Sheila Bentley v. Keven McKenna
This text of Sheila Bentley v. Keven McKenna (Sheila Bentley v. Keven McKenna) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Supreme Court
No. 2018-314-Appeal. No. 2019-20-Appeal. (P 18-335)
Sheila Bentley :
v. :
Keven McKenna. :
ORDER
These consolidated appeals came before this Court for a prebriefing conference in May
2019.1 At that time, the parties were ordered to appear and show cause why the issues raised in
these appeals should not be summarily decided. Nevertheless, due to defendant’s serious health
exigencies, this case has not been scheduled for oral argument. After examining the record in this
case, we are of the view that oral argument is not necessary for the resolution of this case, and that
the appeals may be decided on the memoranda submitted by or on behalf of the parties.
This case concerns a complaint for divorce filed by the plaintiff, Sheila Bentley. In a
responsive pleading, the defendant, Kevin McKenna, demanded a jury trial and took exception to
the ruling of a justice of the Family Court that he was not entitled to a jury. The trial justice granted
the complaint for divorce, and a decision pending entry of final judgment entered in November
2018.
1 The defendant first filed an interlocutory appeal, taking exception to the denial of his pretrial motion for a trial by jury. The defendant’s second appeal was posttrial, wherein defendant took the same exception. Because both appeals address an identical issue, we granted plaintiff’s motion to consolidate the appeals. -1- Before this Court, defendant again presses that his right to a jury trial was violated because
a jury trial in his divorce proceeding was not permitted. His argument is that article 1, section 15
of the Rhode Island Constitution says: “The right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate.”
However, this is not the first time we have addressed that argument. Ninety-two years ago,
in Budlong v. Budlong, 142 A. 537 (R.I. 1928), this Court considered whether it was error for a
justice of the Superior Court to deny a motion for a jury trial in a divorce proceeding. 2 Budlong,
142 A. at 540. The appellant in that case based her argument upon the same constitutional article
to which defendant here ties his argument. We said:
“The respondent excepted to the denial of her motion for a jury trial of this cause. The respondent bases that exception upon the constitutional provision that ‘the right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate.’ The right to demand a jury trial in divorce cases did not exist at the time of the adoption of the Constitution; hence the constitutional provision is inapplicable in this case.” Id.
Budlong remains good law, and we shall not depart from its holding. The judgment of the
Family Court is affirmed.3
2 At that time, Superior Court exercised jurisdiction over domestic matters. Legislation creating the Family Court was not enacted until 1961. General Laws 1956 § 8-10-3, as enacted by The Family Court Act, P.L. 1961, ch. 73, § 1. 3 The defendant also seems to argue that, when Rhode Island ratified its new constitution after the State Constitutional Convention of 1986, the “voters of [t]he State of Rhode Island intended that Family Court would provide the right to a jury trial in the Family Court.” He also argues that the addition of the Equal Protection and Due Process Clauses of the Rhode Island Constitution following the 1986 Convention means “that the jury trial could not be eliminated.” We reject these and any other arguments defendant offers that a right to a jury trial exists in cases of divorce, whether by virtue of the Rhode Island Constitution, the United States Constitution, or otherwise. When the Rhode Island Constitution was ratified following the 1986 Convention, “[t]he right to demand a jury trial in divorce cases did not exist[,]” Budlong v. Budlong, 142 A. 537, 540 (R.I. 1928), and article 1, section 15 is inapplicable. Nothing in the changes made to the constitution in 1986 added the right to a trial by jury in divorce cases. On the federal front, defendant’s allusion to the Seventh Amendment to the United States Constitution is similarly unavailing. See Penn v. Penn, 14 V.I. 522, 529 (V.I. 1978) (“[T]here is no right to a trial by jury in an action for divorce because, at or before the adoption of the Seventh Amendment, such actions were tried by the ecclesiastical courts without the aid of a jury. Divorce actions, therefore, are not within the scope of a constitutional provision that preserves the right to a jury trial where it existed -2- rd Entered as an Order of this Court this 23 day of June, 2020.
/s/ __________________________ Clerk
at common law.”). See generally John K. Matsumoto, Why No Right to Jury Trial in Marital Dissolution Actions, 11 J. Contemp. Legal Issues 202, 202 (2000) (explaining that “[t]he Federal Constitution’s seventh amendment guarantee of jury trial in civil cases is of no direct assistance”). -3- STATE OF RHODE ISLAND AND PROVIDENCE PLANTATIONS
SUPREME COURT – CLERK’S OFFICE
ORDER COVER SHEET
Title of Case Sheila Bentley v. Keven McKenna. No. 2018-314-Appeal. Case Number No. 2019-20-Appeal. (P 18-335) June 23, 2020 Date Order Filed Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and Justices Indeglia, JJ. Providence County Superior Court Source of Appeal General Magistrate Felix E. Gill Judicial Officer From Lower Court For Plaintiff:
Veronica Assalone, Esq. Attorney(s) on Appeal Victoria S. Lombardi, Esq. For Defendant:
Keven McKenna, Pro Se
SU-CMS-02B (revised November 2016)
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