent has not filed a brief.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

OSTRER, J.A.D. This is a post-judgment child custody dispute. Plaintiff Kyle Doughty and

defendant Jayme Beck (formerly Doughty) divorced, settled equitable

distribution, and agreed to joint legal custody and evenly shared physical

custody of their young daughter ("Daughter") until she began school. Their

shared custody arrangement was no easy feat, because Doughty lives in New

Jersey and Beck lives in Kansas. The parties transferred custody every month

or more, usually in Ohio after long road trips. The parents' geography also

guaranteed their shared custody arrangement would be short-lived. As the start

of kindergarten approached, each parent sought physical custody during school

years, leaving the other with custody during summer and school breaks.

After a testimonial hearing, the court determined Doughty and Beck were

both fit and loving parents but that granting Beck physical custody during the

school year and making her the parent of primary residence (PPR) best served

Daughter's interests. The court awarded Doughty physical custody during

summer and school breaks and made him the parent of alternate residence

(PAR). The court later denied Doughty's motion for reconsideration.

Doughty appeals, contending the court's factual findings lacked evidential

support. After carefully reviewing the trial record, we agree some of the trial

A-2908-18 2 court's findings are unsupported. Nonetheless, the errors were not "clearly

capable of producing an unjust result." R. 2:10-2. Therefore, we affirm.

I.

The parties married in Kansas in 2011 while Doughty, a New Jerseyan,

served in the U.S. Army there. Beck is a Kansan. Daughter was born almost a

year later. For a while after Doughty's honorable discharge, the young family

lived with Beck's parents in Kansas, but they relocated to New Jersey when

Daughter was less than a year-and-a-half. They moved into Doughty's parent's

home. Doughty found work and Beck stayed home with Daughter.

After nine months here, Doughty acquiesced to Beck's desire to return to

Kansas. Beck and Daughter moved first, and Doughty planned to join them once

he found work there. But, the following month, Beck told Doughty (soon after

he interviewed for a Kansas job) that she wanted a divorce. They dispute what

prompted her decision. Doughty returned to New Jersey alone, after Beck

refused to permit him to leave with Daughter.

Beck filed for a divorce in Kansas in November 2014. Without a hearing,

the Kansas court granted the parties joint custody of Daughter and barred

A-2908-18 3 Doughty from removing Daughter from Kansas. The Kansas court also ordered

Doughty to pay $300 a month in child support.1

In New Jersey, Doughty immediately applied under an FD docket for

Daughter's return to New Jersey. The court denied emergent relief, and Doughty

was separated from Daughter for several months. But in multiple orders issued

in 2015, the court established jurisdiction over custody with the Kansas court's

concurrence, granted Doughty extended periods of parenting time in New

Jersey, ordered daily phone or Facetime contact between the child and the parent

not present, and established joint legal custody pendente lite, with Beck as PPR

and Doughty as PAR. A plenary hearing that began in August 2015 was halted

when the parties agreed in principle to share physical custody until Daughter

started school.

The agreement followed months of antagonistic email and text exchanges

between the parties. Beck frequently went off on hostile and vulgar tirades

against Doughty, and often threatened to deny him physical and Facetime

contact with Daughter. Beck also withheld information about Daughter's routine

medical care. Doughty usually demonstrated restraint, but he at times demeaned

1 The Kansas order is not in the record on appeal. We rely on a certification from Doughty on the child custody provisions and Beck's testimony on the child support provision. A-2908-18 4 Beck's intelligence. One source of friction was Beck's romantic relationship in

early 2015 with Jeremy Beck, the man she would later marry.2 Also, for a period

in 2015, unbeknownst to Beck, her iPhone's tracking function remained open to

Doughty, who informed Beck he knew her whereabouts, falsely stating he hired

a private investigator. Beck alleged Doughty was stalking her.

The court memorialized the parties' agreement in a September 8, 2015

order, which required them to submit parenting time plans within two weeks

"with the understanding that the parties would like to share roughly equal time

with the child until the child reaches school age and leaving the issue of which

party will be the [PPR] . . . open." The order stated that Daughter "shall remain

in New Jersey with [Doughty] for the next thirty (30) days."

The parties' plans differed. Doughty proposed that he and Beck alternate

parenting time periods of roughly forty-five days, with the first period being an

extension of the thirty days that began September 8 and was scheduled to end

October 8. Beck wanted the parties to alternate thirty-day periods.

As October 8 approached, Doughty's counsel asked the court whether

Doughty could keep Daughter pending the court's decision on the parenting

2 To avoid confusion with Beck, we will refer to Jeremy Beck as "Jeremy," and mean no disrespect in doing so. A-2908-18 5 plans. Doughty also expressed concerns about being present for future

exchanges because of restraints that, according to Beck's counsel, the Kansas

divorce court had issued. Although the court did not respond to Doughty's

counsel's inquiry or a subsequent one, Doughty kept the child. That prompted

Beck to seek help securing Daughter's return. The trial court then directed,

through a law clerk, that Doughty return Daughter to Beck on October 25, 2015,

where she was to remain until December 10, 2015. 3

Then, according to Doughty's counsel, Beck said she would not return

Daughter without a formal order commanding her return. So, on December 4,

2015, the court entered an order directing Beck to return Daughter to Doughty

in five days. In an apparent attempt to equalize parenting time, the court ordered

that Daughter would alternate between New Jersey and Kansas "for as many

days" as Daughter was just in Kansas.

The court then resolved the parties' disparate parenting time plans. By

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KYLE DOUGHTY VS. JAYME BECK (FD-01-0687-15, ATLANTIC COUNTY AND STATEWIDE), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kyle-doughty-vs-jayme-beck-fd-01-0687-15-atlantic-county-and-statewide-njsuperctappdiv-2021.