Meins v. Meins

218 S.W.3d 366, 93 Ark. App. 292
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 30, 2005
DocketCA 05-415
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 218 S.W.3d 366 (Meins v. Meins) 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
Meins v. Meins, 218 S.W.3d 366, 93 Ark. App. 292 (Ark. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Andree Layton Roaf, Judge.

Kevin Meins appeals from udge. of his visitation with his two minor children, in which his daily weekday visitations were terminated and his visitation was reduced to alternate weekends. Kevin alleges that the trial court erred in allowing certain expert testimony under the medical-hearsay exception and alleges that the evidence does not support the modification of his visitation rights. We affirm.

Kevin Meins and Judy Meins were divorced in July 2003. Judy received full custody of the couple’s two children, Kaleb and Lindsey, while Kevin received certain visitation rights outlined in the decree. Kevin’s visitation included picking the children up from school each afternoon and taking them to his home, where Judy would pick them up after she left work at about 5:00 p.m.

The decree listed several requirements concerning visitation. The most pertinent provisions are as follows:

h.For all periods of visitation Defendant (Judy) will call Plaintiff (Kevin) prior to picking up the minor children. Plaintiff will have the minor children ready to leave and allow the minor children to go to Defendant’s vehicle. There shall not be any contact between the parties during the exchange of the children.
i.Neither party will make any disparaging remarks about the other in the presence of the minor children.
j.During all periods of visitation and in the presence of the minor children Plaintiff shall not consume any alcohol. . . .
m. Each party is enjoined and restrained from doing, attempting to do, or threatening to do any act injuring, mistreating, molesting or harassing the other party.
5. Plaintiff shall make an appointment with Dr. Harley J. Harber for treatment of anger management counseling, substance abuse counseling and assessment for medication as well as individual counseling. . . .

Subsequent to the divorce, the after-school visitation arrangement ran smoothly for a while. Judy, however, began to believe that Kevin had not followed some of the terms of the divorce decree and that Kevin had personal issues constituting a material change in circumstances that warranted an amendment of the visitation terms. Judy filed a motion for contempt, in which she accused Kevin of violating the terms of the decree and of making disparaging remarks about her and her new husband in front of the children. At the hearing, the trial court allowed, over Kevin’s hearsay objections, certain expert testimony of social worker, Lisa Doan, under the medical exception to hearsay. Ms. Doan had provided therapy to Lindsey, who suffered from self-esteem issues, and Kaleb, who has Tourette’s Syndrome, anxiety issues, and ADHD.

Ms. Doan testified that the children exhibited anxiety and confusion over the current relationship of their parents. She testified that the children told her that Kevin had made certain disparaging remarks, including saying that their stepfather, Glen Shooks, had slept with their mother before marriage and that he had a “black” heart and should not be allowed around them. Ms. Doan also testified that, in addition to defying the divorce decree by walking the children to Judy’s car, Kevin would confuse the children when he would include Judy in his goodbye “I love yous.” Ms. Doan said that the children then had difficulty understanding the divorce and why their mother could not love their father.

Additionally, Ms. Doan testified that, on one occasion, she had spoken with Kevin over the telephone, and he was slurring his words and being argumentative. She stated that Kevin’s drinking scared Kaleb, who had related to her a story about a time when his father almost had a car accident after he had been drinking. Lindsey told Ms. Doan that her father “acted weird” when he drank. Ms. Doan expressed her concern over the conflict that the children were experiencing and suggested that it needed to stop. She recommended that Kevin seek counseling and assistance so that he could get his life together and also suggested a neutral setting for transferring the children.

Judy testified that Kevin intimidated her when he would bring the children out to the car. Although the divorce decree required Kevin to have no contact with Judy, he would walk the children to the car, carry their backpacks, and strap them into their

seatbelts. He would then tell the children that he loved them and would sometimes tell Judy that he loved her too.

In 2004, Kevin was convicted twice for DWI. After the second conviction, he received a sentence of seven days of community service and his license was suspended until February 28, 2006. Kevin failed to complete his community service requirement and was jailed for ten days. Despite having a suspended license, Kevin still picked up the children after school. Judy testified that she had personally seen Kevin driving the children around after his license was suspended.

Judy also indicated that she had spoken to Kevin on several occasions when he was intoxicated and that he had spoken to and interacted with his children while he was intoxicated. She testified that on the day of her wedding to Glen Shook, Kevin left a message on the family answering machine calling Glen “white trash” and a “m.***** ”

Judy also testified that Kevin had called her vulgar names in front of the children, had called her a liar, and had told the children that she did not love them and only did things to make herself happy, causing the children to become extremely nervous and anxious. Judy’s sister also testified that Kevin had made disparaging remarks about Judy in front of the children. Additionally, Judy suggested that Kevin failed to give Kaleb his medication during weekend visitations.

Kevin testified that, after his license was suspended, his mother drove him to pick up the children after school. Kevin admitted that he did walk the children to Judy’s car and stated that he told Judy “I love you” in order to demonstrate that people could still care about each other even though everything had “gone to hell.” Kevin accused Judy of having an affair with her current husband while both were still married and said that they lived in the same house with the children for about six months before they actually got married. Kevin said that he nevertheless did not then contest the custody arrangement because of his DWI conviction.

Kevin admitted to leaving a derogatory message on Judy’s answering machine on the day of Judy’s wedding, but he claimed that Glen was a bad person who ran a porn site and who was on his fifth wife and had mistreated all his wives and children. Kevin also admitted that he had driven the children with no license, on those occasions when his parents were out of town. He denied that he failed to give his son his medication. Kevin asserted that he had been receiving treatment for anger, depression, alcoholism, and ADD, but did not see the doctor specified in the divorce decree because he felt more comfortable going to his own doctors. Kevin also testified that he only had a problem with alcohol on occasion and that he was “working on fixing” that problem.

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Bluebook (online)
218 S.W.3d 366, 93 Ark. App. 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meins-v-meins-arkctapp-2005.