Court Opinion

ID: 9383821
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-03-31 14:04:49.464384+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:17:48.587887
License: Public Domain

RENDERED: MARCH 24, 2023; 10:00 A.M.
                        NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

                Commonwealth of Kentucky
                          Court of Appeals

                             NO. 2022-CA-1094-ME

TIMOTHY MCILWAIN                                                    APPELLANT

                APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT
v.                HONORABLE DERWIN L. WEBB, JUDGE
                      ACTION NO. 19-D-501308-001

BROOKE BERRY                                                          APPELLEE

                                   OPINION
                                  AFFIRMING

                                  ** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: CALDWELL, GOODWINE, AND MCNEILL, JUDGES.

CALDWELL, JUDGE: According to the notice of appeal, Timothy McIlwain

(McIlwain) appeals from three orders: 1) a May 2019 domestic violence order

(DVO); 2) a July 2022 order extending the DVO; and 3) an August 2022 order

denying his motion to alter, amend, or vacate the July 2022 DVO extension order.

But McIlwain’s appellate briefs substantively challenge only the May 2019 DVO –

for which the time to appeal has long passed – and do not substantively address the
extension proceedings or the merits of the July 2022 extension order. Thus, we

decline to address the merits of the May 2019 DVO and must summarily affirm the

July 2022 DVO extension order.

                                      FACTS

             McIlwain and Brooke Berry (Berry) previously cohabitated and have

a child together. In May 2019, the Jefferson Family Court granted Berry’s petition

for a DVO to last three years – until May 2022. Shortly after entry of the May

2019 DVO, McIlwain filed a motion to alter, amend, or vacate the DVO. And

soon after that, Berry filed a motion to hold McIlwain in contempt for allegedly

violating the DVO.

             While these motions remained pending, the original family court

judge recused from presiding over any future proceedings in the case in August

2019. The case was transferred to another family court judge.

             In January 2020, the family court entered an agreed order noting the

parties’ participation in mediation. Under the agreed order’s terms, a request for

an emergency protective order on the child’s behalf was dismissed and McIlwain’s

motion to alter, amend, or vacate the DVO was withdrawn.

             Prior to the DVO’s expiration, Berry filed a motion to extend it for

another three years. McIlwain filed a response, arguing that extension was

unwarranted on various bases. The family court heard evidence on the motion to

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extend the DVO. McIlwain did not attend the hearing, but counsel appeared on his

behalf. The family court entered an order extending the DVO for three years in

July 2022.

                Shortly thereafter, McIlwain filed a motion to alter, amend, or vacate

– which the family court denied in August 2022. Within thirty days of the family

court’s entry of the order denying the motion to alter or amend or vacate, McIlwain

filed a notice of appeal. The notice of appeal states McIlwain appeals from the

May 2019 DVO, the July 2022 order extending the DVO, and the August 2022

order denying the motion to alter or amend or vacate. Berry argued, inter alia, in

her brief that any challenge to the May 2019 DVO is untimely and that McIlwain’s

appeal should be dismissed.

July 2022 Order is Only Appealable Order Which was Timely Appealed

                Generally, a party has thirty days to file an appeal from a trial court

judgment. See RAP1 3(A)(1); see also former CR2 73.02(1)(a). However, “the

filing of a CR 59.05 motion suspends the running of the time for an appeal, and the

entry of an order overruling a CR 59.05 motion resets the time for appeal so that a

party has the full thirty-days to begin the appeals process.” Hoffman v. Hoffman,

500 S.W.3d 234, 236-37 (Ky. App. 2016).

1
    Kentucky Rules of Appellate Procedure.
2
    Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure.

                                             -3-
               McIlwain argues that his appeal from the May 2019 DVO is timely

because he filed a motion to alter, amend, or vacate the May 2019 DVO. It is true

that his CR 59.05 motion suspended the time to appeal while the CR 59.05 motion

was pending. However, once the CR 59.05 motion was withdrawn via the agreed

order, the time to file an appeal from the May 2019 DVO started to run again.

               McIlwain has asserted that the family court refused to hold a hearing

on his motion to alter, amend, or vacate the May 2019 order and that he was forced

to participate in mediation resulting in withdrawal of his CR 59.05 motion. But he

provides no citations to the record to show that he objected to mediation or that the

court refused to hold a hearing on his CR 59.05 motion.3 Though he requested a

hearing in his CR 59.05 motion before the original family court judge recused,

nothing in the record indicates that McIlwain again requested a hearing on the CR

59.05 motion after the case was transferred to another family court judge.

3
  McIlwain’s appellant brief also does not comply with our appellate rule requirements for
preservation statements identifying how and where in the record issues were raised to the trial
court and thus preserved for review, RAP 32(A)(4), despite our previously advising McIlwain’s
appellate counsel of the importance of complying with preservation statement requirements. See
Babcock v. Estridge, No. 2019-CA-000544-MR, 2020 WL 5587369, at *1 (Ky. App. Sep. 18,
2020) (noting failure to provide proper preservation statement required by then-effective CR
76.12(4)(c)(v) in appellant brief filed by J. Fox DeMoisey).
        Failure to provide preservation statements can result in issues being reviewed only for
palpable error resulting in manifest injustice rather than under otherwise applicable standards of
review for such issues. See Ford v. Commonwealth, 628 S.W.3d 147, 155 (Ky. 2021). See also
CR 61.02. Furthermore, substantive failure to comply with appellate briefing rules can result in
briefs being stricken and appeals dismissed. See RAP 31(H)(1); former CR 76.12(8)(a).

                                               -4-
               In short, there is no reason to depart from the general rule stated in

Hoffman. We conclude McIlwain’s CR 59.05 motion to alter or amend or vacate

the May 2019 DVO suspended the running of the thirty-day period to appeal until

the family court effectively denied the CR 59.05 motion by entering an agreed

order withdrawing that motion. Upon entry of that order, the time for an appeal

began again and ran out.

               The agreed order withdrawing the CR 59.05 motion was entered in

January 2020. McIlwain’s time to appeal from the May 2019 DVO therefore

expired 30 days later in February 2020. Since McIlwain filed his notice of appeal

in September 2022, the appeal from the May 2019 DVO is clearly time-barred and

must be dismissed. RAP 2(A)(3);4 see also former CR 73.02(2). We will not

address the merits of the May 2019 DVO.

                On the other hand, the appeal from the July 2022 order extending the

DVO for another three years was timely filed. McIlwain’s CR 59.05 motion to

alter or amend or vacate the July 2022 order was timely filed. So, the timely CR

59.05 motion regarding the July 2022 order suspended the thirty-day deadline to

appeal until the family court denied the CR 59.05 motion in August 2022.

4
 RAP 2(A)(3) states that the failure to file a timely notice of appeal “shall result in a dismissal”
of the appeal – as did former CR 73.02(2).

                                                 -5-
               In sum, the appeal from the July 2022 extension order – unlike the

appeal from the May 2019 DVO – is not time-barred.5 However, the July 2022

order must be affirmed due to McIlwain’s failure to argue any error related to this

order or the extension proceedings in his briefs.

We Summarily Affirm the July 2022 Order Based on Lack of Substantive
Argument in Briefs About this Order or the Extension Proceedings

               Despite generally requesting that all of the family court’s orders be

vacated at the conclusion of his appellant brief, McIlwain does not substantively

address the merits of the July 2022 order or the extension proceedings in his

appellate brief arguments. In the statement of facts portion of his initial brief,

McIlwain asserts: “the DVO extension hearing consisted of the mother claiming

she was afraid even though for three years there had been no incidents and the

father has no criminal history.” But McIlwain does not cite any supporting legal

authority to challenge the July 2022 order or even make any substantive arguments

about the July 2022 order or the extension proceedings in the argument portion of

his appellant brief or in his reply brief.6

5
  McIlwain claims to also appeal from the August 2022 order denying his CR 59.05 motion to
alter or amend or vacate the July 2022 DVO extension. Technically one cannot appeal from an
order denying a CR 59.05 motion. So, we construe his appeal from the August 2022 order
denying his CR 59.05 motion to be from the judgment which was the subject of the CR 59.05
motion (the July 2022 order extending the DVO). See Ford v. Ford, 578 S.W.3d 356, 366 (Ky.
App. 2019).
6
  Instead, the legal arguments raised in McIlwain’s briefs relate only to alleged problems with the
family court’s entering the May 2019 DVO and/or not granting McIlwain’s CR 59.05 motion to

                                               -6-
              We have no obligation to research or argue any such issues about the

July 2022 order or extension proceedings for him. “It is not our function as an

appellate court to research and construct a party’s legal arguments[.]” Hadley v.

Citizen Deposit Bank, 186 S.W.3d 754, 759 (Ky. App. 2005). Without any citation

of supporting authority, or even argument about alleged error in the July 2022

order, or the extension proceedings in McIlwain’s briefs, any error in this regard

has been waived. See id. (“Our courts have established that an alleged error may

be deemed waived where an appellant fails to cite any authority in support of the

issues and arguments advanced on appeal. [W]ithout any argument or citation of

authorities, [an appellate] [c]ourt has little or no indication of why the assignment

represents an error.”) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).

              In short, the appeal from the May 2019 DVO is barred as untimely

and the appeal from the July 2022 extension order fails due to lack of any

argument or citation of supporting authority in the briefs to challenge this order.

Further arguments in the briefs not discussed herein have been determined to lack

merit or relevancy to our resolving this appeal.

                                    CONCLUSION

              For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the family court’s judgment.

alter, amend, or vacate the May 2019 DVO. References to videotaped recordings in McIlwain’s
briefs appear to be from the May 2019 hearing on the initial petition for a DVO, though the
recordings are identified only by time and not by date.

                                            -7-
          ALL CONCUR.

BRIEFS FOR APPELLANT:    BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:

J. Fox DeMoisey          Troy DeMuth
Prospect, Kentucky       Spencer J. Brooks
                         Prospect, Kentucky

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