Tara A. Watkins v. Steven Joseph Wiley

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 13, 2022
Docket2020 CA 001363
StatusUnknown

This text of Tara A. Watkins v. Steven Joseph Wiley (Tara A. Watkins v. Steven Joseph Wiley) 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
Tara A. Watkins v. Steven Joseph Wiley, (Ky. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

RENDERED: JANUARY 14, 2022; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals

NO. 2020-CA-1363-MR

TARA A. WATKINS APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE LAUREN ADAMS OGDEN, JUDGE ACTION NO. 11-CI-503954

STEVEN JOSEPH WILEY APPELLEE

AND NO. 2020-CA-1442-MR

APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE LAUREN ADAMS OGDEN, JUDGE ACTION NO. 11-CI-503954

STEVEN JOSEPH WILEY; AND HON. COREY SHIFFMAN APPELLEES OPINION AFFIRMING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: CLAYTON, CHIEF JUDGE; CETRULO AND McNEILL, JUDGES.

CLAYTON, CHIEF JUDGE: Tara A. Watkins brings two consolidated appeals

from multiple orders of the Jefferson Family Court pertaining to custody,

visitation, and child support for her son, T.W. Tara also challenges the family

court’s decision not to allow T.W. to testify, its admission of the testimony of

T.W.’s counselor, and its imposition of Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure 11

(“Rule 11”) sanctions. Having reviewed the record and the applicable law, we

affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

Tara A. Watkins and Steven J. Wiley are the biological parents of

T.W., who was born in 2007. They were not married and never lived together.

Initially, T.W. lived primarily with Tara and Steven had visitation on alternate

weekends. In November 2011, Tara sought custody and child support from Steven

in Jefferson Family Court. She and Steven thereafter entered into an agreement

regarding custody, parenting time, and child support which was entered by the

family court as an order on December 13, 2011. Its main provisions were that Tara

would “maintain custody” of T.W. and Steven would have reasonable parenting

time, including alternate weekends. Steven was to pay monthly child support of

-2- $350 dating from November 30, 2011, with an increase to $468 per month

beginning on November 11, 2014.

On February 14, 2013, the family court entered an order incorporating

another agreement between the parties which resolved issues regarding notice to

the other party if one of them intended to move out of state and included an

expansion of parenting time for Steven. In May 2014, Steven filed a motion

seeking equal timesharing which was denied. According to Tara, Steven stopped

paying child support in 2014.

In June 2016, Tara and Steven entered into an agreement concerning

timesharing and child support. It stated in pertinent part:

As of 4/7/16, Steven J. Wiley and Tara A. Watkins consider any and all previous debts in child support reconciled. Mr. Wiley and Ms. Watkins have agreed, in an effort to maximize the quality of life for [T.W.], to amend the court ordered agreement in Jefferson County, KY in regards specifically to child support and visitation between Mr. Wiley and Ms. Watkins.

The agreement described how the parties had forged a working

relationship that allowed parenting time to be distributed more evenly. In

recognition of this, the agreement provided that “Child support will no longer be

paid through the state as Mr. Wiley and Ms. Watkins have agreed to split all costs

50/50 for school, medical, and dental for [T.W.] until [T.W.] reaches the age of

18[.]” T.W. was to continue living primarily with Tara. The agreement specified

-3- that each parent would be responsible for T.W.’s housing, food costs, clothing, and

other basic needs while he was in that parent’s care and that he could stay at either

household at any time.

This 2016 agreement was not filed with the court. During the

following two years, T.W. lived with his mother during the week and his father on

the weekends, and each parent provided for him while he was staying with them.

In 2018, Tara and Steven agreed to reverse the schedule. T.W. began

living with his father during the week and attending school from his home in

Shelby County, and staying with his mother on weekends. Steven assumed most

of the child’s day-to-day care. He scheduled his medical, dental, and counseling

appointments, attended school functions, and met with T.W.’s teachers.

The relationship between the parents began to worsen. They argued

over T.W.’s access to a cell phone and Steven accused Tara of behaving erratically

and being under the influence of drugs. In May 2019, Steven kept T.W. from Tara

and refused to allow her any contact with him. On August 15, 2019, the court

ordered T.W. to continue living primarily with Steven and with Tara every

weekend except for the third weekend of the month.

In October 2019, T.W. ran away from Steven’s home, allegedly at

Tara’s instigation. He was found several miles away at a friend’s house. Steven

took T.W. to Tara’s home and told her “he’s your problem now.” Tara was living

-4- in Louisville at the time, but she withdrew T.W. from school and moved to

Sellersburg, Indiana. Tara explained that she relocated to live with her sister who

would help her care for T.W.

Tara thereafter stopped returning T.W. to Steven. Steven filed

motions to hold Tara in contempt for refusing to return T.W. and for changing his

school.

The family court entered an order on November 5, 2019, requiring the

parties to resume the parenting schedule established in its August 15, 2019 order;

another order on December 2, 2019, again requiring the parties to follow the

parenting schedule and for T.W. to be returned to Steven; and a third on December

16, 2019, allowing Steven to pick up T.W. directly from his school in Indiana

because Tara had not followed the previous orders.

On July 14, 2020 and August 14, 2020, the family court held a

bifurcated hearing on several outstanding motions, including Steven’s motion to

modify custody, establish child support, and to hold Tara in contempt and on both

parties’ motions to modify parenting time. The family court declined to hear

testimony from T.W. at the hearing. It did allow testimony from Edwin Raidt, a

licensed professional clinical counselor. T.W. had been receiving counseling from

Raidt, at the recommendation of his school, since February 2019. Raidt testified at

the hearing that T.W. has an adjustment disorder. He has few friends, is socially

-5- disconnected, and possibly suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder (“PTSD”).

T.W. told Raidt about several traumatic events he had witnessed in Tara’s home,

including domestic violence, evidence of drug use, and inadequate food. T.W. told

Raidt that he was aware of the ongoing litigation between his parents and just

wants it to end. Raidt opined that T.W. exhibits traumatic responses from events

that occurred while he was in Tara’s care and that his mental health would improve

if he spent less time with her.

In its order of August 24, 2020, the family court found that while

T.W. was close to both his parents, Steven provided greater stability and that Tara

was unaware of the negative impact her behavior was having on T.W. It awarded

the parties joint legal custody but gave Steven sole decision-making authority on

all issues involving T.W.’s education, medical, and mental health treatment. The

parties were given an equal voice in all other major decisions affecting T.W.’s

upbringing as well as access to all his providers, teachers, caregivers, and records.

T.W. was ordered to live primarily with Steven and with Tara on alternate

weekends and certain holidays.

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