Scott Bockholt v. State of Arkansas, Office of Child Support Enforcement Ex Rel. Addie Celesta Bockholt

2023 Ark. App. 243
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedApril 26, 2023
StatusPublished

This text of 2023 Ark. App. 243 (Scott Bockholt v. State of Arkansas, Office of Child Support Enforcement Ex Rel. Addie Celesta Bockholt) 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
Scott Bockholt v. State of Arkansas, Office of Child Support Enforcement Ex Rel. Addie Celesta Bockholt, 2023 Ark. App. 243 (Ark. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Cite as 2023 Ark. App. 243 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION III No. CV-22-332

SCOTT BOCKHOLT APPELLANT Opinion Delivered April 26, 2023

V. APPEAL FROM THE BENTON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 04DR-10-851] STATE OF ARKANSAS, OFFICE OF CHILD SUPPORT ENFORCEMENT EX HONORABLE XOLLIE DUNCAN, REL. ADDIE CELESTA BOCKHOLT JUDGE APPELLEE APPEAL DISMISSED

KENNETH S. HIXSON, Judge

This is a child-support modification case. Appellant Scott Bockholt appeals from a

March 1, 2022 order wherein the trial court denied Scott’s motion to vacate an agreed order

modifying child support that had been entered on September 23, 2021. Scott also appeals

from a March 3, 2022 order wherein the trial court amended its prior findings in the

September 23, 2021 order with respect to back child support and costs and fees. On appeal,

Scott argues that the trial court erred in finding that the parties had reached an agreement

as to his income, the amount of child support, and the modification date as reflected in the

September 23, 2021 agreed order. Scott further argues that his counsel lacked the authority

to bind him to an agreement during the settlement negotiations. We dismiss the appeal

because the trial court lacked jurisdiction to enter the March 1 and 3, 2022 orders. Pursuant to our dismissal, the March 1 and 3, 2022 orders are vacated, and the September 23, 2021

order is reinstated.

Addie Celeste Bockholt was awarded primary custody of Scott and Addie’s three

children, and Scott was ordered to pay weekly child support of $97. Appellee Arkansas

Office of Child Support Enforcement (“OCSE”)1 subsequently filed a petition to modify

Scott’s child-support obligation based on an increase in his income. A hearing on the matter

was set for September 7, 2021. However, no hearing was held on that date, and the parties

instead engaged in several hours of settlement negotiations. Based on these negotiations,

OCSE’s counsel believed that a settlement had been reached, and he drafted an agreed order

later that day.

On the late afternoon of September 7, 2021, OCSE’s counsel sent Scott’s counsel an

email with the agreed order attached. The email stated, “Well here it is. Let me know.”

When OCSE received no response, another email was sent to Scott’s counsel on September

13 with the agreed order attached. That email stated, “Do we have any progress on getting

this Order back?” Finally, on September 23, OCSE’s counsel sent an email to the trial court—

on which Scott’s counsel was copied—that stated:

Attached is an order for the above case. This matter was set on September 7th. The matter was settled. I forwarded the order to [Scott’s counsel] on September 7th for his review and his client’s review. I have not heard back from [Scott’s counsel] as of this date. I am requesting the order be entered at this time.

1 Addie assigned her child-support rights to OCSE.

2 Based on the agreed order submitted by OCSE’s counsel, the trial court entered an

agreed order modifying child support on September 23, 2021. In that order, the trial court

found that Scott had personally appeared at the scheduled hearing with his counsel and that,

prior to convening a hearing, the parties settled the matter. Pursuant to the agreement of

the parties, the trial court found that Scott’s income was $9697 a month and that Addie’s

income was $6814 a per month. The trial court then went through all the calculations that

had been provided by OCSE’s counsel on the child-support worksheets and made these

findings regarding child support. The trial court ordered the modification effective

beginning on May 27, 2019, and ordered Scott to pay $1546 in monthly child support from

that date until August 27, 2019, after which one of the three children had reached the age

of majority. The trial court ordered that, beginning on September 27, 2019, Scott’s child-

support obligation was $1308 a month. The order provided, “To the extent the modification

creates a back-support obligation, [Scott] is ordered to pay an additional sum of $300 per

month to the back-support amount beginning September 27, 2021, and on the twenty-

seventh day of each month thereafter until that support is paid in full.” The trial court also

ordered Scott to pay $552.50 in costs and fees.

On October 21, 2021, Scott filed a motion to vacate the September 23, 2021 order

and for a new trial. In his motion and accompanying brief, Scott acknowledged that after

the settlement negotiations on September 7, 2021, the parties notified the trial court that a

settlement had been reached, or was very close to being reached, and that the trial could be

taken off the docket. Scott, however, asserted that no agreement had been signed, that he

3 never approved the proposed agreed order, and that there was no mutual agreement or

meeting of the minds as to the amount of child support or other material terms of the alleged

agreement. Scott premised his motion on Rules 59 2 and 60 of the Arkansas Rules of Civil

Procedure. Scott argued that the September 23, 2021 order should be vacated under Rule

60(a), which provides, “To correct errors or mistakes or to prevent the miscarriage of justice,

the court may modify or vacate a judgment, order or decree on motion of the court or any

party, with prior notice to all parties, within ninety days of its having been filed with the

clerk.”

On February 22, 2022, the trial court held a hearing on Scott’s motion. Several

witnesses testified. Scott’s trial counsel, Billy Bob Webb,3 testified that during his settlement

negotiations with OCSE’s counsel on September 7, 2021, they performed calculations on

various worksheets and eventually reached an agreement on the calculations for Scott’s

income and the child support. However, he stated that although Scott “begrudgingly” agreed

to the final numbers, Scott told attorney Webb that he wanted to see the order and for his

counsel not to agree to it until he saw it. In Scott’s testimony, he stated that he never saw

the proposed agreed order until it was entered and that there was never any agreement

2 To the extent Scott’s motion relied on Rule 59, it was untimely. Rule 59, which governs motions for new trial, provides in subsection (b) that the motion shall be filed not later than ten days after the entry of judgment, and Scott’s motion was filed twenty-eight days after the trial court entered the agreed order. 3 Scott’s trial counsel was replaced by another attorney prior to the filing of Scott’s motion to vacate and for new trial.

4 reached. Patrick Lewis, a third-party attorney representing Scott’s employer, attended the

September 7 settlement negotiations and testified that, although there was not a signed

agreement when the parties left the courthouse that day, and nothing was read into the

record, there was a verbal agreement that the case had been resolved. Attorney Lewis stated

that “everybody shook hands” and that there was no doubt in his mind that a settlement had

been reached. Finally, OCSE presented the testimony of its administrative assistant, Kellye

Key, who was present during the settlement negotiations and took notes. Key testified that

in her notes, she documented the parties’ final agreement as to Scott’s income, the amount

of child support to be paid, and the start date of May 27, 2019 for the modification to take

effect. Key testified that attorney Webb took these figures to Scott, and when he returned,

he stated that they had a settlement.

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Bluebook (online)
2023 Ark. App. 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-bockholt-v-state-of-arkansas-office-of-child-support-enforcement-ex-arkctapp-2023.