Veto F. Roley v. Chinelo J. Roley

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedMay 18, 2021
Docket2019-CP-01863-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Veto F. Roley v. Chinelo J. Roley (Veto F. Roley v. Chinelo J. Roley) 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
Veto F. Roley v. Chinelo J. Roley, (Mich. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2019-CP-01863-COA

VETO F. ROLEY APPELLANT

v.

CHINELO J. ROLEY APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/02/2019 TRIAL JUDGE: HONORABLE MARK A. MAPLES COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: JACKSON COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: VETO F. ROLEY (PRO SE) ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: JOHN SAMUEL GRANT IV NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - DOMESTIC RELATIONS DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 05/18/2021 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE CARLTON, P.J., GREENLEE AND SMITH, JJ.

CARLTON, P.J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. The Jackson County Chancery Court entered a final judgment granting a divorce to

Chinelo Roley from Veto Roley on the ground of habitual cruel and inhuman treatment. The

chancellor also awarded Chinelo sole physical and legal custody of the couple’s two minor

children. The chancellor denied Veto’s post-trial motions. Veto appeals pro se, raising

numerous assignments of error that we restate for clarity as follows: (1) whether the

chancellor erred when he granted Chinelo a fault-based divorce based upon habitual cruel

and inhuman treatment;1 (2) whether the chancellor erred when he utilized the Albright2

1 We include within this assignment of error Veto’s assertions that the chancellor erred (1) when he determined that Chinelo met her burden of proof supporting a divorce based on habitual cruel and inhuman treatment using a “preponderance of the evidence” factors in determining the custody of the couple’s two minor children; (3) whether the

chancellor erred when he denied Veto’s post-trial Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 59

motion “without a de novo hearing” and without issuing findings of fact and conclusions of

law pursuant to Veto’s Rule 52 request; (4) whether the chancellor erred when he allowed

Chinelo a tax deduction for the couple’s minor son for the year 2018; (5) whether the

chancery court displayed “judicial bias” during a June 5, 2018 motions hearing; (6) whether

the chancellor denied Veto his “constitutional due process rights” when the chancellor

enforced Mississippi Code Annotated section 11-51-29 (Rev. 2019) (requiring prepayment

of appeal costs); (7) whether Mississippi Code Annotated section 93-11-65 (Rev. 2015)

(governing testimony by children in divorce proceedings regarding custody preference) is an

unconstitutional “prior restraint to [Veto’s] children’s right to free speech” and whether the

chancellor violated the “minor children’s First Amendment rights when [he] prevented them

from testifying as to their custody preference”; (8) whether the Mississippi Electronic Courts

(MEC) filing system “gives an unconstitutional advantage to represented litigants over pro

se litigants,” requiring “that pro se litigants be added to the MEC system” to remedy the

situation; (9) whether the chancellor erred when he denied Veto’s post-appeal motion to

modify visitation with his children; and (10) whether the costs in this appeal should be taxed

to the chancery court.

standard; and (2) when he relied on Chinelo’s testimony regarding Veto’s personal hygiene after Chinelo allegedly “committed perjury” in her testimony about Veto’s bathing habits. 2 Albright v. Albright, 437 So. 2d 1003 (Miss. 1983).

2 ¶2. For the reasons addressed below, we affirm the chancellor’s final judgment.

STATEMENT OF FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶3. Chinelo and Veto married in 2006. They have two minor children, a girl who was

born in 2012 and a boy who was born in 2007. In April 2017, Chinelo filed her complaint

for divorce against Veto alleging as a fault ground habitual cruel and inhuman treatment, and

alleging in the alternative irreconcilable differences. Veto filed an answer and counterclaim

for separate maintenance.

¶4. The chancellor bifurcated the trial and determined that the “fault issue” would be

heard first. On November 16, 2017, the chancellor held a trial on Chinelo’s request for a

divorce based on habitual cruel and inhuman treatment. At that point, both parties were

represented by counsel.

¶5. Chinelo testified in support of her claim and also called two corroborating

witnesses—Sally Noel, who had lived with Veto and Chinelo and had known them for a

number of years, and Raphael Nnamani, who is Chinelo’s then-twenty-year-old nephew and

who had lived with the couple for one year and four months.

¶6. Chinelo testified about Veto’s inability to control his temper and derogatory comments

and names directed to Chinelo, often in front of the children:

At one point he was physical. He has pushed me. A couple of times I had to call someone to come in front of us . . . to help me because . . . he made me very scared. He . . . has always been verbally abusive in front of the kids, in front of the neighbors, in front of my friends. Every time that we have—like, one single fight is, like—it’s a lot of outburst, a lot of shouting, a lot of anger. He has punched a hole in the wall twice—one in the hallway, one outside—in

3 his anger. You know, he scares me a lot with—when he’s angry, I can’t be able to stand in his presence. It’s scary. At this point, I’m scared. He’s controlling. And the verbal abuse has given me a lot of emotional and mental torture. I mean, . . . the children suffer when the house environment is like that. I can no longer be able to stay married to him in that condition.

¶7. Chinelo described the first incident she remembers where Veto was uncontrollably

angry and confrontational with her:

[T]he first incident happened in 2012, . . . when my son was still a baby. We had this lady, Sally Noel, staying with us [to help with the baby]. And I can’t remember what happened, you know, what led to the incident itself, but I was carrying the child, and [Veto] was practically calling me names, pushing me . . . he had me, you know, pinned down on the wall . . . and I had nowhere to go. So I had to call . . . [Sally]. She was upstairs. I said, Sally, come down, please. And she came and she stood right between us and said, you can’t touch her, you can’t touch her, you know. So that was the first incident.

Chinelo then described an incident that happened in April 2017 when she had to call the

police when “[Veto] was screaming at the top of his voice, calling me names. I said, don’t

call me names in front of my kids, the kids are here . . . . And then . . . I called the cops . . .

[and] [h]e continued abusing me in front of the female cop who had to warn him to stop

talking to his wife like that.”

¶8. She described another time that the police were called to her home because of an

altercation between Veto and Chinelo’s nephew, Raphael, as follows:

[CHINELO:] The second time that it happened [when police were called to her home], I . . . came in on the two cops standing in front of there. They were trying to calm him [(Veto)] down, you know. And then I walked in, I said, Veto, you need to calm down. He said, shut up, don’t even talk right now, you shut up, you b**ch. And then I . . . just called my nephew, I said, let’s go inside, let’s

4 go get the things that you wanted to get, and . . . let him finish up with the cop.

[COUNSEL FOR CHINELO:] Okay. So, now, you mentioned about how he [(Veto)] shakes and how he stomps and walks around . . . . Does that happen a lot when he’s angry?

[CHINELO:] Every time. Every time. That’s his . . . reaction, you know. His—his anger is something else.

¶9. When asked to describe why she testified that she was fearful of Veto, Chinelo said:

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Veto F. Roley v. Chinelo J. Roley, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/veto-f-roley-v-chinelo-j-roley-missctapp-2021.