IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 2018-CA-01061-SCT
CONSOLIDATED WITH
NO. 2016-CA-00615-SCT
CANDICE RAE SHURDEN BALLARD
v.
JOE MARSHALL BALLARD
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/23/2018
TRIAL JUDGE: HON. PERCY L. LYNCHARD, JR.
TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: A. E. (RUSTY) HARLOW, JR.
H. R. GARNER
NANCY M. MADDOX
SARAH JEAN LIDDY
KURT STEVEN SAUL, JR.
SABRINA D. HOWELL
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: DESOTO COUNTY CHANCERY COURT
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: JERRY WESLEY HISAW
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: SABRINA D. HOWELL
NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - CUSTODY
DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 08/29/2019
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:
EN BANC.
BEAM, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
¶1. This Court remanded this case for further proceedings on child custody. Ballard v.
Ballard, 255 So. 3d 126 (Miss. 2017). Finding that the chancellor was not manifestly wrong
or clearly erroneous in granting custody of the three minor children to Marshall Ballard, we
affirm.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶2. The facts were summarized in Ballard. Candice and Marshall Ballard were married
in 2006, and three children were born during the marriage: (1) Jane, who was born in 2007;
(2) John, who was born in 2009; and (3) Jill, who was born in 2011.1 Id. at 128-29. “Neither
party disputes the fact that Marshall is not the biological father of Jill, who was born as a
result of a marital-separation affair.” Id. at 129.2
¶3. Marshall filed for divorce, and the parties later agreed to an irreconcilable-differences
divorce in which the chancery court would decide child custody, among other issues. Id. The
chancellor awarded custody to the Department of Human Services but placed the children
with Marshall’s parents. Id. at 130.
¶4. Candice appealed, arguing that the chancellor relied strictly on hearsay in making the
custody determination. Id. at 131. This Court in Ballard agreed with Candice and reversed
and remanded the issue of child custody. Id. at 134.
¶5. On remand, the chancery court awarded custody of the children to Marshall.
Aggrieved, Candice appeals, arguing that the instructions given by this Court were simply
to review the determination of Candice’s fitness without the hearsay evidence, not to conduct
a new trial on custody.
1
We have continued to use the aliases for the minor children fashioned by this Court
in Ballard because of the confidential nature of this case.
2
It is undisputed that Marshall is the biological father of Jane and John.
2
LAW AND ANALYSIS
¶6. Candice raises the following issues on appeal:
I. Whether the chancellor erred in following the instructions given by this Court.
II. Whether the chancellor erred in finding that custody of Jill could be
awarded to Marshall.
III. Whether the chancellor erred in the Albright analysis.
¶7. The standard of review in domestic-relations cases is well-established: “When this
Court reviews domestic-relations matters, our scope of review is limited by the substantial
evidence/manifest error rule. Therefore, we will not disturb the findings of a chancellor
unless the chancellor was manifestly wrong, clearly erroneous or an erroneous legal standard
was applied.” Darnell v. Darnell, 167 So. 3d 195, 201 (Miss. 2014) (Darnell I) (internal
quotation marks omitted) (quoting Giannaris v. Giannaris, 960 So. 2d 462, 467 (Miss.
2007)).
I. Whether the chancellor erred in following the instructions given by
this Court.
¶8. This Court reversed and remanded the issue of child custody for further proceedings,
because it found that the chancellor’s reliance on hearsay evidence in the guardian ad litem’s
report had been erroneous. Ballard, 255 So. 3d at 134. Candice contends that on remand
the chancellor was only to consider whether she was unfit or whether the presumption against
custody by a violent parent had been implicated by her.
¶9. Relying on Darnell II, Candice asserts that the trial court cannot go beyond the
instructions of the appellate court. Darnell v. Darnell, 234 So. 3d 421, 424 (Miss. 2017)
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(Darnell II). However, the facts in Darnell II are dissimilar. In Darnell II, this Court
specifically directed the trial court to make new findings on remand about whether two
statements were admissible evidence and to conduct a new Albright analysis in light of that
evidence. Id.
¶10. Here, no such instructions limited the trial court’s consideration of the issue on
remand. The instructions were simply to reconsider custody of the three minor children
without using the hearsay evidence from the guardian ad litem’s report.
¶11. “The preeminent consideration of the chancellor on remand should be the best interest
of the children.” Jerome v. Stroud, 689 So. 2d 755, 760 (Miss. 1997) (Prather, P.J., specially
concurring). On remand, the chancellor found that Marshall was best suited to have custody
both of his two biological children and also of Jill, for whom he had served in loco parentis.
Therefore, the chancellor on remand did not go beyond the instructions given by this Court.
II. Whether the chancellor erred in finding that custody of Jill could
be awarded to Marshall.
¶12. While Candice contends that the chancellor exceeded the scope of the instructions on
remand, she argues that Marshall’s having acted in loco parentis for Jill was not enough to
overcome the natural-parent presumption with regard to Candice’s custody of Jill.3 Candice
correctly states that “[t]he law recognizes that parents are the natural guardians of their
children, and ‘it is presumed that it is in the best interest of a child to remain with the natural
parent as opposed to a third party.’” Davis v. Vaughn, 126 So. 3d 33, 37 (Miss. 2013)
3
Candice takes issue with the court’s granting custody of all three children to
Marshall, but her argument focuses on Marshall’s having acted in loco parentis to Jill and
his being granted custody of Jill despite the natural-parent presumption.
4
(quoting In re Dissolution of Marriage of Leverock and Hamby v. Leverock, 23 So. 3d 424,
429 (Miss. 2009)).
However, the presumption in favor of the parent may be rebutted by clear and
convincing evidence that “(1) the parent has abandoned the child; (2) the
parent has deserted the child; (3) the parent’s conduct is so immoral as to be
detrimental to the child; or (4) the parent is unfit, mentally or otherwise, to
have custody.”
Id. (quoting Smith v. Smith, 97 So. 3d 43, 46 (Miss. 2012)). “If the natural-parent
presumption is successfully rebutted, the court may then proceed to determine whether an
award of custody to the challenging party will serve the child’s best interests.” Id. (citing
Smith, 97 So. 3d at 46).
¶13. Candice contends that this case is controlled by In re Waites v. Ritchie, 152 So. 3d
306 (Miss. 2014). In Waites, the mother sought to modify a custody agreement. Id. at 307.
She subsequently notified T.J., her child’s biological father who had joined her petition
seeking custody. Id. Although her husband, Scott, had cared for the child from the
beginning, the chancellor excluded Scott from the Albright consideration because he was not
a natural parent; the chancellor awarded full custody to the mother. Id. However, the
chancellor allowed Scott and T.J. visitation. Id. Scott appealed, and the Court of Appeals
reversed and remanded, finding that Scott should have been considered on equal footing with
the natural parents. Id. The mother and T.J. filed a petition for a writ of certiorari, which this
Court granted. Id. This Court found that the chancellor had properly excluded Scott from
consideration. Id.
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¶14. Candice further argues that the chancellor erroneously relied on a Court of Appeals
case, Welton v. Westmoreland, 180 So. 3d 738 (Miss. Ct. App. 2015), to support awarding
Marshall custody of Jill. In Welton, the natural father sought a modification of custody of
his daughter Alexice and subsequently amended his complaint to seek custody of his
daughter Justice. Id. at 740. Although Daniel was not Justice’s biological father, she
believed he was until she was twelve years old. Id. Her biological father abandoned her and,
after her birth, had never made an attempt to see her. Id. While Daniel knew he was not
Justice’s biological father, he raised her like she was his own from the time she was four
months old. Id. Further, Justice’s mother requested that Justice retain Daniel’s last name.
Id.
¶15. In determining custody of Justice, the court acknowledged that,
[i]n general, the natural parent presumption precludes a court from granting
custody to a “third party” over the objection of a natural parent absent clear
and convincing evidence that the natural parent has abandoned or deserted the
child, has engaged in immoral conduct harmful to the child, or is an unfit
parent.
Id. at 744. “The chancellor did not find that any of the grounds for overcoming the natural-
parent presumption had been established,” but he did find that, “on the ‘unique’ facts of this
case, Daniel ‘stands in the place of a natural parent for purposes of custody of Justice.’”Id.
¶16. Welton relied upon two Supreme Court cases, Griffith v. Pell and J.P.M. v. T.D.M.,
for guidance. While the facts in Pell and J.P.M. vary slightly from the facts in Welton, the
Court of Appeals appropriately extended the reasoning in those cases to apply to Welton,
and, we find that the same principles apply to the present case. In Pell, as discussed in
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Welton, this Court held that “a husband who learned during divorce proceedings that he was
not the biological father of a child born just prior to the marriage could be granted visitation
and, custody over the objections of his wife (the child’s mother).” Id. at 745 (citing Griffith
v. Pell, 881 So. 2d 184, 185-87 (Miss. 2004)). Moreover, as discussed in Welton, in J.P.M.,
this Court “affirmed an order granting custody to a husband who had learned during divorce
proceedings that he was not the biological father of a child born to the marriage” because
“[h]e was deemed the ‘father in fact’ and was not required to present additional evidence to
rebut the natural parent presumption.” Id. (citing J.P.M. v. T.D.M., 932 So. 2d 760, 762-70
(Miss. 2006)).
¶17. This Court reasoned in both Pell and J.P.M.
that the natural-parent presumption had been overcome based on several facts:
(1) the husbands stood in loco parentis; (2) they had supported, cared for, and
treated the child as their own; (3) they could have been required to pay child
support (“with the burden should go the benefit”); and (4) the biological
fathers were not really in the picture: the one in Pell had disclaimed any
interest in the child and had agreed to relinquish his parental rights, while the
one in J.P.M. could not even be determined conclusively.
Id. (quoting Waites, 152 So. 3d at 312).
¶18. In Welton, the Court of Appeals found that the facts necessary to overcome the
natural-parent presumption were present but questioned whether the facts were sufficient to
place Daniel in the position of a natural parent for purposes of Justice’s custody because
Daniel had not been defrauded like the fathers in Pell and J.P.M. Id. at 747.
¶19. Welton held, “although the relevant Supreme Court decisions do not directly address
the unique facts of this case, Pell’s reasoning and Waites’s emphasis on whether the
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biological father is ‘really in the picture’ are instructive and should control.” Id. “[T]he
mere existence of a biological father who abandoned a child years ago should not be used ‘to
defeat an existing father-child relationship when [that] biological father [is not] seeking to
assume care, support and nurturance of the child.’” Id. (alterations in original) (quoting Pell,
881 So. 2d at 187). The mother led Justice to believe that Daniel was her father and
confirmed that Justice’s biological father had abandoned her at birth. Therefore, the Welton
court affirmed the chancellor, who had found “that Pell and subsequent Supreme Court
decisions provided legal authority to grant physical custody of Justice to Daniel.” Id. at 748.
¶20. Welton logically extended the principles articulated in Pell and J.P.M.. The unique
facts of Welton—allowing an in loco parentis figure to have custody—also are present here.
There was no question that Marshall acted in loco parentis to Jill. Further, the trial court’s
in loco parentis finding was neither raised as an issue on appeal nor was it overturned by the
appellate court in Ballard.
¶21. Marshall always supported, cared for, and treated Jill as his own child, even though
he knew she was not his biological child. Candice concedes that Marshall has always
provided for Jill, as he did for John and Jane. She admitted even that Marshall is the only
father Jill has ever known. Further, no evidence was presented that Candice sought support
of Jill from the biological father. In fact, the biological father received notice of the hearing
and did not attend, nor has he ever attempted to visit or to support Jill. It is clear that the
biological father is absent.
8
¶22. Lastly, Candice argues that Welton is both distinguishable and predates this Court’s
ruling in Miller v. Smith, 229 So. 3d 100 (Miss. 2017). This Court finds, however, that the
facts of Miller are dissimilar. There, the Court found that the circumstances did not give
Miller in loco parentis status. Miller, 229 So. 3d at 105. Miller had been sentenced to prison
for eighteen months when the minor child, Smitty, was only a few months old. Id. at 104.
After prison, Miller did not remain a constant in Smitty’s life. Id. Miller provided no
financial assistance to Smitty, nor did he visit Smitty while his mother was in prison during
2012 and 2013. Id. Therefore, Miller did not rebut the natural-parent presumption, and the
Court found substantial evidence in the record to support the chancellor’s conclusion that
Miller did not stand in loco parentis. Id. at 104-105.
¶23. Accordingly, this Court finds that the chancellor appropriately held that custody of Jill
could be awarded to Marshall pending an Albright analysis.
III. Whether the chancellor erred in the Albright analysis.
¶24. “In child custody cases, the polestar consideration is the best interest of the child, and
this must always be kept paramount.” Lee v. Lee, 798 So. 2d 1284, 1288 (Miss. 2001) (citing
Sellers v. Sellers, 638 So. 2d 481, 485 (Miss.1994)).
To help guide us to a proper determination as to custody, the court considers
the following factors in determining the child’s best interests: (1) age, health
and sex of the child; (2) a determination of the parent that has had the
continuity of care prior to the separation; (3) which has the best parenting
skills and which has the willingness and capacity to provide primary child
care; (4) the employment of the parent and responsibilities of that employment;
(5) physical and mental health and age of the parents; (6) emotional ties of
parent and child; (7) moral fitness of the parents; (8) the home, school and
community record of the child; (9) the preference of the child at the age
sufficient to express a preference by law; (10) stability of home environment
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and employment of each parent and other factors relevant to the parent-child
relationship.
Id. (citing Albright v. Albright, 437 So. 2d 1003, 1005 (Miss. 1983)).
¶25. “While the Albright factors are extremely helpful in navigating what is usually a
labyrinth of interests and emotions, they are certainly not the equivalent of a mathematical
formula. Determining custody of a child is not an exact science.” Id. Candice argues that the
chancellor failed to address each of the factors with specificity. We disagree and find that
the chancellor’s findings are supported by substantial evidence. “Where the chancellor
properly considers and applies the Albright factors, the appellate court cannot say the
chancellor is manifestly wrong; such careful consideration and application by the chancellor
precludes reversal on appeal.” Jerome, 689 So. 2d at 757 (citing Smith v. Smith, 614 So. 2d
394, 397 (Miss. 1993)).
¶26. Because Candice contends that the chancellor did not apply the Albright factors with
specificity, we review the chancellor’s analysis to see if he committed manifest error.
1) Age, Health, and Sex of the Child
¶27. The three minors, two who are females and one who is male, are healthy, intelligent
children between the ages of six and eleven. The chancellor found that the son can benefit
from a strong male influence in his life and that the daughters can benefit from a strong
female influence. Because of these facts, the chancellor agreed with the guardian ad litem,
who recommended that the factor favored neither Marshall nor Candice.
2) Continuity of care
10
¶28. Although the children have been in neither party’s custody since shortly after the
original trial, the evidence reflects that both parents had been greatly involved before in the
children’s day-to-day care. Thus, the continuity-of-care factor is neutral.
3) Best parenting skills and willingness to provide primary child care
¶29. While the guardian ad litem found that the willingness factor favored Candice, that
the capacity factor favored Marhsall, and that the parenting-skills factor favored both parties,
overall, the chancellor found that both factors favored Marshall, who had raised Jill as his
own even though he knew the situation of her birth. While he has paid child support as
directed by the Department of Human Services, Candice has not. Additionally, he has moved
in order to be closer to the children.
4) Employment of the parties and responsibilities of that employment
¶30. The chancellor found that the employment factor favored Marshall because of his
flexible work schedule and his ability to work from home. While Candice is employed, she
chooses to maintain part-time employment, causing her to live in poverty.
5) Physical and mental health and age of the parties
¶31. Neither party has any infirmities or an age gap that would hinder their care for the
children, so the chancellor found the physical-and-mental-health factor to be neutral, and we
agree.
6) Emotional ties of the parties and child
¶32. The chancellor noted that the children are loved equally by both parents, and found
the emotional-ties factor to be neutral. We agree.
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7) Moral fitness of the parties
¶33. The court disagreed with the guardian ad litem, who had found that the moral fitness
factor favored Candice. The chancellor found that, while “[n]either of the parties should be
ecstatic about the light of morality shining upon them,” Marshall has made remarkable
progress, while Candice has continuously denied responsibility for her actions. We agree.
8) Home, school, and community record of the child
¶34. The chancellor found that Marshall and Candice are both active in church and have
positive support systems at home. Thus, this factor is neutral.
9) Preference of the child
¶35. The chancellor properly found that the preference-of-the-child factor to be
inapplicable because the children have not reached the age of twelve, which would allow
them to testify about their preference. Miss. Code Ann. § 93-11-65(1)(a) (Rev. 2018). We
agree.
10) Stability of home environment and employment
¶36. The chancellor found that both parties have positive home environments. Marshall
changed his residence to be closer to the children, and Candice has a supportive husband at
home.
11) Other factors
¶37. While “there is no requirement that the Court defer to the findings of the guardian ad
litem,” “when a chancellor’s ruling is contrary to the recommendation of that statutorily
required guardian ad litem,” “the reasons for not adopting the recommendation . . . [should]
12
be stated by the Court in its opinion.” Porter v. Porter, 23 So. 3d 438, 449 (Miss. 2009)
(internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting S.N.C. v. J.R.D., 755 So. 2d 1077, 1082 (Miss.
2000)). Although the chancellor mostly agreed with the guardian ad litem’s report, he failed
to understand why her testimony changed from the first trial to the second.
¶38. The guardian ad litem changed her recommendation despite finding 1) that Marshall’s
conduct had improved more dramatically than Candice’s had; 2) that Marshall had obediently
paid support as ordered, while Candice never voluntarily paid anything; and 3) that Candice’s
testimony and interview questions were questionably truthful.
¶39. While the chancellor acknowledged “that in the absence of some unusual and
compelling circumstances dictating otherwise, it is not in the best interest of children to be
separated,” unusual circumstances do exist here that justify not keeping the siblings together.4
Sellers v. Sellers, 638 So. 2d 481, 484 (Miss. 1994) (quoting Sparkman v. Sparkman, 441
So. 2d 1361, 1362 (Miss. 1983)). The chancellor found that placing three more children in
the mother’s home under the financial circumstances that exist simply to keep the siblings
together would not serve the children’s best interest.
¶40. Accordingly, the chancellor found that the best interest of the children would be
served by placing them in the full care, custody, and control of Marshall, subject to a
visitation schedule for Candice. In considering the Albright factors, the chancellor was
within his discretion in finding that the factors favored Marshall.
CONCLUSION
4
Candice has seven children and argued that John, Jane, and Jill should be kept with
their other siblings.
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¶41. Because the chancellor did not exceed the scope of the instructions on remand or err
in awarding custody of the three minor children to Marshall, we affirm. The chancellor was
within his discretion in finding that Marhsall’s in loco parentis status entitled him to be on
equal footing with Candice in the custody determination about Jill. As to Marshall’s two
biological children, we cannot say the chancellor was manifestly wrong in his Albright
analysis.
¶42. AFFIRMED.
RANDOLPH, C.J., KING, P.J., CHAMBERLIN, ISHEE AND GRIFFIS, JJ.,
CONCUR. MAXWELL, J., SPECIALLY CONCURS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN
OPINION JOINED BY RANDOLPH, C.J., BEAM, CHAMBERLIN AND GRIFFIS,
JJ. COLEMAN, J., CONCURS IN PART AND IN RESULT WITHOUT SEPARATE
WRITTEN OPINION. KITCHENS, P.J., NOT PARTICIPATING.
MAXWELL, JUSTICE, SPECIALLY CONCURRING:
¶43. I agree this case should be affirmed based on the special application of the in loco
parentis doctrine established in Griffith v. Pell, 881 So. 2d 184 (Miss. 2004), and J.P.M. v.
T.D.M., 932 So. 2d 760 (Miss. 2006). I write to point out that recently, in In re Waites v.
Ritchie, 152 So. 3d 306, 314 (Miss. 2014), this Court muddied the water quite a bit over
application of the in loco parentis doctrine. In Waites, this Court held the Court of Appeals
in error for applying Pell and J.P.M. to find a presumed father’s in loco parentis status put
him on equal footing with the biological parents. Id. at 311-14. And this Court used strong
language that indicated the Pell and J.P.M. exception to natural-parent presumption may no
longer be viable. The Waites opinion emphatically concluded that, “[u]nder the present state
of the law, in the absence of rebutting the natural-parent presumption via clear and
14
convincing evidence of abandonment, desertion, immoral conduct detrimental to the child,
and/or unfitness, ‘the court may not consider granting custody to a third party, including one
standing in loco parentis . . . .’” Id. at 314 (quoting Davis v. Vaughn, 126 So. 3d 33, 37
(Miss. 2013)). I find that case went too far.
¶44. Here, I concur with the majority to the extent it backs away from the strong language
in Waites and reaffirms Pell and T.D.M.’s holding that, under unique circumstances like
these, a nonbiological parent’s in loco parentis status can be used to reach an Albright
custody analysis without having to first rebut the natural-parent presumption.
RANDOLPH, C.J., BEAM, CHAMBERLIN AND GRIFFIS, JJ., JOIN THIS
OPINION.
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