Layman J. Hughes v. Jonathan Elliott and Roxann Elliott

2021 Ark. App. 486
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 8, 2021
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2021 Ark. App. 486 (Layman J. Hughes v. Jonathan Elliott and Roxann Elliott) 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
Layman J. Hughes v. Jonathan Elliott and Roxann Elliott, 2021 Ark. App. 486 (Ark. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Cite as 2021 Ark. App. 486 Elizabeth Perry I attest to the accuracy and ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS integrity of this document DIVISION IV 2023.08.01 13:33:25 -05'00' No. CV-20-697 2023.003.20244

LAYMAN J. HUGHES OPINION DELIVERED DECEMBER 8, 2021 APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE POLK COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 57PR-19-75]

HONORABLE JERRY RYAN, JONATHAN ELLIOTT AND JUDGE ROXANN ELLIOTT APPELLEES REVERSED AND DISMISSED

ROBERT J. GLADWIN, Judge

Layman Hughes appeals the May 6, 2020 final order and decree of adoption entered

by the Polk County Circuit Court granting the petition for adoption of his four children

filed by Jonathan Elliott and Lisa Elliott (husband and wife, the “Elliotts”). Hughes argues

that the circuit court clearly erred by (1) granting the petition without proof that the

requirements of Ark. Code Ann. § 9-9-212 (Repl. 2020) had been met; (2) granting the

petition without obtaining Hughes’s consent; and (3) finding that the adoption was in the

children’s best interest. We find merit in Hughes’s argument; accordingly, the circuit court's

adoption order is reversed and dismissed.

I. Statement of Facts and Procedural History

Hughes and Tatum Veal were married and had four children (KJH, d/o/b July 7,

2008; MAH, DOB February 13, 2010; LLH, DOB March 19, 2011; and HJH, DOB January 1, 2015). The family lived in Mena, Arkansas. From 2008 until 2018, Hughes

worked on a pipeline in Texas and New Mexico for extended periods; however, he

maintained contact with and supported his family.

In March 2017, Veal and Hughes divorced, and the resulting decree provided that

they would coparent the children with no provision being made for child support. Veal and

Hughes both had histories of illegal drug use, which caused the children to be placed in

foster care at times, most recently from March to August 2017. During that period, both

Veal and Hughes had supervised visitation with the children through the foster parents and

the Arkansas Department of Human Services (“DHS”).

In August 2017, with Hughes’s consent, Veal regained custody of the children.

Hughes subsequently sent Veal several payments to help provide for the children’s support

during his absence. During this period, Veal met the Elliotts and began leaving the children

in their care from time to time. Roxann Elliott expressed to Veal her concern about the

children’s well-being because Veal allegedly was using drugs again.

Hughes, who was still working out of state, believed that the children were being

cared for by Veal with assistance from the support he provided. He was unaware of Veal’s

alleged drug issues or that she had been leaving the children with the Elliotts; however,

when he returned for Christmas in 2017, one of the children expressed concerns to him

about the situation.

As a result, Hughes decided to quit his job working on the pipeline to be present for,

and obtain custody of, the children. He quit his job in January 2018, moved back to Mena,

2 and sought assistance from DHS for a drug-and-alcohol assessment and inpatient-

rehabilitation therapy.

Roxann Elliott began asserting control and threatening that she would take the

children away from Veal because of her drug use. On January 13, 2019, Veal took the

children to the Elliotts and asked them to keep them for her. Hughes maintained weekly

supervised visitation with the children at the time.

On April 19, Hughes was admitted to an inpatient-rehabilitation program in Fort

Smith. Hughes told his children that he would be leaving for a month to get his life together

for them but that he would be back. That was the last time the Elliotts permitted Hughes

to see his children.

During Hughes’s month-long inpatient rehabilitation, DHS set a protective-services

closure hearing. Additionally, the Elliotts filed to become guardians of the children. The

hearings were combined and held on May 14. 1 DHS transported Hughes to the hearing

from the rehabilitation facility where he unsuccessfully sought visitation and objected to the

guardianship.

At the hearing, the circuit court announced Hughes’s ability to continue supervised

visitation but also stated that it could take up to a year for him to gain significant visitation

with his children by becoming and staying drug-free and receiving counseling and that it

1 The guardianship and adoption cases were not consolidated. A separate appeal of the guardianship has been filed, and the transcript of the guardianship hearing is included in the record of the guardianship appeal, CV-20-731 (dismissed Apr. 27, 2021), but is not included in this record.

3 would then be up to the children’s counselor as to when unsupervised visitation could begin.

The resulting order included a plan anticipating Hughes’s continued visitation.

Following that hearing, the Elliotts enrolled the children in counseling with Pat

Howard. Although they knew that the circuit court’s order permitted supervised visitation,

the Elliotts began to block Hughes’s attempts to see or communicate with the children,

including engaging in the false pretense that a no-contact order had been entered against

Hughes. On Father’s Day, Hughes went to the church the Elliotts attended, at which time

the Elliotts had the pastor and a deputy sheriff ask Hughes to leave under threat of arrest.

On July 7, Hughes took a birthday card to the Elliotts’ house for KJH’s tenth birthday and

left it on their front porch at the door. The following week, Hughes went to Howard’s

office to discuss his options for visitation despite the obstacles from the Elliotts. The children

happened to be at Howard’s office, and the Elliotts called the police, alleging that a no-

contact order against Hughes was in place. They told Howard that visitation was not allowed

and threatened Hughes to never return to their house or they would have him arrested.

During this time, Hughes followed the circuit court’s directives to reinstate visitation

with his children and to work toward gaining custody. He underwent drug-and-alcohol

rehabilitation programs; submitted to and consistently passed weekly drug tests; and started

working regularly with a counselor. He attempted to meet with the Elliotts at Howard’s

office, but they threatened to have him arrested for being there. His drug screens were sent

to Howard, evidencing that he continued to be drug-free. He set up a four-bedroom home

in preparation for gaining visitation with, and eventually custody of, his children.

4 Howard, as gatekeeper for access to the children, did not convey to Hughes any

conditions on his ability to see them other than the circuit court’s order, and she stated that

she wanted him to work on his relationship with the Elliotts—which was not a condition

of the order. Howard acknowledged that Hughes had complied with the circuit court’s

requirements for visitation and that visitation with Hughes would have been appropriate,

but she denied his requests because she felt like he was rude to her and the Elliotts. Hughes

unsuccessfully sought assistance in setting up visitation through Howard from his counselor,

Darlena Peikert, his attorney, Orvin Foster, and DHS

During this time, the Elliotts moved the children to property they owned on

Highway 270, sixteen miles from town. The property is so remote that there is no cell or

land-line phone service, and the nearest neighbor is a half mile away.

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2021 Ark. App. 486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/layman-j-hughes-v-jonathan-elliott-and-roxann-elliott-arkctapp-2021.