Sabrina Smith (Now Prem) v. Jeremy Smith

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 16, 2021
Docket2020 CA 001369
StatusUnknown

This text of Sabrina Smith (Now Prem) v. Jeremy Smith (Sabrina Smith (Now Prem) v. Jeremy Smith) 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
Sabrina Smith (Now Prem) v. Jeremy Smith, (Ky. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

RENDERED: DECEMBER 17, 2021; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals

NO. 2020-CA-1369-MR

SABRINA SMITH (NOW PREM) APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM HARDIN CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE M. BRENT HALL, JUDGE ACTION NO. 14-CI-00304

JEREMY SMITH APPELLEE

OPINION AFFIRMING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: CALDWELL, DIXON, AND L. THOMPSON, JUDGES.

CALDWELL, JUDGE: Sabrina Prem (formerly known as Sabrina Smith and

hereinafter “Prem”) appeals from one or more decisions of the Hardin Family

Court based on its alleged failure to issue required findings of fact and conclusions

of law. For the reasons stated herein, we affirm. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Prem and Jeremy Smith (“Smith”) were married in 1998 and divorced

in 2014. They have a minor child, born in 2007. Prem and Smith share joint

custody of the child. In 2018, Prem filed a motion seeking the family court’s

approval for her to relocate to Texas with the minor child. Prem’s new husband

wished to move to Texas to help out his elderly, ill father.

At a hearing on Prem’s initial relocation motion, the family court

judge inquired whether Prem intended to move to Texas if the family court denied

her motion to relocate with the child. Prem indicated that she would not relocate

without the child. The family court denied this first relocation motion. Prem

remained in Kentucky with the child for about a year while her new husband

moved to Texas.

In July 2019, Prem moved to Texas to live with her husband. The

child remained in Kentucky and was primarily in Smith’s care. In September

2019, Prem filed a motion with the family court to modify timesharing so that the

child could live with her in Texas.

Following an evidentiary hearing, the family court entered an opinion

and order in early March 2020 denying Prem’s motion to modify timesharing to

allow the child to live with her. It ordered that Prem could have parenting time

-2- under the schedule provided in local timesharing guidelines and was responsible

for transportation costs for her parenting time since she voluntarily relocated.

Prem filed a motion for relief under Kentucky Rules of Civil

Procedure (“CR”) 52. Specifically, she requested, pursuant to CR 52.02, factual

findings on why the family court found the parenting time schedule in local rules

in the child’s best interest. And she also generally requested that the family court

amend its order to comply with “formatting mandates of CR 52.01.” (Record “R.,”

p. 360.) Around this same time, Smith also filed a motion requesting that Prem be

ordered to pay child support and to pay for one-half of the child’s private school

costs.

Following some pandemic-related delay, the family court evidently

heard Prem’s CR 52 motion and Smith’s motion for child support and

reimbursement for half the child’s private school costs in the summer of 2020.1 On

July 17, 2020, the family court issued an order granting Smith’s motion. In this

same order, the family court reiterated its denial of Prem’s relocation motion, its

1 Neither transcripts nor video recordings of any hearings in this case from the summer of 2020 were provided to this Court for our review. Instead, the only DVDs of proceedings in this case in the record on appeal are from August 2018 and February 2020. Although this Court granted Prem’s motion to supplement the record with video recordings from two specified dates during the summer of 2020, the Hardin Circuit Court Clerk sent a letter to this Court indicating it had no recordings in this case from those specified dates and the clerk did not send any more video recordings to this Court. Neither party cited to or discussed any video recordings or transcripts of proceedings in this case in their respective briefs nor did they address the lack of further recordings submitted by the circuit court clerk following our granting the motion to supplement the record.

-3- award of parenting time under local guidelines and its holding that Prem must pay

all transportation costs to exercise her parenting times since she had voluntarily

moved to Texas. However, this July 2020 order did not rule on Prem’s CR 52

motion or contain findings of fact or conclusions of law.

Prem then filed another motion seeking CR 52 relief. She specifically

sought, under CR 52.02, findings of fact on income and health care expenses used

in calculating child support. And she again sought findings of fact on why the

family court adopted the parenting time schedule in Hardin County local rules.

Also, she requested that the family court “conform its order to the formatting

requirements of CR 52.01.” (R., p. 400.)

The family court then entered an “Opinion and Order” in September

2020. While this order did not explicitly grant or deny the requested CR 52 relief,

it did contain discussion of the family court’s observations and reasoning on

various matters. Though styled as an opinion and order, the family court did not

actually order anything, but it did set forth findings of fact and conclusions of law,

even though they were not specifically denominated as such. Prem then filed a

timely appeal. Further facts will be provided as needed.

Identification of Issues on Appeal

In the introduction to her appellant’s brief, Prem states that she:

“seeks an opinion and order vacating trial court’s orders denying relocation,

-4- changing primary residential custody, automatically using a local rule parenting

schedule, allocating child travel costs by local rule, calculating child support, and

requiring payment of private school tuition.” (Page i of Appellant’s brief.)

Despite this indication that she seeks for this Court to vacate plural orders, her

notice of appeal states that she appeals from only one trial court decision–its

opinion and order entered September 30, 2020. Her appellate brief states that she

appeals from the family court’s July 17, 2020 order as amended by its September

30, 2020 opinion and order. (Page 1 of Appellant’s brief.)

Although the introduction to Prem’s brief may suggest that she

ultimately seeks broader and more substantive relief, the issues she asserts in the

argument portion of her brief focus on procedural matters. Specifically, she argues

that the family court failed to comply with CR 52.01 requirements and to make

findings of fact about whether the parenting time schedule suggested in local rules

was in the child’s best interest. And she does not discuss the actual merits of such

decisions as denying her motion for relocation or determining the amount of child

support. So, we do not review the merits of the family court’s rulings on such

matters as custody, timesharing, and child support for error.

Instead, we consider only whether the family court complied with its

duties under CR 52 and caselaw construing CR 52. In so doing, we do not confine

our examination to the family court’s July 17, 2020 order and its September 30,

-5- 2020 opinion and order. Instead, we also examine the family court’s opinion and

order entered March 4, 2020 in which it denied relocation, adopted the timesharing

schedule in local rules, and allocated all transportation costs for exercising Prem’s

parental time to her as well as granting Smith’s motion to terminate his prior child

support obligation.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

Reviewing a trial court’s denial of a request for additional findings of

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Sabrina Smith (Now Prem) v. Jeremy Smith, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sabrina-smith-now-prem-v-jeremy-smith-kyctapp-2021.