Mason Wayne Morris v. Jasmine Sharell Morris

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 13, 2026
DocketCA-0025-0746
StatusUnknown

This text of Mason Wayne Morris v. Jasmine Sharell Morris (Mason Wayne Morris v. Jasmine Sharell Morris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mason Wayne Morris v. Jasmine Sharell Morris, (La. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

25-746

MASON WAYNE MORRIS

VERSUS

JASMINE SHARELL MORRIS

**********

APPEAL FROM THE NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF RAPIDES, NO. 278,631 HONORABLE DAVID MICHAEL WILLIAMS, DISTRICT JUDGE

WILBUR L. STILES JUDGE

Court composed of Sharon Darville Wilson, Guy E. Bradberry, and Wilbur L. Stiles, Judges.

REVERSED AND REMANDED. Michael H. Davis Law Office of Michael H. Davis 2017 MacArthur Drive Building 4, Suite “A” Alexandria, LA 71301 (318) 445-3621 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT: Mason Wayne Morris

Kenneth A. Doggett, Jr. Attorney at Law 1100 Martin Luther King Drive Post Office Drawer 13498 Alexandria, LA 71301 (318) 888-3644 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE: Jasmine Sharell Morris STILES, Judge.

Appellant, Mason Wayne Morris, filed in Rapides Parish, Louisiana, a

Petition to Make Foreign Judgment Executory in which he asked the trial court to

make executory in the State of Louisiana the final decree of divorce and custody

rendered by the circuit court in Dekalb County, Alabama. The trial court denied and

dismissed Mason’s petition by judgment signed on May 12, 2025. Mason appeals.

For the following reasons, we reverse and remand the matter to the trial court.

ISSUES

The matter before us is a custody dispute between Mason and Jasmine Morris

involving their daughter, Madeline Morris, who was born on April 28, 2020.1 At the

center of the dispute is whether the State of Alabama or the State of Louisiana has

subject matter jurisdiction over the custody proceedings. In dismissing Mason’s

petition to make the Alabama divorce and custody decree executory in the State of

Louisiana, the trial court held that the State of Alabama did not have jurisdiction

pursuant to the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act

(UCCJEA). Mason has appealed that judgment, asserting the following assignments

of error:

A. The trial court erred in not allowing the Alabama judgment of custody to [be] made executory in the State of Louisiana.

B. The trial court erred in not considering the Exception of Res Judicata filed by Mason Wayne Morris and finding the issues of jurisdiction over the subject matter and custody are res judicata.

1 We note that her birthdate was in incorrectly stated as April 20, 2020 in the previous opinion of this court under docket number 24-705. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This court previously considered the issue of which state has jurisdiction over

the custody dispute in docket number 24-705 when Jasmine appealed the trial court’s

denial of her petition for custody. The opinion rendered by the previous panel in 24-

705 on April 30, 2025, contains the same facts and procedural history which form

the basis of this appeal. We have thus reproduced those facts below:

Madeline Morris was born on April 20, 2020, in Louisiana. Her parents, Mason and Jasmine, were not married at the time of Madeline’s birth and did not live together. Mason and Jasmine married on March 23, 2021, in Fort Polk (now Fort Johnson), Louisiana. After Madeline’s birth, Mason was deployed to Texas for nine months and to Kuwait and Qatar for seven months in 2021.

The parties lived together on base after they married, but Mason alleges that he maintained his domicile in DeKalb County, Alabama, while he was in the military. Mason and Jasmine separated on April 28, 2023. Prior to the separation, Madeline had been enrolled in daycare in Alabama for weeks at a time beginning in July of 2020. Mason left the military in April of 2023 and returned to Alabama.

Jasmine alleges that on May 28, 2023, she brought Madeline to meet Mason’s mother, Stacy Vaughn, at a halfway point between Alabama and Louisiana with the agreement that Madeline would be returned to Jasmine in August. Mason allegedly refused to return Madeline and filed a complaint for divorce in the circuit court of DeKalb County, Alabama, on August 2, 2023. Jasmine filed a motion to dismiss the Alabama case for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. That motion came for hearing on August 25, 2023, and was denied by judgment signed on August 25, 2023, by Judge Andrew Hairston (Judge Hairston). A custody hearing was set for December 12, 2023.

Jasmine had an overnight visit with Madeline after the August 25, 2023 hearing, with the understanding that she would return Madeline to Mason’s custody the next day. Instead, she took the child and returned to Louisiana. Jasmine did not appeal the denial of her motion to dismiss and did not participate in the custody hearing, which proceeded as scheduled on December 12, 2023.

By judgment signed December 13, 2023, Judge Hairston granted a divorce from Jasmine and sole legal and physical custody of Madeline to Mason. The judgment also set out a visitation schedule and ordered Jasmine to pay child support in the amount of $693.00 per month. On December 20, 2023, Mason filed a petition seeking to have the Alabama

2 judgment made executory in the Ninth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Rapides, State of Louisiana. In response, Jasmine filed an opposition and a petition for custody. She alleged that the Alabama court lacked subject matter jurisdiction because Madeline never resided in Alabama for six months or longer and that she had not been served with notice of the December 12, 2023 court date. Mason then filed a peremptory exception of res judicata, an exception of lack of subject matter jurisdiction, and a motion to dismiss Jasmine’s petition for custody. The motion to dismiss alleged that there were simultaneous proceedings in DeKalb County, Alabama.

Mason’s exceptions and motion to dismiss, as well as Jasmine’s motion to compel discovery responses, came for hearing on August 27, 2024. On September 9, 2024, the trial court signed a judgment finding that the Alabama court had subject matter jurisdiction and dismissing both Jasmine’s petition for custody and her petition to modify custody. The judgment stated that Judge David Michael Williams (Judge Williams) of the Ninth Judicial District Court, State of Louisiana, and Judge Hairston had conferred in accordance with La.R.S. 13:1818 and concurred that DeKalb County, State of Alabama, has subject matter jurisdiction over Madeline’s custody. The judgment went on to deny Mason’s exceptions of res judicata and lack of subject matter jurisdiction as moot but noted that said objections may be re-urged at the hearing on Mason’s petition to have the Alabama judgment made executory.

Jasmine appealed. Mason answered the appeal and asked this court to amend the judgment to grant his exceptions of res judicata and lack of subject matter jurisdiction.

Morris v. Morris, 24-705, pp. 2–4 (La.App. 3 Cir. 4/30/25), 411 So.3d 884, 886–87

(footnote omitted).

The previous panel noted that “[a] hearing on Mason’s petition to make the

Alabama judgment executory was held on September 12, 2024.” Id. at 887. The trial

court took the matter under advisement, and a copy of the transcript was filed in the

record of 24-705.

At the time of the September 12, 2024 hearing on Mason’s petition to make

foreign judgment executory, Jasmine had not yet appealed the trial court’s

September 9, 2024 judgment. Her motion for appeal was granted on September 23,

3 2024. As noted by the previous panel in 24-705, Jasmine asserted the following on

appeal:

[T]he trial court erred in granting Mason’s motion to dismiss pursuant to La.R.S. 13:1818 because there were no “simultaneous proceedings” in Louisiana and Alabama at the time she filed her petition for child custody in the Ninth Judicial District Court of Louisiana.

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