Keith Dixon v. Holly Dixon and Tyler Van Dyke , 2022 Ark. App. 439 ( 2022 )


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  •                                   Cite as 
    2022 Ark. App. 439
    ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION II
    No. CV-21-323
    Opinion Delivered November   2, 2022
    KEITH DIXON
    APPELLANT
    APPEAL FROM THE FAULKNER
    V.                                                 COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    [NOS. 23DR-20-938 & 23DR-20-939]
    HOLLY DIXON AND TYLER VAN DYKE
    APPELLEES
    HONORABLE H.G. FOSTER, JUDGE
    AFFIRMED
    RITA W. GRUBER, Judge
    Keith Dixon filed this appeal from the Faulkner County Circuit Court’s entry of two
    final orders of protection in favor of his estranged wife and daughter. He brings four points
    on appeal contending that the circuit court erred (1) by failing to rule on his motion to
    dismiss for insufficiency of service of process and to dismiss the actions; (2) in granting a
    final order of protection in favor of his daughter, Tyler Van Dyke; (3) in granting an order
    of protection in favor of Tyler for a ten-year period; and (4) in granting an order of protection
    in favor of his wife, Holly Dixon, for a ten-year period. We affirm the circuit court’s orders.
    Keith and Holly married on October 24, 2009, when Tyler was seven years old. Keith
    adopted Tyler in a stepparent adoption after the parties were married. On September 3,
    2020, Holly left Keith, and she and Tyler moved into an apartment in Conway. Keith filed
    for a divorce in the Perry County Circuit Court on September 4, using Herby Branscum as
    his attorney.
    After an incident in early October in which Keith came to their apartment, detailed
    more herein, both Holly and Tyler filed petitions for ex parte orders of protection. The
    petitions were filed on October 20, 2020, in the Faulkner County Circuit Court, and the
    court entered temporary orders, which were later extended through December 10. An
    affidavit of service was filed on November 9, showing proof of service on Herby Branscum,
    as agent authorized by appointment or law to receive service on Keith’s behalf. On December
    2, Keith filed a motion to dismiss in both cases, alleging that neither he nor anyone
    authorized on his behalf was served with the petition. He contended that he had not
    authorized his divorce attorney to receive service on his behalf in this case. No hearing was
    ever set for the motions to dismiss.
    A hearing for the permanent orders of protection was held jointly on December 17.
    Tyler testified that she had witnessed physical and emotional abuse in their home during the
    approximately ten-year period she lived with her mother and stepfather. She said that she
    saw Keith strike, choke, punch, and kick her mother; that Keith was often angry; and that
    there was “a lot of screaming, throwing things, and of course hurting my mom.” She said the
    fear of it happening to her or to her mom again made her feel unsafe. She also said she felt
    “unsafe and uncomfortable” due to “sexual tensions” that had arisen, and she thought Keith
    was behaving inappropriately. She gave as an example—Keith coming into her room
    unannounced at random times. She said “[T]he control had gotten extreme, and it seemed,
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    there were just certain instances that made me feel uncomfortable and like my friends also
    felt very uncomfortable.” She said he made inappropriate comments to her based on her
    appearance that made her uncomfortable. She testified that he would call her friends “sexy”
    and engaged in “inappropriate touching,” leading her to tell him that he shouldn’t touch
    them. She said he also walked into her bathroom when she was in the shower. Tyler moved
    out in May 2020 when she turned eighteen, initially moving in with her grandmother and
    then with friends.
    Tyler testified that her mother left Keith in September and that they rented an
    apartment together in Conway. Neither she nor her mother told Keith where the apartment
    was located, but she said he eventually found it and began coming there. She described the
    incident that prompted her and Holly to file their petitions. She said that she and Holly were
    driving home from shopping at Target, and she noticed someone behind them when she was
    pulling into the apartments. It was Keith, and he pulled up, parked behind them, and
    blocked them in their parking space. She said he came to the side of the car, “knocking on
    the windows violently,” and demanded they give him their keys and credit cards. She testified
    that they were scared, and they locked the car doors until he backed away and they were able
    to get into the apartment and call the police. She said that she had seen him drive around
    the area since that time and had seen him sitting in his car at the Walgreens close to the
    apartments when she was coming home from school. She said it makes her anxious because
    he has no reason to be in Conway at Walgreens by the apartment. She was afraid that he
    3
    would continue to “stalk,” “harass,” and threaten her if a permanent order of protection
    were not entered.
    Holly testified that Keith began physically abusing her in 2011, several years after they
    had married. She said it happened multiple times and recounted one incident in which he
    told her she needed to tell him she was sorry, and she asked “for what” because she did not
    know what they were fighting about. She said he left the room and then returned “out of
    nowhere and just grabbed me and threw me to the ground.” She said she did not remember
    a lot after that because she hit her head and he started kicking her. She said at some point,
    Tyler came in screaming and telling Keith to stop. She said the abuse continued, but she
    did not call the police because she was afraid, and she did not speak to Keith of the pain
    because he would hit her again. She learned not to disagree with him. She said he also has
    an anger and “rage” problem. She said she did not know why, and she would “just bow down
    and just [do] whatever it would take to . . . stop the anger.” She said the night she moved
    out, he already knew where she was moving and the apartment they were moving into,
    although she had not told him any of that information. She said she moved out because she
    did not feel safe anymore and because she did not want to be without Tyler, who had moved
    out.
    She said on the night he blocked in Tyler’s car at the apartment, he “came out of
    nowhere,” pulled in behind them, and “bright-lighted” them. She said he came up to the car
    yelling, screaming, and threatening them while they sat there “petrified of what he could
    do.” She said she had no idea he would come from the marital home in Perry County to
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    Conway to threaten her. She said they had been in counseling about separating, and she was
    trying to “do it in a civil way.” She said when a narcissistic person loses control, the person
    is grasping at straws. She said that she was petrified because she knew he had a concealed
    weapon, knew what he was capable of doing, and knew he had lost control after she filed the
    petition. She said he has always gotten away with whatever he wants to do; that she had
    always gone along with him; and when she stopped going along, things started to happen.
    She said that she was fearful for her safety and would look both ways and in the bushes
    whenever she left the apartment. She said he’s “going to get his way,” and he’s going to “do
    whatever it takes to get his way.” She testified that he had always told her that “a random
    crime is the best crime.”
    Keith testified that he is a retired nephrologist and general internist. He said he had
    kicked Holly out of the house before when he tried to call her an hour and a half after she
    went to play tennis, and she said she was at Kroger on the way home. He continued to try to
    call and talk with her, but she did not answer the phone and showed up at the house four
    hours later in different clothes. She explained that she had been Christmas shopping, but
    she had no gifts, so he kicked her out. He said he was drunk and that he gets severely
    depressed and turns to alcohol in such instances. He said Holly called the police to get her
    stuff, and the police asked if he had threatened her. In response to counsel’s question
    whether any of her allegations of physical abuse were true, the following colloquy took place:
    KEITH:        I was married for 30 years and never touched my wife, okay?
    COUNSEL:      Well, we’re talking about –
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    KEITH:        And I know. I know. I’m getting to it. I – I have – Holly– the way – the
    way it’s happened, and it’s been years and years since I’ve touched Holly
    –
    COUNSEL:      Okay. When you say “touched her” –
    KEITH:        Well, yes, no, I’ve – I – let me just say. I’ve pushed her down, and I
    have kicked her, and I have – and I’ve slapped and knocked her glasses
    off.
    COUNSEL:      How long ago?
    KEITH:        That’s been eight years, nine years ago.
    COUNSEL:      Okay.
    KEITH:        I haven’t touched Holly in years.
    COUNSEL:      Okay. So eight or nine years ago you do admit that –
    KEITH:        Yes.
    ...
    KEITH:        If you look at the stuff that she’s got down there – just – I’ll just give
    you an example. I was intoxicated –
    COURT:        Doctor. Doctor, the question was, is any of it true?
    KEITH:        Oh.
    COURT:        We need to listen to the question –
    KEITH:        It –
    COURT:        You need to listen to the question –
    KEITH: Oh, okay. Yes, sir.
    COURT:        I’m sorry –
    KEITH:        Yes –
    6
    COURT:        I’m sorry.
    KEITH:        Okay. Go ahead.
    COURT:        Only one of us needs to talk, and –
    KEITH:        Go ahead. I’m sorry.
    COURT:        – one of the two of us is me.
    KEITH:        Go ahead.
    COURT:        It needs to be me.
    KEITH:        You’re in charge.
    COURT:        Thank you. I appreciate that. I appreciate your conceding that for me,
    Doctor. What you need to do is listen to the question that’s asked and
    answer the question that’s asked.
    When asked whether he has violent anger and rage, he said that Holly is his “trigger”
    and that he would beg her to stop and leave him alone, but she would not during an
    argument. He admitted that Holly’s actions did not “justify it.” He said he asked her if she
    loved him, and she said she had not loved him in eight years, so he filed for divorce the next
    day. He testified that he had never done anything sexually inappropriate to Tyler or her
    friends and that he went to that Walgreens because it is his pharmacy.
    Finally, he said he was not violent the night he blocked them in and had only gone
    to retrieve his gate openers and credit cards. He admitted it was “probably a mistake to show
    up like that.” He also testified that Holly and Tyler were “scared,” so he backed off.
    At the conclusion of the hearing, the court indicated that it did not seem odd that
    Keith testified Holly told him she had not loved him in eight years, which was about the
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    same time the physical abuse testified to took place. The court also said that it had the
    opportunity to observe the witnesses and make determinations about their credibility based
    on its observation and being physically present with them. The court stated that the record
    reflected that counsel and the court had trouble keeping Keith on track. The court said it
    understood how it felt to “be in a position where you’re normally in charge” and then to
    find yourself in a situation “that the judge is actually in charge of the courtroom.” The court
    noted that this behavior was “consistent with the allegations and the conclusions that I draw
    based on the evidence.” The court then stated that it had a lot of experience dealing with
    domestic violence and that it did not think Tyler and Holly were lying. When the court asked
    Holly and Tyler’s counsel how long they wanted the order of protection to last, she answered,
    “[A]s long as the Court can give it to us.” The court then granted a ten-year order of
    protection in both cases.
    I. Motion to Dismiss
    For his first point on appeal, Keith contends that the circuit court erred by failing to
    rule on his motion to dismiss for insufficiency of service of process. Unfortunately, we simply
    have nothing to review regarding the motion to dismiss because, as Keith admits in his point
    on appeal, the circuit court did not rule on the motion. Keith has provided no authority for
    his argument that this court reviews a court’s “failure to rule” for error. We have said,
    however, that we will not review a motion to dismiss where appellant failed to obtain a ruling
    on the motion. Fratesi v. Fogleman, 
    72 Ark. App. 1
    , 
    32 S.W.3d 38
     (2000). There is nothing
    in the record to suggest Keith even requested a hearing on the motion. Moreover, without
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    ever obtaining a ruling on the motion, Keith attended and participated in the hearing on
    the merits without mentioning the alleged insufficiency of service. Our law is well settled
    that any defects in the process, the return thereon, or the service thereof are cured or waived
    by the appearance of the defendant without raising an objection, and the defendant is
    precluded from thereafter taking advantage of the defect. Trelfa v. Simmons First Bank of
    Jonesboro, 
    98 Ark. App. 287
    , 292, 
    254 S.W.3d 775
    , 779 (2007); see also Edwards v. Ark. Dep’t
    of Hum. Servs., 
    2016 Ark. App. 37
    , at 13, 
    480 S.W.3d 215
    , 223. By actively participating in
    the action without objecting to the alleged insufficiency of service, Keith waived his challenge
    related to the service of the petition. See T.S.B. v. Robinson, 
    2019 Ark. App. 359
    , at 4, 
    586 S.W.3d 650
    , 653.
    II. Final Order of Protection in Favor of Tyler
    For his second point, Keith contends that the circuit court erred in granting a final
    order of protection in favor of Tyler because Tyler never alleged or testified that Keith had
    threatened to harm her or that he had physically abused her in any manner. He contends
    that her testimony simply stated that she was concerned for her mother’s safety, and although
    she testified that she was scared when he approached her car at the apartment in Conway,
    she did not offer proof that she was in fear of imminent physical harm, bodily injury, or
    assault. Basically, he contends that Tyler’s “fear” is because of her mother and is for her
    mother’s safety and not for herself or because of what Keith has threatened to do to Tyler.
    An order of protection may be entered upon a finding of domestic abuse. 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 9-15-205
    (a) (Repl. 2020). Domestic abuse is defined as “physical harm, bodily injury,
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    assault, or the infliction of fear of imminent physical harm, bodily injury, or assault between
    family or household members.” 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 9-15-103
    (4)(A) (Repl. 2020). Our standard
    of review following a bench trial under the Domestic Abuse Act is whether the circuit court’s
    findings are clearly erroneous. Steffy v. Steffy, 
    2021 Ark. App. 171
    , at 4. A finding is clearly
    erroneous when, although there is evidence to support it, the reviewing court on the entire
    evidence is left with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made. 
    Id.
    Disputed facts and determinations of credibility are within the province of the fact-finder.
    
    Id.
    We turn to the evidence presented at the hearing. Tyler testified that she had
    witnessed physical and emotional abuse in their home during the approximately ten-year
    period she lived with her mother and stepfather. She said that she saw Keith strike, choke,
    punch, and kick her mother; that Keith was often angry; and that there was “a lot of
    screaming, throwing things, and of course hurting my mom.” She said the fear of it
    happening to her or to her mom again made her feel unsafe. She specifically testified that she
    was scared when Keith approached her and her mother at the apartment in Conway; Holly
    testified they were “petrified”; and Keith admitted in his testimony that Holly and Tyler
    appeared to be scared of him, causing him to back away. First, we don’t see this record as
    Keith represents it. Tyler was not merely in fear for her mother’s safety but for own as well.
    Second, Keith argues that because he had not specifically threatened to harm Tyler and had
    not physically abused her, her fear was somehow not justified or “proven.” The circuit court
    was not required to view Keith’s behavior toward Tyler in isolation from his behavior toward
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    Holly. His violent behavior occurred in Tyler’s family over a period of many years—in fact,
    for Tyler, this amounted to over half her life. It is not clearly erroneous for the circuit court
    to conclude that Keith’s physically and emotionally abusive behavior could reasonably inflict
    fear of imminent physical harm, bodily injury, or assault in Tyler. See, e.g., Baltz v. Baltz, 
    2021 Ark. App. 202
    , 
    624 S.W.3d 338
    . Accordingly, we affirm the court’s finding of domestic
    abuse.
    III. Ten-Year Order of Protection for Tyler
    Next, Keith argues that the circuit court erred in entering an order of protection in
    favor of Tyler for a ten-year period. He claims that, even if there were sufficient evidence to
    support a final order of protection on behalf of Tyler, ten years is excessive under the
    circumstances of this case. He again states that there was no evidence that he committed or
    threatened to commit any physical harm, bodily injury, or assault upon Tyler before the
    September 3 incident at the apartment. He argues that the circuit court stated no reason for
    issuing the order for such a significant length of time and treating Tyler’s case identically to
    Holly’s case other than counsel’s request that it be granted for “as long as the Court can give
    it to us.”
    Arkansas Code Annotated section 9-15-205(b) authorizes a court to enter an order of
    protection for a duration between ninety days and ten years “in the discretion of the court.”
    The court may then renew it “at a subsequent hearing upon proof and a finding by the court
    that the threat of domestic abuse still exists.” 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 9-15-205
    (b). The abuse-of-
    discretion standard of review is a high threshold that does not simply require us to determine
    11
    that the circuit court erred but requires us to hold that that the circuit court act
    improvidently, thoughtlessly, or without due consideration. Steele v. Lyon, 
    2015 Ark. App. 251
    , at 4, 
    460 S.W.3d 827
    , 831.
    According to the testimony of both Holly and Tyler, Keith was filled with rage, angry,
    and physically abusive to Holly in front of Tyler for years—the majority of her childhood.
    When she turned eighteen, she left her family home and her mother to escape Keith. Tyler
    testified that after she had moved into the apartment in Conway, Keith began appearing at
    the Walgreens near her home when she came home from school. Holly testified that when
    a narcissistic person loses control, that person is grasping at straws. She said that she was
    petrified because she knew Keith had a concealed weapon, knew what he was capable of
    doing, and knew he had lost control after she filed the petition. Tyler said the fear of Keith
    harming her or her mom again made her feel unsafe. We simply cannot say the circuit court
    abused its discretion in granting the order of protection for ten years, which is allowed by
    the statute.
    IV. Ten-Year Order of Protection for Holly
    Finally, Keith argues that the circuit court’s entry of a ten-year final order of
    protection in favor of Holly was excessive where other adequate remedies were available. He
    basically restates the evidence presented, pointing out perceived inconsistencies in Holly’s
    testimony that he claims demonstrate she is not truly afraid of Keith. He also admits that the
    parties were emotional at the hearing and that he “did himself no favors during the hearing”
    by describing Holly as a “trigger” for his behavior and acting in such a manner that the court
    12
    felt obligated to admonish him. He contends that Holly’s courtroom demeaner and
    testimony that she was petrified of Keith is belied by her actions in going to the marital
    residence to attempt to retrieve her belongings.
    The testimony established that Keith hit, punched, choked, and kicked Holly; that
    he had a pattern of rage and violence throughout the marriage; that he had a concealed
    weapon and had made statements to her suggesting he meant her harm if she defied him;
    and that he continued to inflict in Holly the fear of physical harm, bodily injury, or assault
    after she moved to Conway. The court stated on the record that it found her credible. Keith
    asks us to reweigh the evidence insofar as Holly’s stories and behavior appear inconsistent;
    however, it is within the sole province of the fact-finder to weigh credibility and resolve
    disputed facts. Lewis v. Lewis, 
    2018 Ark. App. 148
    , at 3. On this record, we cannot say that
    the circuit court abused its discretion in entering a ten-year order of protection for Holly.
    Affirmed.
    VIRDEN and VAUGHT, JJ., agree.
    Branscum Law Offices, by: Herby Branscum, Jr.; and Elizabeth Branscum Burgess, for
    appellant.
    LaCerra, Dickson, Hoover & Rogers, PLLC, by: Traci LaCerra, for appellees.
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Document Info

Citation Numbers: 2022 Ark. App. 439

Filed Date: 11/2/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/2/2022