Robert Dunn Hudson v. Lynsey Alexis Massie

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedOctober 24, 2023
Docket1369223
StatusUnpublished

This text of Robert Dunn Hudson v. Lynsey Alexis Massie (Robert Dunn Hudson v. Lynsey Alexis Massie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert Dunn Hudson v. Lynsey Alexis Massie, (Va. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Judges Raphael, Lorish and Callins Argued at Lexington, Virginia

ROBERT DUNN HUDSON MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 1369-22-3 JUDGE LISA M. LORISH OCTOBER 24, 2023 LYNSEY ALEXIS MASSIE, ET AL.

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF WASHINGTON COUNTY Malfourd W. Trumbo, Judge Designate

Timothy W. McAfee (McAfee Law Firm, PLLC, on briefs), for appellant.

(Kimberly C. Haugh; Brandie I. Lester, Guardian ad litem for the minor children; Kimberly C. Haugh, P.C.; Brandie I. Lester, Attorney at Law, PLLC, on brief), for appellees. Appellees and Guardian at litem submitting on brief.

Robert Dunn Hudson and Lynsey Alexis Massie had two children together. After their

relationship ended in 2016, Lynsey had full legal and physical custody over both children.

Lynsey then married Michael Ross Massie, II. Together, the Massies petitioned to adopt the two

minor children born to Lynsey and Hudson, over Hudson’s objection. We affirm the trial court’s

conclusion that Hudson’s withholding of his consent was “contrary to the best interests of the

child” under Code § 63.2-1205.

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). BACKGROUND1

Lynsey and Hudson began dating in 2013. Lynsey gave birth to one of the adoptive

children that year, and the other was born in 2015. The pair lived together with the children until

the end of 2016. At that point, Lynsey and Hudson’s relationship ended, after at least two

incidents of domestic violence. In one, occurring in November 2016, Lynsey sustained serious

injuries from Hudson, requiring the placement of six staples in her head. Just one month later, in

December 2016, there was another domestic violence incident in which Hudson physically

harmed Lynsey, giving her a fractured arm, and Lynsey shot Hudson in the back with a firearm.

Hudson was criminally charged in connection with the incident.

Following these instances of domestic violence, Lynsey and the adoptive children moved

in with Lynsey’s mother, and Lynsey’s parents provided financial support for Lynsey and the

children through November 2018—until Lynsey moved in with Michael. Hudson also entered a

new relationship with a woman named Shawna Russ, and the pair lived in Bristol, Tennessee

throughout 2018. Russ’s child lived with them until Child Protective Services (CPS) began

investigating Hudson for potentially abusing the child in January 2019. The couple then spent a

few months in Georgia waiting for a house in Johnson City, Tennessee that they eventually

moved into.

Meanwhile, from December 2016 to August 2018, a protective order prevented Hudson

from seeing the adoptive children, and he did not visit with them until after he was acquitted of

the criminal charges stemming from the December 2016 incident. In August 2018, the

Washington County Circuit Court entered an order granting Lynsey sole legal and physical

1 “In accordance with familiar principles of appellate review, the facts will be stated in the light most favorable to the prevailing party at trial.” Norfolk S. Ry. Co. v. Sumner, 297 Va. 35, 37 (2019). -2- custody of the children and giving Hudson visitation rights. About five months after the court’s

July 2018 hearing on custody and visitation, however, Lynsey moved to rehear, alleging that she

had learned of a “domestic issue” that occurred before the visitation hearing, in which “the

victim was Robert Hudson and the Defendant was his girlfriend who continues to reside with

him.” The court denied the motion on January 23, 2019, and entered an order with a copy of the

schedule of visitation originally issued in August.2 The schedule provided that Hudson could see

the children on alternating weekends, as well as Father’s Day and portions of the Thanksgiving

holiday, Christmas holiday, and summer vacation.

From August 2018 to January 2019, regular visitation between Hudson and the

children—consistent with the court’s order—occurred without incident. In January 2019,

however, Lynsey received a call from CPS in Tennessee, informing her that “there had been an

incident” in Hudson’s home and asking her if her children were safe. The caller told Lynsey that

she could not provide any more details about the ongoing investigation. Based on that call,

Lynsey decided not to allow any further contact between Hudson and the children until she got

more information.3

2 The court did not address the merits of Lynsey’s allegations in the order entered on January 23, 2019. 3 Lynsey cut off in-person contact as well as phone calls with Hudson and his parents. She testified that phone calls were a threat to the children’s safety because she was worried Hudson might say something to confuse or scare them. She also said that Hudson’s family was present for incidents of domestic violence committed by Hudson against Lynsey and that they never reported these incidents to the police. The trial court’s visitation order did not give either Hudson or the child’s grandparents rights to contact the children by phone. -3- Lynsey then petitioned for court-ordered child support. After multiple hearings to

address the request, Hudson failed to appear at a hearing in September 2019 and the court issued

a capias.4

Text messages between Hudson and Lynsey show that after Lynsey first prohibited

visitation, Hudson waited six months to request visitation again. When Hudson texted Lynsey in

June 2019 asking to see the children, he represented that the Tennessee investigation was over,

but when Lynsey requested proof, Hudson did not provide any additional information. Hudson

waited three more months, until September 2019, to again ask to visit the children. He made

repeated additional requests to see the children, or speak with them by phone, throughout the fall

of 2019, with the last request coming in December 2019. Hudson also told Lynsey that he could

provide her and the children with financial support, and offered to send them clothing or other

items.

Lynsey denied Hudson’s requests for visitation and informal offers of support. She

repeatedly asked Hudson to resolve visitation and child support through the court system, and to

provide evidence that the Tennessee investigation was resolved and that he had a safe home

environment for the children. Hudson never provided proof, and never paid any financial

support to the children. Hudson’s last request to see the children was on Christmas Day in 2019.

In July 2020, about one and a half years after Lynsey first prevented Hudson from visiting the

children, Hudson filed a motion with the court to enforce his visitation rights.

While Hudson’s motion for visitation was pending, the Massies jointly petitioned for

adoption. They asked the court to enter an order granting an adoption to Michael Ross Massie

4 The capias was ultimately dismissed because the child support proceeding was terminated when Lynsey and Michael filed for adoption. -4- and terminating the rights of the children’s natural father, Robert Dunn Hudson.5 The petition

stated that Lynsey is the birth parent of both children, that the Massies started dating in 2017,

have lived together with the children since 2018, and have married. The Massies also have a

separate child, born in January 2019, living with them and the adoptive children. The Massies

alleged that the court should terminate Hudson’s parental rights on the grounds of “(a)

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