Lee Ann Hall v. Scarlett Sims

2025 Ark. App. 227
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedApril 16, 2025
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 227 (Lee Ann Hall v. Scarlett Sims) 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
Lee Ann Hall v. Scarlett Sims, 2025 Ark. App. 227 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 227 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION III No. CV-23-769

LEE ANN HALL Opinion Delivered April 16, 2025 APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE LAWRENCE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 38DR-23-82]

SCARLETT SIMS HONORABLE MICHELLE C. HUFF, APPELLEE JUDGE

AFFIRMED

BRANDON J. HARRISON, Judge

Lee Ann Hall appeals from a final order of protection the Lawrence County Circuit

Court entered 18 August 2023 preventing her from harassing, abusing, or initiating contact

with her daughter-in-law Scarlett Sims, or Scarlett’s four minor children. Scarlett’s husband

Mathew filed a similar petition some six weeks later. The circuit court granted both

petitions after consolidating them for hearing in August 2023. Lee Ann argues the circuit

court clearly erred in finding she committed domestic abuse, which Ark. Code Ann. § 9-

15-103(4) (Repl. 2020) defines as “[p]hysical harm, bodily injury, assault, or the infliction

of fear of imminent physical harm, bodily injury, or assault between family or household

members.” With a finding of domestic abuse, the circuit court can provide relief including

orders to exclude the abusing party from a victim’s residence and workplace and restrain

him or her from further contact, harassment, or mistreatment. Ark. Code Ann. § 9-15-

205(a)(1), (2), (6) & (8) (Repl. 2020). The court entered a final order of protection granting that relief to Scarlett and the minor grandchildren for ten years. It granted Mathew the

same relief for the same time. Lee Ann appeals both orders. Today we affirm the circuit

court’s order in this appeal, and in the related appeal, Hall v. Sims, 2025 Ark. App. 228.

Lee Ann is Mathew’s mother, and Mathew is Scarlett’s husband. That much is clear.

When events began, the Sims family was living in Walnut Ridge with Elizabeth Novacinski,

whom everyone calls “Granny.” Mathew testified that she is his grandmother. Lee Ann

testified that Granny is her mother. Scarlett testified that Granny is Mathew’s grandmother

but not Lee Ann’s mother. Lee Ann was “saying that it’s her mom,” she continued, “but

she’s not kin to her at all.” The circuit court was confused. Counsel agreed, “It’s very

confusing.” Scarlett was right. Lee Ann explained, “She’s been my mother since I was 15

. . . . It’s my ex husband’s mom.”

In any event, Lee Ann had worked as a traveling nurse. She began spending more

time with Scarlett’s four children,1 who were boys aged eight and younger, after retiring in

late 2022 at the age of forty-eight. In May 2023, the Simses’ objections to her behavior

boiled over. Scarlett testified that Lee Ann was sleeping naked with the boys. Lee Ann

would let them go into Walmart by themselves to pick out toys and would beat them with

a belt over Scarlett’s objection. When Scarlett raised these concerns, Lee Ann responded

that she “can do whatever she wants in her house.” Hubris never ends well.

The afternoon of May 16, after a school graduation, Lee Ann showed up at the

Simses’ home to pick up the children. Scarlett would not let her. When Scarlett told Lee

1 Lee Ann testified that Scarlett has children by two of her sons, and the two oldest children are Scarlett’s by Mathew’s older brother.

2 Ann she was not allowed to be around the children, Scarlett said that Lee Ann “told me

that if I don’t let her see my kids, she will make sure I’d never see them again.” Scarlett

testified that Lee Ann told her “me and my husband would be in the ground before we

stopped her.” Lee Ann was waving her finger and her voice was raised. She threatened

that she would evict the Sims from their house, and Mathew wouldn’t have a job anymore.

As the circuit court would eventually find, Lee Ann made good on both those threats.

The police were called; they asked Lee Ann to leave. Scarlett petitioned for an order

of protection in this action May 24. The court set a hearing for July but continued it to

August 14 for consolidation with Mathew’s similar petition of June 29.

The testimony covered events between May and June, including investigations and

proceedings in other courts that are described, but not otherwise documented, in this record.

After Lee Ann was served with Scarlett’s Lawrence County petition in this action for an

order of protection over the May 16 incident, Lee Ann petitioned for an ex parte order of

protection against Mathew (her son, remember) in Greene County. The Greene County

court entered a temporary order of protection but dissolved and dismissed it later after a

hearing. Lee Ann then removed Granny from the Walnut Ridge house and, according to

Scarlett, used a power of attorney to file terroristic-threatening charges against Scarlett and

Mathew on Granny’s behalf. Those charges were also dismissed. But someone (whether

Granny herself or Lee Ann is unclear) obtained an ex parte order of protection for Granny

against Mathew. And police told Mathew to leave the Walnut Ridge house because Lee

Ann would be bringing Granny back to it.

3 On June 28, he went back to the house to get his belongings. Scarlett testified that,

around 3:00 p.m., she and Mathew were sitting on the porch when Lee Ann pulled up in

her SUV. When Mathew asked what she was doing there, Lee Ann said, “I have something

that will end you,” and opened the car door. She had a revolver in a holster in the side

door. She grabbed it and flashed it at them. Scarlett was scared to death. Mathew

recognized the revolver as his stepdad’s.2 Lee Ann has “bragged about flipping it to people

driving down the road,” he said. The Simses left to file a police report.

While they were gone, their neighbor Christy Duke drove by the house around 6:45

p.m. on her way to a Wednesday church service. She saw Granny outside the house,

standing near a gray SUV she didn’t recognize with a maroon truck backed up beneath the

drive. A woman she didn’t know then, but identified as Lee Ann later, was on the porch

unlocking the door. Duke stopped to ask Granny if everything was all right but had to cut

the conversation short to get to church. On the drive back, both vehicles were still outside

Granny’s house, and Lee Ann was opening the gate to the back yard. Duke messaged

Scarlett, who identified Lee Ann and her husband from a photo. Around 9:30 p.m., the

Halls were inside the house, Duke said.

The next morning, Duke called police because “the front door was wide open.”

They called her over to give a statement. Duke had been in the house before because her

grandson plays with Scarlett’s kids. She said that none of Granny’s belongings were

2 Lee Ann identified the gun he described as “his dad’s gun.” Counsel clarified, “[W]hen you say ‘his dad,’ you mean your husband [Mathew’s stepfather], correct?” She said yes. The stepfather goes by George. His name is Billy; he got “George” from his sister.

4 bothered, but there were toys dumped on the floor, everything was pulled out of the closets,

and the beds had been disassembled. In the backyard, she could see that a bedframe and a

mess of clothes had been piled up and burned. Police advised Scarlett and Mathew “to go

ahead and get their stuff out since things were escalating” as they were. Mathew petitioned

for an order of protection the same day. The Sims moved in with Steve Warren, Scarlett’s

mother’s fiancé, who worked construction with Mathew.

A few weeks later, Duke was at home when Lee Ann began knocking insistently at

the front door.

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Related

Lee Ann Hall v. Mathew Sims
2025 Ark. App. 228 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2025)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2025 Ark. App. 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-ann-hall-v-scarlett-sims-arkctapp-2025.