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ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
DIVISIONS I & II
No. CV-15-413
Opinion Delivered: FEBRUARY 24, 2016
APPEAL FROM THE SEBASTIAN
ERIN LANE POTTS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT,
APPELLANT FORT SMITH DISTRICT
[NO. DR-13-858]
V.
HONORABLE JIM D. SPEARS,
JUDGE
TIMOTHY D. POTTS, JR.
APPELLEE DISSENTING OPINION ON THE DENIAL
OF REHEARING
KENNETH S. HIXSON, Judge
The appellate court is the guardian of fair play. We are somewhat insulated, and
sometimes isolated, from the discord and cacophony of the trial court. We do not have the
luxury of an NFL replay official where he simply sticks his head under a black hood and
reviews a video replay of the actual play under review. Ours is generally a world of black
and white emanating solely from the printed page. Sometimes that insulation is a detriment
such as where we attempt to interpret the demeanor or credibility of a witness or the
behavior or intent of parties or attorneys. But, sometimes that insulation is beneficial in that
we can take a fresh, unadulterated look at the proceedings below without bias, prejudice,
or emotion. We don’t make the rules; we simply review what happened below to ensure
the rules were followed. When rules are not followed and the notions of fair play are
offended, the appellate court should be compelled to act. Such is the case in this matter. I
Cite as 2016 Ark. App. 127
would grant Erin Potts’s petition for rehearing because the trial court erroneously denied
her a hearing prior to dividing the parties’ property. Therefore, I dissent.
To put this matter in context, it appears from the record that this divorce was the
type of divorce that gives divorces a bad name. The parties could not, or at least did not,
agree on virtually anything. The trial court was repeatedly dragged into the fray to referee
the participants. Shortly after the complaint was filed in October 2013 the disagreements
began:
• Husband wrote to the judge and complained to the court that wife would not
cooperate in visitation because the baby was breastfeeding and could not be away
from wife for over three hours at a time.
• Husband wrote to the judge and complained that wife would not cooperate in
making up missed visitation.
• Husband wrote to the judge and complained that wife would only allow visitation
in a rented hotel room so she could breast feed the minor child during visitation.
• Wife wrote to the judge to complain that it was all the husband’s fault.
• Judge, wife, and husband had a conference call to resolve the visitation issues.
• Judge entered a Temporary Order for joint custody and child support.
• Wife and/or husband wrote the judge a letter complaining summer visitation
schedule was not working.
• Wife wrote the judge complaining that husband and his witnesses would not
cooperate in discovery and depositions.
• Judge wrote a letter addressing the discovery issues.
• Wife filed motion for continuance from July 28 trial date.
• Husband objected to continuance.
• Judge denied motion for continuance.
• On July 29, 2014, the matter was tried. The parties agreed to joint custody. Proof
of grounds for divorce was taken and corroborated. Property division was specifically
reserved so attorneys could work out a settlement. Judge advised attorneys to have
any property settlement approved by the other attorney.
• Within a couple of months of the divorce hearing, the parties started up again
complaining to the judge. Husband complained that wife was interfering with his
joint custody and alleged a material change in circumstances and requested primary
custody. Husband also sent judge a proposed property-settlement agreement that
had not been approved by wife.
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• Wife complained to judge that nothing is her fault and that she disagreed with
property settlement proposed by husband.
• On November 21, 2014, the judge wrote a letter to the parties and addressed, among
other things, the marital property: “On the remaining issues of the marital home and
content. If the parties do not reach an agreement within ten days, the house and all contents
will be sold and the money divided between the parties. … I do not feel a hearing on this matter
would be helpful due to the fact that I am fully aware of the position of each of you and your
clients and no other factual conclusions could be resolved.” 1 (Emphasis added.)
• On November 24, 2014, the judge changed custody from joint custody to primary
custody to husband without a hearing but based on the contents of the numerous
correspondences from the attorneys.
• The disagreements continued, and husband wrote the judge and asked the judge not
to split the property equally because the marital residence was his pre-marital
property and that there was a question concerning appreciation in the equity since
the marriage. Husband attached a 31-page appraisal of the residence to the letter.
• Two days later on November 26, 2014, wife turned around and asked the court for
ten more days to settle the property disputes and not to consider the information set
forth in the husband’s letters as evidence on any ultimate decision. Specifically, wife
states, “The defendant [wife] would further request that the court not piecemeal the property
issues as requested by the plaintiff [husband]. … Again, the defendant [wife] is requesting that
the court only consider evidence properly before the court, and is objecting to the introduction or
consideration of any of the items the plaintiff [husband] has attempted to introduce through
letters to the court or attachments to pleadings. The defendant [wife] respectfully requests that
the court set this matter for hearing so that any decision to modify this order be based on actual
facts and evidence rather than hearsay propounded by the plaintiff [husband]. Thank you for
your time and consideration regarding this matter, and I hope we are able to having a hearing
in the near future so that these misunderstandings might be resolved.” (Emphasis added.)
• Even after the latest correspondence, the parties continued to disagree, and the
husband prepared two proposed orders and sent them both to the judge. One order
apparently simply divided the property equally; the second order contained several
pages of minutia concerning the property-division issues. 2
Instead of having a hearing and accepting evidence on clearly disputed property-
division issues, the trial court apparently accepted the more detailed version of the husband’s
1 It is unclear from the context of the letter if the trial judge is referring to the
continuing disagreement concerning custody of the minor child, the division of property,
or both.
2 The two proposed decrees are not in the record for comparison.
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proposed divorce decree and property division. 3 The decree of divorce was filed on
February 4, 2015. To show the detail and factual findings of the trial court, a sampling of
the decree is described below:
Paragraph 11 is approximately one and one half pages in length. It discusses the
marital home and concludes it was pre-marital property. It discusses the valuation and
appreciation of the home and amount of equity that will be divided. It further discusses
a finding that the wife has a retirement account at Walmart and that instead of dividing
the equity in the residence, the parties should offset the balance in the Walmart account
against the equity in the residence.
Paragraph 12 is one page in length. This paragraph divides several retirement
accounts and brokerage accounts presumably owned by the parties.
Paragraph 13 is approximately one page in length and divides automobiles and 26
line-itemed marital assets.
Paragraph 14 is approximately one page in length and divides marital debt ranging
from a Lowe’s account to property taxes.
I include this summary description of the property-division portion of the Divorce
Decree only to show the degree of detail that was required by the trial court in making its
findings of fact. The error is that the trial court had no evidence before it from which to
make these findings. The divorce hearing held on July 29, 2014, did not contain any
evidence relating to marital property. The only evidence introduced at that hearing was the
husband’s grounds for divorce and corroboration. The issue of property division was
specifically reserved. While over the intervening months each party had requested a hearing
on property-division issues if an agreement could not be reached, no hearing was ever held
and no evidence was ever introduced. All of the information and data used by the trial
court to divide the property was gleaned from pleadings, letters from counsel, and
attachments thereto. As a matter of fact, the trial court stated as much. The appellant filed
3 See footnote 2.
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a timely motion for reconsideration requesting a hearing on division of property and
custody. The trial court denied the motion. The trial court entered an order and candidly
stated: “The Court finds that based upon the testimony of the parties and the statements of
counsel at the July 29, 2014, hearing and based upon the Court’s review of letters from counsel
and the pleadings in this case there is sufficient evidence to support the Court’s entry of Decree of
Divorce.” (Emphasis added.) Yet there was no evidence regarding property division
introduced at the July 29 hearing. Hence, the only source of information that the trial court
used to divide the property was “letters from counsel” and “the pleadings.” While the trial
court obviously bent over backwards for over a year to placate and referee two very
disagreeable parties, the trial court clearly erred in substituting “letters from counsel” and
“pleadings” in the place of evidence to decide both child custody and the division of
property.
At least since 1910, Arkansas has held fast and true to the premise that pleadings and
exhibits to pleadings are not evidence from which findings can be made. Our own court
followed this premise only a few months ago in Morrison v. Carruth, 2015 Ark. App. 224, at
6, 459 S.W.3d 317, 321, where we held: “First, no evidence regarding Morrison’s deed or
tax payments was ever introduced at trial. Instead, Morrison attached copies of her deed and
tax records to her complaint. Exhibits to a pleading, however, are not evidence and must be
introduced at trial in order to be considered. S. Farmers Ass’n v. Wyatt, 234 Ark. 649, 353 S.W.2d
531 (1962); see also Jones v. Harris, 221 Ark. 716, 255 S.W.2d 691 (1953); Foster v. Elledge,
106 Ark. 342, 153 S.W. 819 (1913).” (Emphasis added.) This same premise can be followed
back in time. In Wyatt, 234 Ark. at 654, 353 S.W.2d at 534, the supreme court held:
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“Exhibits must be introduced in evidence in order to be considered. An exhibit is merely a part of
the pleading and has no greater dignity than the pleading to which it is attached.” (Emphasis
added.) And finally, back in 1910, in Taylor v. Robinson, 94 Ark. 560, 562, 127 S.W. 972,
973 (1910), the supreme court held: “In a trial at law deeds and other instruments of writing
exhibited with the complaint, the execution of which is denied in the answer, must be
introduced in evidence. Their exhibition with the pleadings does not make them a part of the
evidence in the case, unless they are adduced in evidence at the trial. Richardson v. Williams, 37 Ark.
542; Neff v. Elder, 84 Ark. 277.” (Emphasis added.) Similarly, letters from attorneys are not
admissible evidence. See Tri-State Transit Co. of Louisiana v. Westbrook, 207 Ark. 270, 276,
180 S.W.2d 121, 125 (1944). 4
Not only did the trial court refer to, and use, information that was not introduced
into evidence, such a use of non-introduced evidence forecloses any meaningful appellate
review. There is no evidence for this court to review in the record to even begin an analysis
of whether the trial court’s use of the information was clearly erroneous. There is no
evidence to review whether the appellant was prejudiced. In Williams v. State Office of Child
Support Enforcement, 2015 Ark. App. 225, at 5, 459 S.W.3d 321, 325, we reversed a finding
of contempt because there was no evidence in the record to support the finding. We stated:
“However, as to the circuit court’s order holding Williams in contempt, the record reveals
that OCSE presented no evidence of noncompliance with the Florida judgment. The
4There could be exceptions if the letter contains stipulations or other matters clearly
designed to be used by the trial court as evidence. See Tri-State, supra; see also Williams:
“The attorney’s unsworn statements to the court that Williams had not paid were neither
testimony nor evidence.”
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attorney’s unsworn statements to the court that Williams had not paid were neither testimony nor
evidence. As discussed above, evidence is required to prove indirect contempt, which occurs
outside the presence of the court. As there was no such evidence before the circuit court as to
Williams’ alleged failure to pay child support, the court’s order holding Williams in contempt was
clearly against the preponderance of the evidence. Accordingly, we reverse.” (Citations omitted.)
(Emphasis added.) Similarly, in Ponder v. Arkansas Department of Human Services, 2016 Ark.
App. 61, at 5, __ S.W.3d __, __, decided only three weeks ago by this court, we reversed
a change of custody because there was no evidence in the record. We held: “But our
review of the record confirms that there were no findings made by the circuit court based
on the evidence presented at the review hearing regarding the best interest of the children.
Whether a change in custody is in the best interest of a child is a question of fact, not a
matter of law, and as such, the best interest criterion must be attended by some proof. …
We hold that the circuit court committed reversible error by making findings despite a complete lack of
evidence for the circuit court to consider.” (Emphasis added.)
Again, while I commend and even applaud the trial court for exhibiting unrestrained
patience and enduring the litigiousness and contentiousness of the parties, I cannot affirm a
trial court’s making findings of fact regarding the division of property based solely on letters
of counsel and pleadings. Such a use of non-evidence is clearly erroneous. While the trial
court may have been frustrated by its many months of refereeing the discord and cacophony
readily apparent from the record in this case, in my view its remedy was to either set a
hearing or impose sanctions under Rule 11 or Rule 37; not to decide the case on letters and
pleadings.
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I would be remiss if I did not make a comment on another holding in the majority
opinion. Consider this perhaps as a caveat to the trial bar. The majority either affirms
outright, or at least inferentially affirms, the proposition that where one attorney does not
object to a proposal submitted in a letter to a judge by the opposing attorney, that the
attorney has either acquiesced to the contents in that letter and proposal or, at least, cannot
later object to the court’s use of that letter as substantive evidence. The majority states:
Timothy’s last letter urged the court to enter his proposed decree reflecting a
property division very close to what Erin wanted, and Erin did not respond. The
record does not show that Erin ever proposed a property division to the trial court 5
or identified any specific property that was in dispute upon which she wanted the
court to hold a hearing. Nor has she identified any such property on appeal. She
has failed to explain what proof she was prohibited from presenting or how she was
prejudiced by its exclusion.
Erin Potts’s counsel describes the problem poignantly in his petition for rehearing:
“Surely the rule isn’t that the last or most prolific letter writer wins or that you have to participate in a
letter-writing campaign at all. But that is the effect of the Court’s decision.” I agree with, or at
least am very concerned about, this point raised by Erin Potts’s counsel. If we are going to
allow letters and pleadings to substitute for evidence, then we no longer need Rules of
Evidence—we need only keyboards and reams of paper.
In conclusion, on the one hand, the majority holds that the trial court was clearly
erroneous in failing to have a hearing and accept admissible evidence to determine the issue
of change of custody. On the other hand, the majority holds that the trial court did not err
5While Erin Potts did not submit a proposed property-settlement agreement to the
trial court, Erin Potts did submit a proposed property-settlement agreement to Timothy
Potts that was rejected. In letters dated November 13 and November 14, 2014, the trial
court was made aware of Ms. Potts’s rejected proposal.
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in failing to have a hearing and accept admissible evidence to determine the division of
property. The information used by the trial court on both questions, i.e., property division
and custody, was gleaned from the same “letters of counsel” and “pleadings.” I cannot get
my head around why “letters of counsel” and “pleadings” are sufficient evidence for a
property division, but not sufficient evidence for deciding custody. In my view, this case
should be reversed and remanded for a hearing to decide both the custody and the property-
division issues.
I would grant the petition for rehearing and reverse.
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