Court Opinion

ID: 4568639
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-09-22 23:07:00.924371+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:28:13.061419
License: Public Domain

RENDERED: AUGUST 21, 2020; 10:00 A.M.
                       NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

                Commonwealth of Kentucky
                          Court of Appeals
                           NO. 2019-CA-000997-ME

BETSY DANETTLE BALIAN                                             APPELLANT

                 APPEAL FROM LEWIS CIRCUIT COURT
                      FAMILY COURT DIVISION
v.              HONORABLE JEFFREY L. PRESTON, JUDGE
                       ACTION NO. 16-CI-00185

GREGORY BASIL BALIAN                                                APPELLEE

                               OPINION
                       VACATING AND REMANDING

                                 ** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: CALDWELL, JONES, AND TAYLOR, JUDGES.

TAYLOR, JUDGE: Betsy Danettle Balian brings this appeal from an Order of the

Lewis Circuit Court entered May 9, 2019, inter alia, denying Betsy’s motion to

modify the timesharing schedule with the parties’ children. We vacate and

remand.
              Betsy and Gregory Basil Balian were married on December 29, 2009.

Three daughters were born of the parties’ marriage: K.B. (born 1/7/2011); M.B.

(born 7/1/2013); and V.B. (born 3/18/2017).1 On November 16, 2016, Betsy filed

a petition for a domestic violence order (DVO). Therein, Betsy alleged that

Gregory had committed acts of domestic violence and sexual abuse upon her and

two of the children. An emergency protective order was entered. After Betsy filed

the DVO petition and without seeking permission of the court, Betsy took the

children and moved to North Carolina. Gregory initiated the instant proceedings

by filing a Verified Petition for Custody on December 1, 2016. Betsy then filed a

Verified Petition for Legal Separation. Gregory answered and also filed a Motion

to Return Children to Kentucky.

              The family court conducted a hearing upon the petition and various

motions on January 19, 2017. By order entered February 23, 2017, the parties

were temporarily granted joint custody of their daughters and Betsy was designated

primary residential custodian. Gregory was granted supervised visitation. The

family court found there was no evidence of domestic violence and dismissed

1
 Betsy Danettle Balian and Gregory Basil Balian’s third child, V.B., was born on March 18,
2017, after the action had been filed and after Betsy moved to North Carolina. Betsy also had
two daughters from her previous marriage. These two daughters had resided solely with Betsy
and Gregory before the action was filed but are not at issue in the instant appeal.

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Betsy’s petition for a DVO.2 Despite dismissing the petition, the family court

ordered Gregory’s visitation to be supervised pending outcome of the criminal

charges that emanated from the allegations in the DVO petition.

              On May 26, 2017, Gregory filed a Motion for Visitation. Therein,

Gregory stated the grand jury had refused to return an indictment against him

regarding sexual abuse allegations made in the DVO petition. Thus, Gregory was

seeking unsupervised visitation with his children. By Order entered June 1, 2017,

Gregory was granted unsupervised visitation with his two oldest daughters.

Gregory was denied visitation with the parties’ infant daughter that was born on

March 18, 2017, as the child was still being nursed by Betsy.

              In mid-2018, Betsy moved back to Kentucky. By order entered June

15, 2018, the parties were awarded joint custody of their three children, and neither

party was designated the primary residential custodian. The order further provided

that the parties were to have a “50/50 time split with all three minor children.”

June 15, 2018, Order at 1.

              The family court conducted a “final” hearing on August 2, 2018. The

family court entered a decree of dissolution of the marriage by Order entered

August 7, 2018. By a separate order also entered on August 7, 2018, the family

court reaffirmed its earlier order granting joint custody to the parties with no

2
  The family court consolidated the domestic violence action with this case and heard evidence
regarding the alleged domestic violence at the January 19, 2017, hearing.

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designation of a primary custodian and a 50/50 time split for custody of the

children. Additionally, the court ordered the children to be enrolled in a school in

Fleming County and that the parties were to engage in shared parenting on a 3-

day/4-day alternating schedule. The parties were ordered to exchange the children

at a gas station in Tollesboro, Kentucky, and were further admonished to control

their behavior while exchanging the children. Gregory filed a motion to alter,

amend, or vacate which was denied by the family court and neither party appealed

this final custody order.

             On April 10, 2019, Betsy filed a Motion to Modify Timesharing, and

then, on April 26, 2019, Betsy field an Amended Motion. Therein, Betsy sought,

among numerous requests, to be designated the primary residential parent. The

family court summarily denied Betsy’s motion to modify timesharing without an

evidentiary hearing. In its May 9, 2019, Order denying the motion to modify, the

family court noted that it had “an understanding of the facts of this case as it was

litigated before the Court, nonstop, for a period of two to two and a half years.”

May 9, 2019, Order at 1. This appeal follows.

             Betsy contends the family court erred by denying her motion to

modify timesharing. More specifically, Betsy asserts it was error to summarily

dismiss her motion to modify timesharing without conducting an evidentiary

hearing. This is the only issue raised in this appeal.

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             Modification of timesharing is governed by Kentucky Revised

Statutes (KRS) 403.320(3), which provides:

             The court may modify an order granting or denying
             visitation rights whenever modification would serve the
             best interests of the child; but the court shall not restrict a
             parent’s visitation rights unless it finds that the visitation
             would endanger seriously the child’s physical, mental,
             moral, or emotional health.

The necessity of a hearing upon a motion to modify timesharing pursuant to KRS

403.320 was addressed by the Kentucky Supreme Court in Anderson v. Johnson,

350 S.W.3d 453 (Ky. 2011). Therein, the Anderson Court determined that an

evidentiary hearing is required upon a motion to modify timesharing and

specifically stated:

             [B]y saying that a timesharing modification can be done
             “whenever” it is in the best interests of the child to do so,
             the legislature effectively gave the family court
             continuing jurisdiction to hear such motions until the
             child reaches the age of majority or is emancipated.
             Motions to modify timesharing are motions to reopen the
             final divorce decree to the extent stated in the motion and
             require payment of the reopening fee. The Court is
             clearly obligated to determine questions of law and fact
             in the original custody proceeding. See KRS 403.310.
             Part of that proceeding is granting visitation or time
             sharing. Thus[,] motions for modification are not new
             actions and the case number remains the same. And by
             virtue of being brought post-decree, they are not motions
             being made in a pending action.

             ....

                                           -5-
             Consequently, though named a “motion,” a motion for
             modification [of timesharing] is actually a vehicle for the
             reopening and rehearing on some part of a final order,
             which asks for adjudication on the merits presented at a
             required hearing. As such, family courts must make
             findings of fact and conclusions of law, and must enter
             the appropriate order of judgment when hearing
             modification motions.
Id. at 456-57 (emphasis added) (footnotes omitted) (citation omitted); see

McNeeley v. McNeeley, 45 S.W.3d 876, 877-78 (Ky. App. 2001) (holding that a

motion to modify timesharing pursuant to KRS 403.320(3) cannot be granted

without a hearing, because a hearing is required for the purpose of determining the

best interests of the children). The Anderson Court, likewise, held that in

addressing a modification of timesharing issue, Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure

(CR) “52.01 requires that the judge engage in at least a good faith effort at fact-

finding and that the found facts be included in a written order. Failure to do so

allows an appellate court to remand the case for findings, even where the

complaining party failed to bring the lack of specific findings to the trial court’s

attention.” Anderson, 350 S.W.3d at 458.

             In the case sub judice, the family court summarily denied Betsy’s

motion to modify timesharing without an evidentiary hearing. The family court

was clearly frustrated with the amount of litigation that had occurred as a result of

the parties’ constant inability to agree upon child-related issues, which we certainly

appreciate and understand upon review of the record in this case. While we are

                                          -6-
sympathetic to the family court’s frustration, we reluctantly must vacate and

remand for an evidentiary hearing to determine whether the modification is in the

best interests of the children. See McNeeley, 45 S.W.3d at 878; Anderson, 350
S.W.3d at 455; see also Rules of the Supreme Court (SCR) 1.030(8). Upon

conclusion of the hearing, the family court shall render findings of fact and

conclusions of law. Anderson, 350 S.W.3d at 457.

               However, upon remand, we would caution both parties that

evidentiary hearings premised upon frivolous claims or unsubstantiated allegations,

asserted solely to frustrate, harass, or aggravate the other party may not be taken

lightly by the family court and may be subject to appropriate sanctions if so

determined, including the award of attorney fees to the prevailing party. See CR

11.3 Additionally, we note that upon our review of the record, neither of the parties

could be labeled a “model parent” and, in fact, both have engaged in conduct

detrimental to the best interests of their children and otherwise designed to alienate

the affections of the children against the other parent or interfere with the other

parent’s timesharing with the children. To the extent that such conduct endangers

the safety, health, and well-being of the children, the family court may and can

3
  Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure (CR) 11 requires every pleading, motion, and other paper of
a party represented by an attorney to be signed by the attorney. If signed in violation of CR 11,
sanctions may be imposed upon the attorney, the represented party or both. Additionally, to the
extent either party makes false statements under oath at an evidentiary hearing, criminal penalties
may be applicable. Kentucky Revised Statutes 523.020.

                                               -7-
refer the case to the Cabinet for Health and Family Services for investigation and

appropriate action. Both parents are encouraged on remand to place the best

interests of their children above their personal, moral, or religious bias and end

their hostility toward one another.

             For the foregoing reasons, the Order of the Lewis Circuit Court is

vacated and this cause is remanded for proceedings consistent with this Opinion.

             ALL CONCUR.

BRIEFS FOR APPELLANT:                     BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:

John Preston Thompson                     R. Stephen McGinnis
Grayson, Kentucky                         Greenup, Kentucky

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