Stacey Davis v. James Leslie Henderson;

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedSeptember 29, 2020
DocketNO. 2018-CA-01184-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Stacey Davis v. James Leslie Henderson; (Stacey Davis v. James Leslie Henderson;) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stacey Davis v. James Leslie Henderson;, (Mich. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2018-CA-01184-COA

STACEY DAVIS APPELLANT

v.

JAMES LESLIE HENDERSON APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/04/2019 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. ROBERT GEORGE CLARK III COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: MADISON COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: PAUL E. ROGERS MARY CATHERINE WILLIAMS ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: JAMES LESLIE HENDERSON (PRO SE) NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - DOMESTIC RELATIONS DISPOSITION: REVERSED, RENDERED, AND REMANDED - 09/29/2020 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE WILSON, P.J., LAWRENCE AND McCARTY, JJ.

McCARTY, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Upon a husband and wife’s divorce, the wife was granted sole physical custody of the

couple’s two children, and the husband was ordered to pay child support for both children.

The husband later sought to terminate his child-support obligations for one of the children.

The chancery court granted the request and reduced his child-support obligations by half.

The chancery court also found the wife in contempt for failure to comply with court-ordered

counseling sessions. The wife now appeals the chancery court’s child-support and contempt

findings.

FACTS ¶2. James “Jim” Henderson and Stacey Davis had two sons during their marriage: L.S.H.

and C.R.H.1 When the couple divorced, Stacey was granted sole custody of both children,

and Jim was awarded visitation. Twelve years after the custody determination, Jim filed a

petition for emergency relief. The chancery court entered a temporary order awarding Jim

sole legal and physical custody of L.S.H. for the purpose of admitting him into an in-patient

treatment facility. The court also suspended Jim’s child-support obligation by half, to $1,000

per month.

¶3. A year later, L.S.H. was returned to Stacey’s custody, and Jim’s full child-support

obligations were reinstated. The chancery court ordered Stacey and Jim to “enter into

individual weekly counseling sessions with [a counselor] for the purpose of learning to co-

parent and communicate with one another.” A subsequent in camera status conference was

held with only the chancellor and the parties’ attorneys present. During the conference, the

court verbally ordered that Stacey and Jim were to follow the counselor’s recommendations.

No written order followed the verbal order.

¶4. Following the status conference, the counselor recommended that the children

participate in parental reunification counseling with Jim. The counselor testified that Stacey

did bring C.R.H. to a counseling session and made an appointment for L.S.H. On the day of

L.S.H.’s appointment, Stacey arrived without him and informed the counselor that L.S.H.

would not be attending the parental reunification counseling because she did not believe the

children were under a court order to do so. However, she did state her intention to continue

1 We use initials to protect the identities of minors.

2 with the co-parenting counseling.

¶5. Jim filed a motion for contempt for Stacey’s alleged failure to participate in the court-

ordered co-parenting classes and her alleged interference with Jim’s visitation rights.2 In his

motion, Jim sought for Stacey to be found in civil and criminal contempt of court. He

requested that Stacey be fined an amount not exceeding $5,000 for each separate incident of

contempt and incarcerated for a term not exceeding six months for each separate incident of

contempt.

¶6. A hearing on the motion was held on the matter, and the chancery court found that

“Stacey unilaterally stopped attending the sessions and refused to allow the minors to

participate in sessions with Jim[.]” During the year and a half between the status conference

and the contempt hearing, Stacey had only attended three co-parenting counseling sessions.

The court accordingly held Stacey “in contempt for her failure to timely participate in co-

parenting counseling, unilaterally stopping the sessions, and preventing the minors from

participating in parental reunification counseling with their father.” Stacey was ordered to

be “incarcerated in the Madison County Detention Center for ten (10) days,” with six days

suspended and “four (4) days shall be served[,] . . . [to] pay a fine to the Madison County

Chancery Clerk in the amount of $2,000.00[,]” and to pay Jim’s attorney fees “in the amount

of $3,085.00.”

¶7. Jim also filed a motion to terminate his child-support obligations to C.R.H on the

ground that “C.R.H.’s total abandonment of his father-son relationship with Jim is clear and

2 Throughout their legal dispute, Jim filed numerous contempt actions against Stacey. His sixth motion for contempt is the subject of this appeal.

3 extreme, and justifies a forfeiture of Jim’s financial obligations for the benefit of C.R.H.”

He argued that C.R.H. had refused to have any contact with him for over three years and

would not answer Jim’s phone calls or text messages.

¶8. At the hearing on the matter, C.R.H. testified his father “has done things that make

me not want to see him.” He described Jim as abusive and recounted an incident when Jim

forced the thirteen-year-old boy to hold up his hands against the wall “for a very long

extended period of time” until he was in pain and crying. C.R.H. testified that on that same

night, his father pinned his twelve-year-old brother against the wall by his neck, leaving hand

marks.

¶9. When L.S.H. returned to school after his visitation with Jim, the school counselor

questioned him about the marks on his neck. The counselor then filed a report with the

Mississippi Department of Human Services (DHS), which initiated an investigation.3 The

DHS investigation substantiated the allegations of child abuse. The matter was then referred

to the youth court. However, the youth court declined to hear the case because there was a

pending action in the chancery court. C.R.H. also stated that his stepmother was abusive as

well. He testified that “when we were younger, if we did anything that she saw as unfit, she

would either slap us or pull our hair.”

¶10. C.R.H. testified that Jim’s controlling behavior was one of the reasons he no longer

3 During his testimony, L.S.H. gave his version of the events. He stated, “My dad had—he held me on the ground. He was slapping me in the face. And, obviously I was squirming around so he was hitting me on the neck and face in just kind of that general area.” Both L.S.H. and C.R.H. testified that the school reported the marks on L.S.H.’s neck to DHS, which initiated an investigation.

4 wanted to have visitation with his father. When visiting Jim, C.R.H. was not allowed to close

his bedroom door or go outside and play in the yard. Instead, C.R.H. said he was “required

to always stay in the front foyer of the house where [he could] be easily observed.” Jim

would normally take C.R.H.’s phone away from him to restrict the boy’s communication with

his mother. He also would not give him the password to access the internet. Also, even

though C.R.H. loved to cook, he was not allowed to do so at Jim’s house. Because Jim and

his wife only cooked “occasionally,” the family primarily ate “[e]ither fast food or some easy

homemade meal.”

¶11. C.R.H. is fearful of his father. He stated at trial, “I am afraid that if I try to have any

sort of normal relationship with me [sic], I might end up in a very scary situation that I might

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