Boyd v. Crocker

Arkansas Court of Appeals
Boyd v. Crocker, 2016 Ark. App. 382 (2016)
Phillip T. Whiteaker

Boyd v. Crocker

Opinion

Cite as

2016 Ark. App. 382

ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION IV No. CV-15-1058

JASON BOYD Opinion Delivered September 7, 2016 APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE CRAIGHEAD COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, WESTERN DISTRICT [NO. DR-2014-165] V. HONORABLE PAMELA HONEYCUTT, JUDGE

REMANDED TO SETTLE AND CANDACE CROCKER SUPPLEMENT THE RECORD AND APPELLEE TO SUPPLEMENT THE ADDENDUM

PHILLIP T. WHITEAKER, Judge

Appellant Jason Boyd appeals the order of the Craighead County Circuit Court

imputing income to him and ordering him to pay child support based on that imputed figure.

Boyd contends that the circuit court erred as a matter of law in its application of the “net-

worth method” of calculating income for a self-employed payor. Because of a minor

deficiency in the record of this case, however, we are unable to reach the merits of Boyd’s

appeal at this time.

Boyd and appellee Candace Crocker were engaged in a relationship that led to the

birth of a child, G.B. Crocker filed a petition to establish paternity and visitation, and in

response, Boyd admitted that he was G.B.’s father and that he should be ordered to pay a Cite as

2016 Ark. App. 382

reasonable amount of child support. The circuit court subsequently entered an agreed

temporary order in which it found Boyd to be G.B.’s biological father, granted him visitation,

and ordered him to pay $400 per month in child support on a temporary basis. Shortly

thereafter, the circuit court entered a modified agreed temporary order; in this order, the

court set a more definite visitation schedule and ordered Boyd to continue paying child

support; however, because Boyd was seeking joint custody, the court reserved the issues of

custody and child support for a final hearing.

At that hearing, the court heard evidence regarding, among other things, Boyd’s

income sources, bank records, and tax returns. At the conclusion of the hearing, the court

asked Crocker’s counsel to prepare proposed findings of facts with respect to Boyd’s income,

after which Boyd would have an opportunity to object before the court issued its written

decision. In response, Crocker submitted a “posttrial brief and proposed findings of fact” in

which she summarized the evidence of Boyd’s bank records and asked the court to find

Boyd’s income for child-support purposes to be $11,105 per month and set child support at

$1,606 per month.

After receiving Crocker’s posttrial brief, the circuit court sent a letter to the parties in

which it explained that it had actually intended for Crocker to submit an order containing

proposed findings of fact, rather than a brief. The court determined, however, that it did not

need briefs from the parties on the law; rather, the court had gone ahead and drafted an

opinion. The remainder of this letter set forth the court’s assessment of the evidence and its

reasoning in reaching its conclusions as to Boyd’s income for child-support purposes. The

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2016 Ark. App. 382

court then asked Crocker to again prepare an order based on the court’s rulings. After the

court heard Boyd’s objections and issued another letter clarifying its earlier rulings, Crocker

submitted another precedent. The circuit court signed and entered this order, which found

Boyd’s income to be $11,105 per month and ordered him to make monthly child-support

payments of $1,606. Boyd filed a timely notice of appeal and now contends that the circuit

court erred in its application of the “net-worth method” of calculating his income for child-

support purposes.

We must, however, order supplementation of the record to address an omission in the

circuit court’s original letter opinion. That letter, found at pages 79–81 of the record, purports

to consist of four pages; however, the second page is missing. The circuit court set out the

reasoning behind its decision to use the net-worth method in this letter, and that analysis

subsequently formed the basis of the order from which Boyd has appealed. Without knowing

the entirety of what the court wrote in this letter, we are unable to satisfactorily determine

how the court construed and applied the law, which renders appellate review difficult.

If anything material to either party is omitted from the record, this court may direct

that the record be settled and that a supplemental record be certified and transmitted. Ark. R.

App. P.–Civ. 6(e) (2015); see also Norris v. Davis,

2014 Ark. App. 435, at 2

. Accordingly, we

order the record to be settled and supplemented pursuant to Rule 6(e); in addition, we order

supplementation of the addendum pursuant to Arkansas Supreme Court Rule 4-2(b)(4).

Appellant has fifteen calendar days to settle and supplement the record and supplement the

addendum. See

Norris, supra.

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2016 Ark. App. 382

Remanded to settle and supplement the record and to supplement the addendum.

KINARD and HIXSON, JJ., agree.

Bristow & Richardson, PLLC, by: Kristofer E. Richardson, for appellant.

Tiner, Cobb & Byars, by: Kara L. Byars, for appellee.

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Reference

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Published