NEIL KITCHENS v. KAY WHISENHUNT

CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 8, 2025
DocketCV-24-524
StatusPublished

This text of NEIL KITCHENS v. KAY WHISENHUNT (NEIL KITCHENS v. KAY WHISENHUNT) 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
NEIL KITCHENS v. KAY WHISENHUNT, (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 471 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION IV No. CV-24-524

Opinion Delivered October 8, 2025 NEIL KITCHENS APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, FOURTEENTH DIVISION V. [NO. 60DR-24-321]

KAY WHISENHUNT HONORABLE SHAWN J. JOHNSON, APPELLEE JUDGE

REVERSED AND DISMISSED

CASEY R. TUCKER, Judge

On February 2, 2024, appellee Kay Whisenhunt filed a petition for an order of

protection against appellant Neil Kitchens in the Pulaski County Circuit Court. The circuit

court declined to enter an ex parte order of protection but rather issued a notice of hearing

for March 5, 2024.1 Following the final hearing, the circuit court entered a final order of

protection for two years against Kitchens. On May 30, 2024, Kitchens filed a timely notice

of appeal.

Kitchens’s arguments on appeal are the circuit court erred in: (1) not dismissing the

petition for an order of protection for failure to allege “domestic abuse;” (2) granting a final

order of protection based on purported “course of control” and/or “disturbing the peace”

1 An amended notice of hearing was entered setting the final hearing for May 2, 2024. rather than any actual act of domestic abuse; and 3) finding domestic abuse. We reverse and

dismiss the final order of protection entered against Kitchens.

I. History and Trial Facts

Whisenhunt’s petition for order of protection alleged that Kitchens threatened

physical harm by (1) sending emails to Whisenhunt stating he would make her “pay” for

what she had done and to other family members threatening revenge since 2022; (2) showing

up at her home trying to get into two gates without revealing his identity; and (3) mailing

her photographs with handwritten notes.

Kitchens filed a response in opposition and an affidavit stating he did not commit

domestic abuse, detailing a fractious history between him and extended family, and accusing

Whisenhunt of ruining his life. In Kitchens’s response, he defended his actions as described

by Whisenhunt.

At the May 2 hearing, Whisenhunt testified that she and Kitchens, who are siblings,

had not seen each other since 2019. Whisenhunt testified that she was afraid Kitchens would

physically harm her, but she admitted he had never been violent toward her. She stated that

she, her husband, and her sister assisted her mother in a lawsuit against Kitchens. Sometime

after that lawsuit, Kitchens breached the first security gate of her neighborhood, took

pictures, and left presents and a note outside the main gate to her home in late 2023 when

she was out of town. She testified that she had not felt safe in her home since that incident,

and now she stays in her home only when her husband is present. She testified that she filed

three police reports and has upgraded her security system. Whisenhunt stated that Kitchens

2 had sent various emails with threats to extort money, but she did not introduce them as

exhibits. She stated that Kitchens has an alias and has pled guilty to fraud in the past.

The following colloquy then took place:

COURT: And then from there, you’re saying that you have continued to be as the statutes says infliction, you feel as if you have felt the infliction of fear of imminent physical harm.

[WHISENHUNT]: Yes, sir.

COURT: How?

[WHISENHUNT]: My life has changed. When [Kitchens] and his wife showed up unannounced at, they somehow got through the first gate, I live in the second gate, they couldn’t get through that one, and incidentally, I wasn’t even home, I was out of town for this Thanksgiving holiday, but I came home, and I did find his packet, that they had been there, and it did have wine and candy in it. That scared me so bad.

COURT: Why would he leave presents for you if you know? I mean if everything had gone in 2019 as you indicated, why, why would he leave a gift? Any idea?

[WHISENHUNT]: To get us to sit down and give him money. We really believe extortion is the whole thing.

The court continued to ask what Kitchens has that he is “holding over” Whisenhunt. She

responded, “[T]he threat as he writes in there of revealing even more embarrassing

information if I don’t.” Whisenhunt referred to emails during her testimony, but they were

not read into the record or admitted as exhibits.

3 Kitchens, who is a resident of Washington State, testified that he has never abused or

threatened Whisenhunt, except with lawsuits. He stated that he wanted to meet with her

about the lawsuits. He wanted a written retraction and an apology that he was “never

stealing” from their mother. He testified that he was aware of only one police report, not the

three she reported. Kitchens testified that he tried to run for state senate in Washington, but

Whisenhunt reported him to the DA, and he pled guilty to one count of knowingly living

outside the district. He was questioned regarding a photograph of his stepdaughter, her

friends, and him flipping off Whisenhunt—this photograph was not admitted. Kitchens

reiterated he is not a threat as far as physical violence—he has never touched her.

Following the conclusion of testimony and presentation of evidence, the court orally

ruled that it found applicable the “course of control” definition in Ark. Code Ann. § 9-15-

219 (Supp. 2023), which includes “disturbing of the peace,” to enjoin Kitchens from having

contact with Whisenhunt for two years. The court stated that “[u]nder Ark. Code Ann. § 9-

15-219 Kitchens’s behavior constitutes a disturbing of the peace.”2 In its oral ruling, the court

stated, “It’s a pattern of communications, the sending of communications by mail, the

showing up at home unannounced, the moving into an interior gate when it’s a two-gate

system, and these are unwanted contacts.” The court described Whisenhunt as “worried and

concerned,” not in imminent fear of physical or bodily harm.

2 Disturbing the peace under Ark. Code Ann. § 9-15-219 is “a pattern of behavior that unreasonably destroys the mental or emotional calm of the family or household members based upon the totality of the circumstances.”

4 On May 2, 2024, the court issued its order styled “Final Order of Protection,” which

states that the “victim(s) is (are) in immediate and present danger of domestic abuse and

therefore an Order of Protection is hereby granted pursuant to the terms herein.”

II. Standard of Review

Our standard of review following a bench trial is whether the circuit court’s findings

are clearly erroneous or clearly against the preponderance of the evidence. Borland v. Borland,

2021 Ark. App. 448, at 3, 638 S.W.3d 308, 311. A finding is clearly erroneous when,

although there is evidence to support it, the reviewing court on the entire evidence is left

with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made. Id. Disputed facts and

determinations of witness credibility are within the province of the fact-finder. Id. We review

issues of statutory interpretation de novo. Hocut v. Hocut, 2022 Ark. App. 452, 655 S.W.3d

527.

III. Analysis

Kitchens argues that the circuit court’s order must be reversed and dismissed because

the petition did not allege a purported act of domestic abuse.3 Whisenhunt pled in the

petition for an ex parte order of protection that certain acts made her fearful of harm, which

does not rise to the requisite standard for a temporary or “ex parte” order of protection

pursuant to Ark.

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NEIL KITCHENS v. KAY WHISENHUNT, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neil-kitchens-v-kay-whisenhunt-arkctapp-2025.