Samuel L. Conley v. Althea T. Conley

2019 Ark. App. 424
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 2, 2019
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2019 Ark. App. 424 (Samuel L. Conley v. Althea T. Conley) 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
Samuel L. Conley v. Althea T. Conley, 2019 Ark. App. 424 (Ark. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Cite as 2019 Ark. App. 424 Digitally signed by Elizabeth Perry ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS Date: 2022.07.28 14:52:04 DIVISION IV -05'00' No. CV-18-748 Adobe Acrobat version: 2022.001.20169 Opinion Delivered: October 2, 2019 SAMUEL L. CONLEY

APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE UNION COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 70DR-15-503]

ALTHEA T. CONLEY HONORABLE MICHAEL R. APPELLEE LANDERS, JUDGE MOTION TO DISMISS INITIAL APPEAL GRANTED; MOTION TO LIMIT CURRENT APPEAL GRANTED; CURRENT APPEAL AFFIRMED

RITA W. GRUBER, Chief Judge

The sole issue on appeal in this case is whether the circuit court’s award of attorney’s

fees in a postdivorce-decree order constitutes an abuse of discretion. We recognize that

appellant has presented four additional points 1 on appeal concerning the court’s divorce

decree, but we have no jurisdiction to address them. Accordingly, we grant appellee’s

motion to dismiss a previous appeal from the divorce decree (CV-18-603), we grant

appellee’s motion to limit the appeal in this case to the issue of attorney’s fees, and we affirm

the award.

1 (1) The court erred in denying his motion to dismiss the complaint for divorce for failure to prove grounds; (2) the court erred in making an unequal division of the marital assets without explanation; (3) the court erred in the amount of alimony awarded; and (4) the court erred in awarding custody to Althea and ordering Samuel to pay child support. Althea and Samuel Conley were married in 1988 and divorced by decree entered on

December 30, 2016. During their marriage, both parties pursued advanced degrees with

Althea obtaining a Ph.D. in clinical psychology and an M.D. She completed her education

in 2004 and has been a practicing psychiatrist in South Arkansas since that time. Samuel has

a B.S. in engineering, a master’s degree in statistics, and several years of coursework for a

Ph.D. in biostatistics. He did not work outside the home during their marriage but stayed

home to care for their four daughters 2 and oversee the parties’ rental properties. Althea filed

a complaint for divorce on September 30, 2015. Both parties asked the court for primary

custody; Samuel also asked for alimony.

The circuit court entered a temporary order in January 2016 awarding primary

custody to Althea and directing that she and the children remain in the family home on

Ridgewood Drive in El Dorado. The court awarded exclusive possession of the parties’

West Little Rock home on Quercus Circle to Samuel.

The circuit court held a final hearing in December 2016 and entered a divorce decree

on December 30, 2016. The court granted a divorce to Althea and awarded her custody of

the three minor children with visitation to Samuel “as agreed between the parties” or

pursuant to the court’s standard visitation guidelines if they could not agree. The court

ordered Samuel to pay weekly child support of $119. The court considered that Samuel was

unemployed but noted the testimony of a qualified rehabilitation counselor confirming he

had the education and physical ability to earn a substantial wage but lacked the desire to

work. The court imputed minimum wage so that Samuel could prepare to get a job but

2 K.C. (born July 18, 1998); L.C. (born January 15, 2000); V.C. (born June 19, 2007); and M.C. (born April 22, 2009).

2 ordered him to “immediately present proof of income” upon obtaining employment and

stated that child support would be modified at that time. The court also ordered Althea to

pay alimony in the amount of $2000 a month for twenty-four months. Finally, the court

specifically divided the parties’ personal property and made the following division of their

real property:

a. [Althea] shall receive the residence and contents therein located at … Ridgewood Drive, El Dorado, Arkansas. [Samuel] shall receive as his own property the four duplexes in North Little Rock, Arkansas, and their contents.

b. There are two houses that are owned by the family LLC in Little Rock, Arkansas. Each party shall receive one of the houses and contents. If the parties cannot agree as to the ownership of these two houses, they shall be sold and the proceeds of the sale divided evenly between them.

c. The home at … Quercus Circle, Little Rock, Arkansas, and contents shall be sold and the proceeds divided evenly after payment of the debt presently owed for said property and costs of sale. A sale may be avoided by agreement between the parties made within thirty (30) days of the decree.[3]

Samuel filed a notice of appeal from the decree on January 27, 2017. An order to

extend the time to lodge the record on appeal was entered on April 25, extending the time

to lodge the record with our supreme court to August 28. Samuel did not lodge the record

by August 28.

On October 10, 2017, Althea filed a motion for increase in child support and petition

to sell real estate. She contended that Samuel had failed to gain appropriate employment

and asked the court to impute income based on his earning ability and standard of living.

She also alleged that she had paid the mortgage on Quercus Circle while Samuel continued

to live there. She claimed that they had not been able to agree about the sale of the property

3 The parties estimated the home’s value at $500,000; there was a mortgage of approximately $50,000 on the home.

3 and asked the court to order the property sold and to provide that she be reimbursed for

her payments. She also asked the court to order the two Little Rock homes owned by the

family LLC to be sold and the proceeds divided because the parties had been unable to agree

on a division of ownership. Samuel responded to the motion, denying all of Althea’s

allegations; he also denied that the parties were divorced on December 30, 2016, claiming

that some matters were incomplete; thus, the order was not a final order.

At a hearing on the motion on April 11, 2018, Althea testified that her understanding

of the divorce decree was that the Quercus Circle residence was to be sold if the parties did

not reach another agreement about the property within thirty days of the divorce decree.

She said that she had tried to arrange a sale but could get no agreement or cooperation from

Samuel. She said she was torn about making the monthly mortgage payments and

approached Samuel about giving him the Quercus Circle residence, but he would not

discuss it. She also testified that she had been unable to get him to cooperate on dividing or

selling the other two Little Rock homes. She testified that she offered to give him the two

Little Rock homes and the Quercus Circle residence just to have closure and to be able to

“have my life” and “move on,” but he refused to discuss it. She testified that her financial

obligations made it difficult to pay both the alimony and the extra mortgage payment, so

she decided to pay the mortgage instead of the alimony. She also testified that in October

2017 her lawyer sent to Samuel’s counsel a deed to the El Dorado home for Samuel to

execute along with deeds signed by her for the four duplexes awarded to Samuel in the

divorce. Samuel had not returned the Ridgewood Drive deed at the time of the hearing in

April 2018.

4 Samuel testified that although the children had been in Althea’s custody for over two

years at the time of the motion hearing, his profession had been and remained an “at-home

father.” He said he had been looking for a job but thought it in his best interest to pursue a

doctorate.

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2019 Ark. App. 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samuel-l-conley-v-althea-t-conley-arkctapp-2019.