Melissa Starkey v. Patrick Holmes and Tommie Mitchell

2025 Ark. App. 279
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedMay 7, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 279 (Melissa Starkey v. Patrick Holmes and Tommie Mitchell) 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
Melissa Starkey v. Patrick Holmes and Tommie Mitchell, 2025 Ark. App. 279 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 279 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION I No. CV-24-294

Opinion Delivered May 7, 2025 MELISSA STARKEY APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE CRITTENDEN COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 18DR-23-285]

HONORABLE BARBARA HALSEY, PATRICK HOLMES AND TOMMIE JUDGE MITCHELL APPELLEES AFFIRMED

N. MARK KLAPPENBACH, Chief Judge

Melissa Starkey appeals from an order of the Crittenden County Circuit Court

denying her petition for grandparent visitation. We affirm.

Starkey is the maternal grandmother of the minor child (MC) at issue here, who was

born in June 2021 to Patrick Holmes and Tommie Mitchell, Starkey’s daughter. Holmes

and Mitchell were divorced in April 2023; Holmes was granted sole custody of MC, and

Mitchell was awarded supervised visitation. In June 2023, Starkey filed a petition for

grandparent visitation.

Pursuant to the grandparent-visitation statute, there is a rebuttable presumption that

a custodian’s decision to deny or limit the grandparent’s visitation is in the best interest of

the child. Ark. Code Ann. § 9-13-103(c)(1) (Repl. 2020). The grandparent petitioner bears the burden of rebutting the presumption by a preponderance of the evidence; to do so, the

petitioner must show that she has established a “significant and viable relationship” with the

child and that visitation with the petitioner is in the child’s best interest. Ark. Code Ann. §

9-13-103(c).

A hearing was held in January 2024. The testimony established that when MC was

born, Holmes was in the Marines and lived in California with Mitchell. Shortly after MC’s

birth, Starkey traveled from her home in Arkansas to visit the family for two weeks and help

care for MC. Starkey did not see MC again until after Mitchell and MC moved back to

Arkansas in April 2022. When MC was nine months old, Mitchell and MC moved in with

Holmes’s parents in West Memphis. Starkey testified that she began seeing MC often and

that he stayed with her at her home in Tennessee for about two weeks every month. This

testimony was corroborated by the testimony of Starkey’s brother, with whom she and her

husband lived. Starkey testified that she formed a close bond with MC during this time, and

she once kept MC for an entire month.

Starkey acknowledged that she had filed a petition for an order of protection against

her husband in 2020 alleging that he had physically abused her and threatened to kill her

on several occasions; however, she said he had received help and was totally different now.

Starkey testified that she would like to be awarded visitation every other weekend as well as

a week for a vacation, but she was willing to take any kind of visitation the court deemed

reasonable. She said she would not interfere with the parents’ relationship with MC and

would respect their wishes.

2 Holmes, Mitchell, and Holmes’s mother disputed that MC spent that much time with

Starkey. Both Mitchell and Holmes’s mother, Stephanie Smith, testified that Mitchell and

MC lived with Smith for about two months, and Smith took care of MC while Mitchell

worked. In June 2022, Mitchell moved into her own house in West Memphis, but Smith

continued to be MC’s primary caretaker while Mitchell worked. Smith was not aware that

MC ever went to stay with Starkey in Tennessee during this time. A few months later,

Mitchell moved again, and Smith lost contact with her. Mitchell testified that MC lived in

California with Holmes in January and February 2023 before returning to live with her in

her new home in Tennessee. Mitchell testified that MC stayed with Starkey for only half a

week one time, although Starkey had requested he stay for two weeks. Mitchell agreed to let

him stay for one week, but she picked MC up early because he was unhappy when she called.

Mitchell said that Starkey had always been welcome to visit MC at her home.

Starkey testified that she enjoyed regular visits with MC until April 2023 when she

called the police and child-protective services after she saw a picture of MC with a bruise on

his face while in Mitchell’s custody. As a result of this incident, MC was temporarily placed

in Smith’s care until mid-April when Holmes was able to get him and take him back to

California. While MC was in Holmes’s custody, Starkey asked to FaceTime MC nearly every

day, and Holmes allowed it when possible. In April, she told Holmes that she was going to

hire an attorney to get her visitation in writing. Holmes stopped responding to her requests

to FaceTime in June, and Starkey then filed her petition.

3 Holmes left active duty and moved back to West Memphis in August 2023. Since

then, Mitchell had been exercising visitation under Holmes’s supervision whenever their

busy schedules allowed, which had amounted to once or twice a month for a couple of hours.

Mitchell also had a brief FaceTime call with MC nearly every night. Holmes testified that

after Starkey told him she was filing for visitation, he told her she was too controlling and

he no longer wanted contact. Holmes claimed that Starkey is vindictive, controlling, and

needs everything to be her way. He also felt that visitation is not in MC’s best interest due

to the past domestic violence between Starkey and her husband that he only recently became

aware of. Finally, Holmes felt that it was more important to facilitate MC’s relationship with

Mitchell and that adding visitation with Starkey would be difficult and would leave less time

for him to spend with MC. Holmes said that it would be reasonable for Starkey to have

visitation under his supervision once a month when his schedule allowed. Mitchell also felt

that any visitation should be limited to supervised once a month; she did not want it to

reduce her visitation time.

On appeal, we give due deference to the superior opportunity of the circuit court to

view and assess the credibility of the witnesses, and we will reverse a finding by a circuit court

only if it is clearly erroneous. Harvill v. Bridges, 2012 Ark. App. 683. A finding of fact is

clearly erroneous when, despite supporting evidence in the record, the appellate court,

viewing all of the evidence, is left with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been

committed. Id.

4 The circuit court did not make a specific finding regarding whether Starkey had

established a significant and viable relationship with MC; however, the court did find that

she had failed to prove that visitation was in MC’s best interest. To establish that visitation

with the petitioner is in the best interest of the child, the petitioner shall prove by a

preponderance of the evidence the following:

(1) The petitioner has the capacity to give the child love, affection, emotional support, and guidance;

(2) The loss of the relationship between the petitioner and the child is likely to:

(A) Harm the child;

(B) Cause emotional distress to the child;

(C) Result in the emotional abuse of the child; or

(D) Result in the emotional neglect of the child;

(3) The petitioner is willing to cooperate with the custodian if visitation with the child is allowed; and

(4) Awarding grandparent visitation would not interfere with the parent-child relationship.

Ark. Code Ann. § 9-13-103(e). The court found that (1) Starkey’s ability to give guidance to

MC “comes into question” given testimony regarding Starkey’s husband’s criminal past and

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Related

Shores v. Lively
2016 Ark. App. 246 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2016)

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