Rhonda Miller v. James Cody Armstrong

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 11, 2021
Docket2019 CA 001435
StatusUnknown

This text of Rhonda Miller v. James Cody Armstrong (Rhonda Miller v. James Cody Armstrong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rhonda Miller v. James Cody Armstrong, (Ky. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

RENDERED: MARCH 12, 2021; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals

NO. 2019-CA-1435-MR

RHONDA MILLER APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM HARDIN CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE M. BRENT HALL, JUDGE ACTION NO. 19-CI-01098

JAMES CODY ARMSTRONG APPELLEE

OPINION AND ORDER DISMISSING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: ACREE, MCNEILL, AND L. THOMPSON, JUDGES.

ACREE, JUDGE: Appellee, James Cody Armstrong, moves this Court to strike

the brief of Appellant, Rhonda Miller, claiming Miller’s brief violates the

Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure (CR) by failing to include any citation to the

video tape record. CR 76.12(4)(c)(ii) and (iii); CR 98(4)(a). Miller concedes that

her brief fails to include any citation to the video tape but objects to the motion.

In Hardin Circuit Court, Miller pursued status as a de facto custodian. The court conducted a hearing on August 6, 2019, and the circuit court clerk

generated a video recording of the hearing. On August 19, 2019, the court entered

an order denying Miller’s motion for de facto custodian status.

On September 11, 2019, Miller filed a notice of appeal. That same

day, Miller’s counsel requested a copy of the video recording of the hearing. (Trial

Record (TR) at 25-26). Counsel had a stenographer transcribe the video.

In late September 2019, the appeal was docketed in this Court. A few

weeks after that, on October 7, 2019, Miller’s counsel presented to the circuit clerk

a “notice of filing of a Transcript of the hearing [of] August 6, 2019 . . . .” (TR at

35). Appended to that notice was a sixty-nine-page transcription of the video

record.

Armstrong promptly moved the circuit court to strike Miller’s filing.

(TR at 105). Because the circuit court clerk must abide by deadlines for certifying

the record, the circuit court first entered an order abating the clerk’s certification of

the record on appeal until it ruled on Armstrong’s motion to strike. (TR at 108).

After a hearing on Armstrong’s motion to strike, the circuit court entered an order

stating that Miller’s “transcript may be stricken from the record by the Court of

Appeals.” (TR at 110).

Thereafter, the circuit court clerk transmitted the certified record to

this Court. The record does not include the video recording of the hearing on

-2- Miller’s motion to be declared a de facto custodian. Consequently, when Miller

filed her brief, she did not cite to the video record at all. And, even though the

stenographic transcript is in the record, (TR at 36-104), Miller does not cite to the

pages in that record. Instead, she cites only to the transcript (by page number and

line) prepared by her stenographer. The transcript is attached, in toto, to her brief

as an evidentiary appendix; however, it is almost three times longer than is allowed

by the applicable rule, CR 98(4)(b).1

Armstrong moved this Court to strike Miller’s brief, noting that it fails

to comply with the appellate rules requiring ample citation to the certified record.

CR 76.12(4)(c)(iv), (v); CR 98(4)(a). Miller argues that her alternative method

suffices. We disagree.

“It is the responsibility of the appellant or counsel for the appellant, if

any, to see that the record is prepared and certified by the clerk . . . .” CR 75.07(5).

When it comes to the video record, the same rule applies. CR 98(3)(b) (“It is the

responsibility of the appellant to see that the record is prepared and certified by the

clerk within the time prescribed by this rule.”).

1 CR 98(4)(b) states, in pertinent part:

An appendix of the evidence (hereinafter, evidentiary appendix) that consists of a transcription of the evidence or other court proceeding may be attached to a brief on appeal. The filing of an evidentiary appendix and index attached to a brief shall not exceed . . . twenty-five (25) pages if filed in the Court of Appeals . . . .

-3- Miller was responsible for designating the video record for

certification by the circuit clerk as part of the record on appeal. The clerk’s

certification of the video record is this Court’s assurance of “its authenticity as a

part of the record . . . .” Burton v. Commonwealth, 248 Ky. 141, 58 S.W.2d 373,

373 (1933). The circuit court clerk’s responsibility is to “prepare and certify the

entire original record on file in his or her office . . . including the designations or

stipulations of the parties with respect to proceedings . . . electronically recorded”

which the rule further identifies as those “recordings of proceedings electronically

recorded . . . as have been designated or agreed upon by stipulation . . . .” CR

75.07(1), (2) (emphasis added). There is only one explanation for the absence of

the video recording of the proceedings from this record on appeal. Miller failed to

designate the video recording as part of that record.

The circuit court did not order a stenographic transcript of the video

recording, and Armstrong did not stipulate to its preparation. There is no provision

in the civil rules that authorized Miller’s unilateral preparation of a stenographic

transcript to be filed, without circuit court approval, after the appeal was docketed

in this Court. The applicable rule here is CR 98 which begins by saying “[u]nless

otherwise ordered by the court, no transcript of court proceedings shall be made a

part of the record on appeal except as provided in Paragraph 4 of this rule.” CR

98(3). Paragraph 4 of this rule relates to the allowance of an appendix, not

-4- exceeding 25 pages, that presupposes and cites to the video recording that an

appellant is charged with designating to be included in the certified record. CR

98(4). Paragraph 4 provides specific instructions as to how such an appendix must

be prepared, including a detailed index and citation to “the number of the video

recording, and the month, day, year, hour, minute, and second at which the

reference begins as recorded on the video recording.” CR 98(4)(a).

Such an appendix must comply with the rule. Otherwise, “[t]he

appellate court may strike any part or all of an evidentiary appendix, or brief to

which it is attached, which has been determined by the appellate court to contain

unnecessary material.” CR 98(4)(b)(ii)(b).

There is no certified record of the proceedings to which Miller may

refer this Court as supporting her claim of error. Likewise, there is no certified

record of the proceedings to which Armstrong can cite in opposition to Miller’s

appeal.

Having considered the motion as well as the response, the Court

ORDERS that the motion be GRANTED. Miller’s brief is hereby stricken, and

this appeal is DISMISSED.

-5- ALL CONCUR.

ENTERED: March 12, 2021 JUDGE, COURT OF APPEALS

ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:

Alexa L. Helton LeeAnna Dowan Douglas P. Vowels William David Tingley Brandenburg, Kentucky Elizabethtown, Kentucky

-6-

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Related

Burton v. Commonwealth
58 S.W.2d 373 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1933)

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