Rodgers v. Rodgers

2016 Ark. App. 447, 503 S.W.3d 102, 2016 Ark. App. LEXIS 461
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 28, 2016
DocketCV-15-906
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2016 Ark. App. 447 (Rodgers v. Rodgers) 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
Rodgers v. Rodgers, 2016 Ark. App. 447, 503 S.W.3d 102, 2016 Ark. App. LEXIS 461 (Ark. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinions

CLIFF HOOFMAN, Judge

| ¾ This is a stepparent adoption case. The natural mother is appealing from the trial court’s order granting the adoption petition of the children’s stepmother. The trial court found that appellant Reanna Rodgers’s consent to the adoption was not required because the petitioner, appellee Destiny Rodgers, proved that Reanna had failed, for a period of at least one year and without justifiable cause, to communicate with ,he!r"children or to provide for their care and support as required by law or court order. Reanna argues on appeal that the trial court clearly erred in making these findings, necessitating reversal of the order of adoption. We hold that the trial court did not clearly err, and we therefore affirm the trial court’s order of adoption.

The facts are not in material dispute. Chris Rodgers and appellant Reanna Rodgers were married in 2002 and divorced in 2011, wherein the parents were given joint custody of |¡.their four children, who were born between 2004 and 2010.1 The divorce case was filed in Garland County Circuit Court, domestic relations division, DR2011-740-IV.

In May 2013, Chris remarried to appel-lee Destiny Rodgers. In August 2013, Chris was awarded temporary custody of the children pursuant to an ex parte order; Chris had alleged that Reanna was on drugs and neglectful as a parent. During the September 4, 2013, hearing in that case, Reanna appeared pro se, and she submitted to a urine drug test. She tested positive for methamphetamine and amphetamines. She lost joint custody, and her rights of visitation were suspended. The trial judge stated in the hearing that “I mean she is not to have any visitation at all with these children.” The trial judge warned Chris that if he permitted Reanna any visitation, she would hold Chris in contempt of court. The trial judge told Reanna that “when you decide that your children are more important to you than methamphetamine, then you can certainly come back and you can ask the Court to reverse this ruling and the Court will certainly look at it. But until that day happens, then there’s not going to be even visitation with your children.” The trial judge emphasized that “the Court considers this a temporary order” and that “you can come back in with your attorney and we’ll look at this again.” The trial judge told Reanna that she could come back to court “any time.” The trial judge ordered Reanna to fill out an Affidavit of Financial Means.

The September 6, 2013 “Amended Temporary Order” gave Chris sole custody of the children and recited that Reanna “should not be entitled to any visitation at this time,”| ¾ that Reanna “shall complete an affidavit of financial means and file same in this case file,” that “no child support shall be ordered from [Reanna] at this time,” that Reanna was required to submit to a hair-follicle drug test by separate order, and that Reanna “may petition this court for a review of the issue of child custody, or child visitation, at such time as [Reanna] can pass a drug screen.”

On October 17, 2013, and on April 19, 2014, Reanna filed two separate drug test results showing that she was negative for methamphetamine and other controlled substances. She later admitted that she relapsed on drags after the October 2013 test and did not ever-receive drag treatment; she later claimed, however, to -have been drug free since approximately December 2013.

On September 19, 2014, appellee Destiny Rodgers petitioned to adopt the children, who had been living with her and Chris. The case was filed in Garland County Circuit Court, probate division, PR-2014-531-IV. Chris joined the petition and consented to his children being adopted by his wife Destiny. In the petition, Destiny alleged that Reanna’s consent was not required because Reanna had failed, for a period of more than one year, without justifiable cause, (1) to provide for the care and support of the children in any meaningful fashion or (2) to communicate with or maintain any significant contact with the children. The petition accused Reanna of failing “to even contact or message the children on birthdays or at Christmas.” Destiny alleged that this was all that the applicable statute ’ required, so Destiny sought the adoption without the mother’s consent and sought to terminate Reanna’s parental rights to these children. On October 7, 2014, Reanna, represented by counsel, responded by Ufiling a general denial of the adoption petition allegations. The matter was assigned to the same trial judge who had presided over the divorce proceedings. Later in October 2014, subsequent to the filing of the petition to adopt, Reanna filed a petition with the trial court in the domestic-relations proceeding to reconsider her rights to visitation or custody.

At the May 2015 hearing, the following testimony was taken. Reanna, who remarried in October 2014 and who now had a five-month-old son, agreed that in the year between September 2013 and September 2014, she had not communicated with or provided support to the children, but she believed that she was justified in those failures due to the trial court’s prior order suspending her visitation and not ordering her to pay any child support. She testified that she tried to send money to Chris, although she was still not working, but not until after the petition to adopt was filed, and both times Chris returned the money. Before that time, Reanna said she did not have the means to provide support, even if parents have a general duty under Arkansas law to provide support regardless of any support order. She said that she believed she had been instructed not to have any contact with the children in the order suspending her visitation, and so she abid-ed the trial court’s order until she could afford to hire an attorney. Reanna was unaware that there were free attorneys, so she thought she had to save money to hire a lawyer, although she had filed two clean drug screens in the domestic-relations proceedings. Reanna explained that she had been drug free for quite some time. She said she had filed a petition to acquire visitation in the divorce case, but it had not yet been heard. She was willing to -be slowly reincorporated into the children’s lives and to attend to any therapy. Reanna testified that her “lifestyle today is completely different than |sit was when I lost custody of the children... a hundred percent better than it was.” She said that she did try to deliver a present to one of the children’s school one time, but she feared getting in trouble for doing what she was not supposed to do. “I obeyed Judge He-arnsberger’s ruling of not seeing them and I would do anything I can to see them now.”

Chris testified that he wanted'his wife to adopt the four children, and he complained that Reanna did not file a petition for visitation until after the petition to adopt had been filed. He admittedly rejected Re-anna’s recent attempts to provide child support. He said that he had heard nothing at all from Reanna since he was given full custody, testifying that:

During that year after I got custody, I have all of my calendars right there of every day since then of no contact. All the dates of all the’football games, no contact. All the birthdays, no contact, no cards. I have not received any contact from Reanna. My parents have not received contact. My wife. My in-laws have not received contact. She did not attend any school activities. I have [a] record. She did not attend any athletic activities. We did not receive birthday cards. Anything: We just had birthdays.

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Related

Rodgers v. Rodgers
2016 Ark. App. 447 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2016 Ark. App. 447, 503 S.W.3d 102, 2016 Ark. App. LEXIS 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodgers-v-rodgers-arkctapp-2016.