Virgil L. Caudill III v. Jerry Summers ( 2021 )


Menu:
  •                        RENDERED: APRIL 2, 2021; 10:00 A.M.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    Commonwealth of Kentucky
    Court of Appeals
    NO. 2020-CA-0559-ME
    VIRGIL L. CAUDILL, III                                                        APPELLANT
    APPEAL FROM GRANT CIRCUIT COURT
    v.                   HONORABLE R. LESLIE KNIGHT, JUDGE
    ACTION NO. 12-CI-00442
    JERRY SUMMERS; LAURETTE SUMMERS;
    CHRISTINE M. SUMMERS; AND W.J.S., A
    MINOR CHILD                                                                   APPELLEES
    OPINION
    VACATING AND REMANDING1
    ** ** ** ** **
    BEFORE: GOODWINE, KRAMER, AND MAZE, JUDGES.
    KRAMER, JUDGE: Virgil L. Caudill, III, appeals a March 20, 2020 order of the
    Grant Circuit Court which the circuit court entered to, in its view, “clarify” a prior
    1
    Rendition of this expedited appeal was administratively delayed two weeks due to error in the
    Clerk’s Office.
    custody and visitation order it had entered on October 1, 2019. Upon review, we
    vacate and remand.2
    Appellees Jerry and Laurette Summers are the maternal grandparents
    of W.S., a minor child. Appellee Christine Summers is the mother of W.S. and
    appellant Virgil Caudill, III, is W.S.’s father. This appeal involves the
    interpretation and enforcement of an October 1, 2019 order that the Grant Circuit
    Court entered regarding the parties’ parenting and visitation rights with respect to
    W.S. In relevant part, the order provided as follows:
    FINDINGS OF FACT
    1. [Christine] has now relocated back to Grant County
    and is residing in the home with her parents, [Jerry and
    Laurette].
    2. Although [Christine] is now living with her parents,
    she often stays away from said residence for days at a
    time.
    3. [Christine] has failed to exercise a significant amount
    of her parenting time. However, since moving back to
    Grant County, [Christine] has exercised the majority of
    her parenting time.
    4. [Christine] has failed to financially contribute to the
    care of [W.S.]
    5. [Jerry and Laurette] are significantly involved in the
    exchanges of the minor child and often utilize
    [Christine’s] court ordered parenting time.
    2
    Rendition of this expedited appeal was administratively delayed two weeks due to error in the
    Clerk’s Office.
    -2-
    6. It is in the best interest of [W.S.] that he continues to
    maintain the loving relationship that he has enjoyed with
    his Maternal Grandparents, [Jerry and Laurette].
    7. A joint custody arrangement requires a finding that
    Parties have the ability to co-parent with one another. In
    this case, the Court finds to the contrary.
    JUDGMENT OF THE COURT
    1. [Virgil’s] Motion for Sole Custody is GRANTED.
    2. [Christine] shall have parenting time with [W.S.] the
    first, third, and fifth weekends of each month.
    3. If necessary, [Jerry and Laurette] may exercise
    [Christine’s] parenting time.
    4. The Parties shall exercise holiday parenting time
    pursuant to this Court’s Local Rule 10.0.
    5. [Christine] shall ensure that [Virgil] has full access to
    school and medical information concerning [W.S.]
    6. [Jerry’s and Laurette’s] Motion for Grandparent
    Visitation is DENIED.
    (Emphasis added.)
    The controversy at issue in this appeal began shortly after this order
    was entered and chiefly involves the provisions emphasized above. Specifically,
    on November 12, 2019, Jerry and Laurette filed a motion, the relevant substance of
    which was as follows:
    Comes now the Third Party Petitioners, Jerry Summers
    and Laurette Summers, by and through counsel, and
    -3-
    moves the Court to compel the Respondent, Virgil L.
    Caudill, III, to comply with the Court’s Order of October
    1, 2019 and allow the Third Party Petitioners to exercise
    the Petitioner’s, Christine M. Summers, parenting time
    with the minor child. Alternatively, the Third Party
    Petitioners respectfully request that the Respondent be
    found in contempt for his refusal to abide by the Court’s
    October 1, 2019 Order.
    The Petitioners would state that since the entry of the
    October 1, 2019 Order that the Respondent has provided
    the child to them according to the parenting schedule of
    the Petitioner, Christine Summers (Local Rule visitation),
    with the exception of one weekend. On Friday,
    November 1, 2019, the Respondent’s step mother arrived
    at the meeting location and informed the Petitioner, Jerry
    Summers, that the child would not be going with them
    this weekend because they believed that the mother was
    in jail.
    Christine Summers will be at the Summers home on the
    weekend of November 15 – 17, 2019, however it remains
    to be seen whether Mr. Caudill will follow this Court’s
    Order or make up his own rules of visitation.
    In short, Jerry and Laurette believed that the October 1, 2019 order,
    set forth above, had granted them an enforceable assignment of Christine’s right of
    parenting time with respect to W.S. Further, as illustrated by the fact that this was
    their motion and not Christine’s motion, Jerry and Laurette believed they had
    independent standing to invoke the circuit court’s contempt power to enforce this
    right against Virgil.
    Responding, Virgil disagreed. Rather, he interpreted the October 1,
    2019 order, and its statement in paragraph “3” (i.e., “If necessary, [Jerry and
    -4-
    Laurette] may exercise [Christine’s] parenting time”), merely as indicating it was
    the circuit court’s intention to provide him the discretion to permit Jerry and
    Laurette to exercise Christine’s parenting time.
    This dispute became the subject of a November 27, 2019 hearing
    before a domestic relations commissioner of the Grant Circuit Court. Thereafter,
    the commissioner entered a recommended order – which the circuit court adopted
    on March 20, 2020 – “clarifying” the October 1, 2019 order in relevant part as
    follows:
    IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the meaning intended
    for the phrase “if necessary”, in paragraph 3 of the
    Court’s October 1, 2019 Order (“If necessary, the Third-
    Party Petitioners/Maternal Grandparents may exercise the
    Petitioner’s parenting time”), means when the mother
    (Petitioner, Christine Summers) is not available to parent
    the child for whatever reason. The phrase “if necessary”
    does not mean at the discretion of the father (Respondent
    Virgil Caudill, III).
    In other words, the circuit court interpreted the October 1, 2019 order
    consistently with Jerry’s and Laurette’s interpretation, i.e., as granting Jerry and
    Laurette an enforceable right of visitation with W.S., subject to Christine’s
    “availability.” Hence, Virgil lacked the discretion to deny them visitation. Virgil
    timely appealed this order.
    It is well settled that once a judgment becomes final, the trial court
    loses jurisdiction to modify it absent a showing of extraordinary circumstances
    -5-
    justifying the reopening of the judgment. CR3 54.01; 60.02. See also Cawood v.
    Cawood, 
    329 S.W.2d 569
    (Ky. 1959); Mullins v. Hess, 
    131 S.W.3d 769
    (Ky. App.
    2004); Fry v. Kersey, 
    833 S.W.2d 392
    (Ky. App. 1992). Here, no party has ever
    appealed, contested, or otherwise sought to modify the October 1, 2019 order. And
    because of that, Virgil argues the circuit court’s March 20, 2020 order – which he
    views as effectively modifying and amending the prior October 1, 2019 order –
    was improper.
    Jerry and Laurette, on the other hand, assert the March 20, 2020 order
    did not modify but merely interpreted the October 1, 2019 order consistently with
    its terms. And indeed, if that truly is the case, the circuit court did not lose
    jurisdiction in this matter because it merely exercised its continuing authority “to
    enforce its own judgments and remove any obstructions to such enforcement.”
    Akers v. Stephenson, 
    469 S.W.2d 704
    , 706 (Ky. 1970) (citing 46 AM. JUR. 2D
    Judgments § 898; Crook v. Schumann, 
    292 Ky. 750
    , 
    167 S.W.2d 836
    (1943)). See
    also Shelby Petroleum Corp. v. Croucher, 
    814 S.W.2d 930
    (Ky. App. 1991);
    Ballew v. Denny, 
    296 Ky. 368
    , 
    177 S.W.2d 152
    , 154 (1944) (citation omitted)
    (explaining “[t]he mere interpretation of a judgment involves no challenge of its
    validity”).
    3
    Kentucky Rule of Civil Procedure.
    -6-
    As further explained in Board of Education of Campbellsville
    Independent School District v. Faulkner, 
    433 S.W.2d 853
    , 855 (Ky. 1968),
    [A] judgment always is open to construction by any court
    that is asked to give effect to it. And if the judgment is
    ambiguous by reason of circumstances not apparent on
    the face of the record supporting it, we perceive no sound
    reason why it may not be shown by extraneous evidence
    . . . . If that is good law for deeds, contracts, wills and
    other writings, and it has always been so recognized, it is
    no less good law in the case of an anomalous judgment.
    It is always proper to consider what the judgment should
    have been, since it will be presumed that the court
    intended to adjudge correctly in law upon the facts of the
    case, and of two possible interpretations of the language
    of the judgment, that one will be adopted which makes it
    valid, in preference to one which would make it
    erroneous.
    (Internal quotation marks and citations omitted.)
    Moreover, when interpreting a judgment, “effect must be given to that
    which is unavoidably and necessarily implied in a judgment, as well as that which
    is expressed in the most appropriate language.” Furlow v. Sturgeon, 
    436 S.W.2d 485
    , 486 (Ky. 1969) (citation omitted). Furlow also provides that where claims in
    an action are mutually exclusive, “adjudicating in favor of one is negating the
    other.”
    Id. With these rules
    in mind, we begin with the presumption that in
    entering the original October 1, 2019 order, the circuit court “intended to adjudge
    correctly in law[.]” 
    Faulkner, 433 S.W.2d at 855
    (emphasis added) (citation
    -7-
    omitted). Considering that rule, the October 1, 2019 order cannot properly be
    interpreted as providing Jerry and Laurette authority to enforce Christine’s parental
    or visitation rights associated with W.S. This type of right cannot be assigned.
    See, e.g., Hamilton v. Duvall, 
    563 S.W.3d 697
    , 701 (Ky. App. 2018) (“It is telling
    that grandparents initiated this case and sought visitation through father while he
    was in jail ‘claim[ing] that father transferred his superior right of custody to them
    during his incarceration[.]’ This right, of course, is not transferable.”).4
    Likewise, the original October 1, 2019 order cannot properly be
    interpreted to have granted Jerry and Laurette any form of independent rights of
    visitation associated with W.S. To explain, the right of grandparent visitation
    derives solely from KRS5 405.021; thus, consistently with that statute, “[i]f a
    grandparent wishes to have visitation with a grandchild, he or she must petition the
    circuit court in the county in which the child resides and must prove by clear and
    convincing evidence that visitation is in the child’s best interest.” K.C.O. v.
    Cabinet for Health and Family Servs., 
    518 S.W.3d 778
    , 785-86 (Ky. App. 2017)
    (quoting VanWinkle v. Petry, 
    217 S.W.3d 252
    , 258 (Ky. App. 2007)). Here, in
    paragraph “6,” the October 1, 2019 order denied Jerry’s and Laurette’s petition for
    4
    While the disposition of this matter does not require the Court to plunge into the constitutional
    realms surrounding grandparent visitation versus a parent’s superior and fundamental right to
    make decisions regarding his child without overt state interference, we offer Hamilton, 
    563 S.W.3d 697
    , as an excellent overview on the subject.
    5
    Kentucky Revised Statute.
    -8-
    visitation rights. See 
    Furlow, 436 S.W.2d at 486
    (explaining that where claims in
    an action are mutually exclusive, “adjudicating in favor of one is negating the
    other”).
    Accordingly, there are two competing interpretations of the language
    in the October 1, 2019 order at issue in this matter, i.e., “If necessary, [Jerry and
    Laurette] may exercise [Christine’s] parenting time.” The circuit court’s
    interpretation would, as discussed, render the October 1, 2019 order invalid.
    Whereas Virgil’s interpretation is consistent with Kentucky law and is, therefore,
    the proper interpretation. See 
    Faulkner, 433 S.W.2d at 855
    (citation omitted)
    (“[O]f two possible interpretations of the language of the judgment, that one will
    be adopted which makes it valid, in preference to one which would make it
    erroneous.”).
    We are left, then, with only one conclusion: Through its March 20,
    2020 order, the circuit court did not “clarify” its prior October 1, 2019 order, but
    rather attempted to modify that order in a manner prohibited by its jurisdiction and
    statutory authority. We therefore VACATE the March 20, 2020 order of the Grant
    Circuit Court. Upon REMAND, the circuit court is instructed to deny Jerry’s and
    Laurette’s November 12, 2019 motion.
    ALL CONCUR.
    -9-
    BRIEF FOR APPELLANT:      BRIEF FOR APPELLEES:
    Marianne S. Chevalier     Casey Cheesman
    Ft. Mitchell, Kentucky    Williamstown, Kentucky
    Stephen L. Bates, II
    Dry Ridge, Kentucky
    -10-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2020 CA 000559

Filed Date: 4/1/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/9/2021