RENDERED: FEBRUARY 5, 2021; 10:00 A.M.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
Commonwealth of Kentucky
Court of Appeals
NO. 2019-CA-0546-ME
SPENCER STONE APPELLANT
APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT
v. HONORABLE TARA HAGERTY, JUDGE
ACTION NO. 17-CI-501586
CATHERINE STONE APPELLEE
AND NO. 2019-CA-1863-MR
SPENCER STONE APPELLANT
APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT
v. HONORABLE LAUREN ADAMS OGDEN, JUDGE
ACTION NO. 17-CI-501586
CATHERINE STONE APPELLEE
OPINION AND ORDER
AFFIRMING IN PART AND REVERSING IN PART IN CASE NO. 2019-CA-
0546-ME AND DISMISSING CASE NO. 2019-CA-1863-MR
** ** ** ** **
BEFORE: GOODWINE, K. THOMPSON, AND L. THOMPSON, JUDGES.
THOMPSON, K., JUDGE: During their dissolution of marriage proceedings,
Appellant Spencer Stone and Appellee Catherine Stone entered into a marital
settlement agreement which required them to split the cost of “tuition” at their
children’s private school, but they later disagreed about whether “tuition” covered
other fees and costs. Spencer, pro se, filed an appeal in 2019-CA-0546-ME.
While that appeal was pending, the family court ordered Spencer to prepay $5,000
in attorney fees to Catherine in the ongoing proceedings. Spencer then filed an
appeal in 2019-CA-1863-MR. We ordered the two related appeals to be
consolidated. Having reviewed the parties’ briefs and applicable law, we affirm in
part and reverse in part in 2019-CA-0546-ME and dismiss in appeal 2019-CA-
1863-MR as being from a nonfinal order.
Spencer and Catherine married in 2005 and had three children who
were minors when Spencer filed a petition for dissolution in 2017. Later in 2017,
Spencer and Catherine reached a marital settlement agreement which provided in
relevant part that they “shall divide all unreimbursed medical expenses and [the
costs of] agreed upon extracurricular activities equally.” The agreement also
provided that “as long as the children continue to attend St. Raphael, the parties
will split the cost of tuition equally” and that “[s]o long as the parties’ oldest
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daughter attends Mercy, the parties will split the cost of tuition for her equally.”
The agreement also stated that “Catherine has not incurred any indebtedness to
anyone for which Spencer or his estate may be liable without the express consent
of Spencer.” Finally, the agreement provided that “[e]ach party shall be
individually responsible for any attorney’s fees and costs that he or she incurs in
relation to this action.”
Disputes soon rose about the meaning of the agreement. In April
2018, Catherine filed a motion asking the court to hold Spencer in contempt for
failing to pay half of their children’s extracurricular activity fees and for
“guidance” regarding the private school expenses.
In August 2018, the court dissolved the marriage and incorporated the
property settlement agreement by reference. However, the decree did not address,
or end, the disputes.
After conducting a hearing, in December 2018, the family court issued
an order finding in relevant part that “expenses related to the children’s private
school attendance, such as books, uniforms, and technology fees are contained
under the umbrella term ‘tuition.’” The family court also required Spencer to
reimburse Catherine for half of additional fees, such as a summer camp and a field
trip to Chicago. The court declined to find Spencer in contempt regarding the
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private school expenses because the parties had a “good faith disagreement
regarding the expenses included in their agreement[.]”
The court further found that Spencer was responsible for paying half
of a lengthy list of extracurricular fees. Specifically, the court found:
Any activity that the children participated in during the
parties’ marriage shall be considered an “agreed upon”
activity. Spencer may not unilaterally withdraw his
financial support for an activity which the children have
historically participated in, nor may he unreasonably
object to new endeavors that the children express an
interest in beginning.
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED AND ADJUDGED
that Spencer is in contempt for failing to abide by the
parties’ agreement to divide the cost of the children’s
extracurricular activities equally. He shall pay Catherine
$1,714.35 within thirty days of this Order. Hereafter,
Spencer shall reimburse Catherine his one-half share of
all extra-curricular expenses within thirty days of receipt
of proof of payment. . . .
Though it obviously did not resolve the entirety of the parties’ sundry disputes, the
family court chose to include finality language pursuant to the Kentucky Rules of
Civil Procedure (CR) 54.02(1), allowing for immediate appeal. The case was then
reassigned to a different family court judge.
Spencer then filed a motion to alter, amend, or vacate. Specifically,
Spencer argued the family court erred by concluding he had agreed to the
extracurricular activities at issue. Among other things, Spencer also argued the
family court failed to make findings on a $5,000 credit card debt allegedly incurred
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by Catherine without Spencer’s knowledge. Meanwhile, the parties continued to
file motions seeking relief regarding other disagreements not germane to these
appeals.
In March 2019, the original family court judge issued an order which
substantively denied Spencer’s motion to alter, amend, or vacate, though the order
did not specifically state whether the motion was granted or denied. In relevant
part, the court amended its prior order to state that Spencer “refused to respond”
when Catherine asked him about enrolling their children in extracurricular
activities and his “refusal to co-parent does not relieve him from his obligation to
support the children as contemplated by the parties’ settlement agreement.” As to
the credit card debt, the court found that Catherine had taken a cash advance on
Spencer’s card in September 2014 “to pay household bills and expenses for the
children” and that when Spencer learned of the charge the following day he
reported it as a fraudulent transaction. However, Spencer “has no legal basis to
now request reimbursement” from Catherine because he knew of the charge when
he assented to the marital settlement agreement, under which he “agreed to assume
all credit card debt issued in his name.” Spencer then filed an appeal in 2019-CA-
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0546-ME, listing the December 2018 and March 2019 orders as the basis for the
appeal.1
Meanwhile, the parties continued to litigate their various
disagreements. Germane to Spencer’s second appeal, in October 2019, Catherine
filed a motion citing an alleged disparity in her income and Spencer’s income and
asking the court to order Spencer to advance her $5,000 in attorney fees “for fees
she has incurred and continues to incur to defend herself from [Spencer’s]
frivolous and unnecessary legal actions.” The court ordered the parties to file
updated financial disclosure forms by November 4, 2019. Catherine did so;
Spencer did not.
On November 6, 2019, the family court issued an order noting that
only Catherine had filed the financial disclosure and that it showed her financial
situation “has changed little since the parties’ December 20, 2017 Marital
Settlement Agreement[.]” Without noting that the parties’ agreement explicitly
requires each to pay his or her own attorney’s fees, the court granted Catherine’s
motion and required Spencer to advance her $5,000 in attorney fees. Crucially, the
court noted that “final allocation of fees is hereby reserved by the Court.” Two
1
We “do not have jurisdiction over the trial court’s denial of a CR 59.05 motion” since such an
order is interlocutory. Ford v. Ford, 578 S.W.3d 356, 365 (Ky. App. 2019). When a party
“erroneously designates” an order denying its CR 59.05 motion in its notice of appeal, “we
utilize a substantial compliance analysis and consider the appeal properly taken from the final
judgment that was the subject of the CR 59.05 motion.” Id. at 366 (internal quotation marks,
emphasis, and citation omitted).
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days later, Spencer filed his response to the order requiring updated financial
reports. A little under a month later, with the family court having taken no
additional substantive acts, Spencer then timely filed an appeal in 2019-CA-1863-
MR.
We begin with Spencer’s first appeal, which presents several
questions.2 Did the parties also agree to split evenly other costs assessed by their
children’s schools when they agreed to each pay half of their children’s tuition?
Did the trial court correctly conclude that Spencer must pay half of various
extracurricular fees? Did the trial court err regarding a credit card bill and giving
Catherine more time to refinance the marital home?
Settlement agreements “are a type of contract and therefore are
governed by contract law[.]” Frear v. P.T.A. Industries, Inc., 103 S.W.3d 99, 105
(Ky. 2003) (citation omitted). Absent an ambiguity in the contract, which is not
present here, a contract will be “enforced strictly according to its terms” and a
court construing the contract will not consider any extrinsic evidence. Id. at 106
(citations omitted). Under longstanding Kentucky contract interpretation law,
“[w]ords will be construed in the sense they are employed by the parties, and
2
We decline Catherine’s request to strike Spencer’s brief. Although it does not contain a large
number of citations to the record, including where he preserved all of the issues, the record is not
expansive and Spencer’s pro se briefs are minimally sufficient to enable us to review the issues
contained therein.
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unless a contrary intention appears, they will be given their ordinary meaning[.]”
Black Star Coal Corp. v. Napier, 303 Ky. 778, 199 S.W.2d 449, 451 (1947)
(citation omitted). We review de novo a circuit court’s interpretation of a contract,
including a marital settlement agreement. Cagata v. Cagata, 475 S.W.3d 49, 56
(Ky.App. 2015).
As to tuition, we note that the term is not specifically defined in the
settlement agreement. And there is no definitive Kentucky precedent which
clearly defines the term for private elementary and high schools.
A leading online dictionary defines “tuition” in relevant part as “the
price of or payment for instruction[.]” Tuition, MERRIAM-WEBSTER ONLINE
DICTIONARY, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/tuition (last visited
Nov. 5, 2020). Similarly, in an analogous case involving whether an agreement by
a parent to pay college tuition included fees assessed by the university, we
analyzed Kentucky statutes governing what is considered “tuition” in higher
education and concluded tuition “include[s] those costs which are mandatory for a
student to receive instruction once present in the classroom” and so the word
tuition is defined as “all expenses imposed by the educational institution as a
condition of full-time enrollment in an undergraduate program for an academic
year.” Yarber-Nowlin v. Nowlin, No. 2007-CA-002290-MR, 2008 WL 4092901,
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*2 (Ky.App. Sept. 5, 2008) (unpublished).3 Although the costs here are for private
elementary and high schools, that is a distinction which makes no practical, logical
difference.
Synthesizing those authorities, the fundamental takeaway is that
tuition includes only mandatory costs or fees which must be paid in order to attend
the school(s) in question. In other words, any optional costs or fees are not
included within the scope of a private school’s “tuition”—regardless of their
educational, socialization, or developmental merit. To conclude otherwise would
require us to add a phrase like “and all fees and costs” to the parties’ contractual
agreement to split only the cost of private school tuition, which we may not do as
“[o]ur duty is to carry out the expressed intentions of the parties. When those
intentions are clearly stated in a written document, we have no authority to add
terms not included by the parties.” Snowden v. City of Wilmore, 412 S.W.3d 195,
208 (Ky.App. 2013) (citation omitted). If the parties had intended all costs and
fees imposed by the private schools at issue to be encompassed by their agreement,
they easily could have, and logically should have, written the agreement in the
manner in which the parties did in Cagata, where the father was obligated under a
settlement agreement to pay “the cost of tuition, books, registration and other fees,
3
We cite Yarber-Nowlin as persuasive authority pursuant to CR 76.28(4)(c) as the parties have
not cited, nor have we independently located, published authority helping to determine what
constitutes “tuition” for private elementary and high schools.
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and uniforms for all three (3) children through the eighth grade, at an agreed upon
parochial school.” 475 S.W.3d at 51.4
The question then becomes what fees or costs are mandatory and must
be paid in order for the parties’ children to attend the private schools at issue. We
have not been directed to evidence to show that the summer dissection camp and
8th grade field trip to Chicago are—despite their likely merits—mandatory and
unavoidable. Catherine states in her brief that the Chicago trip “is a normal part of
the children’s educational instruction” but does not point to anything showing the
trip was mandatory. Costs are not mandatory simply because many students
choose to engage in the activities which lead to the costs. Similarly, we have not
been cited to evidence that student(s) must ride the bus to attend the private
school(s) at issue. Again, Catherine contends her children must be transported to
school, but she does not cite to anything in the record showing that the schools, not
her personal circumstances, require any of the children to ride the bus, so the bus
fees may not be deemed to be encompassed within “tuition.” In short, the trial
court erred by making Spencer pay half of the field trip, dissection camp, and bus
expenses as tuition expenses. On the other hand, Spencer does not facially
4
Cognizant of the fact that they are not precisely on point factually or legally, we cite the
following authorities only to show how the term “tuition” generally has not been used to include
all fees and costs imposed by a school. See Ridgeway v. Warren, 605 S.W.3d 567, 567-68
(Ky.App. 2020).
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challenge the registration fees, uniforms, books, and iPad deposit expenses, which
would presumably be mandatory in any event, so we affirm the trial court’s
decision to require Spencer to pay half of them.
The marital settlement agreement states that Spencer and Catherine
“shall divide . . . agreed upon extracurricular activities equally.”
Although this portion of their agreement does not contain the word
“expenses” or “fees” or “costs,” the parties seem to accept that the agreement
means they shall split equally the expenses incurred in any agreed upon
extracurricular activities engaged in by their children. It is uncontested that
Spencer did not explicitly agree to any post-agreement extracurricular activities
However, the trial court concluded Spencer had to pay half of a substantial list of
extracurricular activity expenses because the children had engaged in many of
those activities prior to when the agreement was reached, and Spencer had refused
to respond when asked about approving new activities. We construe Spencer’s
argument to be that he can only be forced to pay half of the fees for extracurricular
activities which he explicitly approved.
Again, we must interpret this contract as written without adding or
subtracting from the words the parties chose to utilize. But “[w]ithin every
contract, there is an implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and contracts
impose on the parties thereto a duty to do everything necessary to carry them out.”
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Farmers Bank and Tr. Co. of Georgetown, Kentucky v. Willmott Hardwoods, Inc.,
171 S.W.3d 4, 11 (Ky. 2005).
In this case, that implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing
means that Spencer was not required to agree to any particular new extracurricular
activity fees.
We agree with the trial court’s reasonable conclusion that Spencer had
already agreed to extracurricular activities the children had undertaken prior to the
agreement and that he had not explicitly withdrawn that extant approval. Stewart
v. Madera, 744 S.W.2d 437, 439 (Ky.App. 1988) (“Both our statutory scheme and
our case law demand that whenever possible the children of a marriage should be
supported in such a way as to maintain the standard of living they would have
enjoyed had the marriage not been dissolved.”). In sum, we affirm the trial court’s
decision to direct Spencer to pay half of the extracurricular activity expenses in
existence at the time of the settlement agreement. However, we reverse the trial
court as to the order for Spencer to pay extracurricular activity expenses
voluntarily assumed after the time of the agreement because the trial court relied
on the settlement agreement for giving it such authority even though the settlement
agreement did not mention, specify or contemplate these expenses.
Finally, we affirm the trial court’s conclusion that Spencer was in
contempt for failing to participate in the extracurricular activity decisions. The
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parties’ agreement was incorporated into a court order and thus Spencer’s
inarguable failure to meet his duty of good faith and fair dealing means he failed to
comply with an order of the court, a contumacious act. Smith v. City of Loyall, 702
S.W.2d 838, 839 (Ky.App. 1986) (“A civil contempt occurs when a party fails to
comply with a court order for the benefit of the opposing party[.]”). “The purpose
of civil contempt authority is to provide courts with a means for enforcing their
judgments and orders, and trial courts have almost unlimited discretion in applying
this power.” Id. at 838-39. We find no abuse of discretion here, especially since
the practical effect of the contempt is unclear given that the trial court did not
impose any sanctions.
Spencer contends the trial court should have held Catherine
responsible for a $5,000 cash advance she took on a credit card in his name years
before these proceedings began, apparently without his prior authorization.
According to Catherine, the advance was used for household bills and expenses for
the children. The settlement agreement states that Catherine and Spencer will each
assume debts taken in their individual names and that Catherine “has not incurred
any indebtedness to anyone for which Spencer or his estate may be liable without
the express consent of Spencer.” It is uncontested that Spencer knew of the credit
card charge before entering into the settlement agreement, so if he did not agree
that the matter had been resolved he logically should have made sure it was listed
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as a disputed item in the settlement agreement which generally indicates that all
debts have been resolved to the parties’ satisfaction. We affirm the trial court on
this issue.
The parties’ agreement states that Catherine “shall refinance the
property [the marital home] within ninety (90) days and Spencer will sign a
quitclaim deed upon refinance.” Issues regarding the marital home were not
addressed in the trial court’s order resolving the school tuition disputes, but in his
motion to alter, amend, or vacate Spencer contended the court failed to rule on,
among other things, “the transfer of the title of the residence to [Catherine] so that
[Spencer’s] name is off of the mortgage” and so Spencer requested the court to
“make a judgement concerning the marital residence.”
The motion to alter, amend, or vacate mentioned only transferring title
to the marital home to Catherine alone and did not specifically refer to any
refinancing by Catherine. Before the trial court ruled on the motion to alter,
amend, or vacate, Spencer filed a motion asking the court to compel Catherine “to
refinance the marital property as she was obligated to do pursuant to the terms of
the Marital Settlement Agreement[.]”
The trial court did not specifically rule on Spencer’s motion to
compel. The court instead issued an order regarding only Spencer’s motion to
alter, amend, or vacate, which held in relevant part:
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[Spencer] also claims that [Catherine] violated the
settlement agreement by failing to refinance the mortgage
on the former marital residence. At the time of the
hearing, [Spencer] had signed an authorization for
[Catherine] to assume his purchase loan through the
Veteran’s Administration. [Catherine] testified that she
had started the paperwork and expected to have the loan
transferred within 90 days. If that has not occurred,
[Spencer] may file a motion for the Court to address the
issue.
That order did not contain any finality language. Spencer then filed this appeal.
After citing to where the matter was allegedly preserved and to the
standard of review for marital settlement agreements, Spencer’s entire substantive
argument is:
The Circuit Court states “. . . [Spencer] had signed an
authorization for [Catherine] to assume his purchase loan
through the Veteran’s Administration (‘VA’)” for the
refinance of the marital home. No such document exists,
where Spencer signed an authorization for Catherine to
assume his VA loan. Spencer did write an email
attempting to make it easier for Catherine to refinance the
loan; however, the assumption of the loan was denied.
Further, the [settlement agreement] clearly states that
Catherine will assume the property within 90 days of the
[settlement agreement].
Spencer respectfully requests this Court to remand
[the matter to] the Circuit Court to vacate paragraph 3 of
the March 7, 2019 order, and to enforce the [settlement
agreement], requiring Catherine to immediately refinance
or sell the marital home.
The only time Stone explicitly asked the court to direct Catherine to
refinance the marital home was in his motion to compel, but he failed to insist on a
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ruling on that motion before appealing. In criminal and civil cases alike, precedent
plainly holds that a party who does not insist that a trial court rule on a request for
relief has waived appellate review of the disputed issue(s). Dillard v.
Commonwealth, 995 S.W.2d 366, 371 (Ky. 1999) (citation omitted) (“It is the duty
of one who moves the trial court for relief to insist upon a ruling, and a failure to
do so is regarded as a waiver.”); Oldham Farms Development, LLC v. Oldham
County Planning and Zoning Comm’n, 233 S.W.3d 195, 197 (Ky.App. 2007)
(citation omitted) (“But as noted by the appellees in their documents, the failure of
Oldham Farms to insist upon a ruling by the circuit court on these issues means
that they are not properly preserved for our review.”).
Moreover, the refinancing order does not appear to be final and
appealable. The order did not contain finality language, and some issues remained
outstanding after that order was issued. Spencer filed his appeal before the ninety
days given to Catherine to refinance expired. The trial court obviously did not
consider the refinancing matter to be finally concluded because it specifically
stated Spencer could seek relief if Catherine failed to refinance within ninety days.
Even if we take Spencer’s pro se status into account and somehow
leniently ignore the waiver and lack of finality problems, it is unclear what relief
he requests. He has shown no error or abuse of discretion in the trial court’s
granting Catherine extra time to refinance the marital home, even if we assume
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(solely for purposes of argument) that the court meant refinancing in general
instead of specifically assuming the extant mortgage. The court invited Spencer to
seek relief if Catherine did not accomplish the refinancing within ninety days.
That was the proper avenue of relief for Spencer to pursue if Catherine failed to
comply with the court’s deadline.5 In short, we discern no basis for appellate relief
on the refinancing issue. If the refinancing issue has not been resolved, Spencer
may seek relief from the family court.
Spencer’s second pro se appeal asks us to reverse the trial court’s
decision to advance $5,000 in attorney fees to Catherine. However, the order
challenged by Spencer lacks finality language, and there were other matters
remaining to be addressed by the court (indeed, a hearing on setting a proper
visitation schedule had been set but not yet held when Spencer filed this appeal in
December 2019). In fact, the trial court obviously expected to revisit the attorney
fee issue because the challenged order stated that “final allocation of fees is hereby
reserved by the Court.” In short, the order from which Spencer appealed was
5
We decline Spencer’s invitation to take judicial notice that Catherine had not refinanced the
home by the time he filed his reply brief. We must utilize the record before us in making our
decisions, and the record in this case does not show whether Catherine refinanced the home.
Moreover, judicial notice is reserved for facts which are “not subject to reasonable dispute”
because they are either “[g]enerally known” within the county or “[c]apable of accurate and
ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned.”
Kentucky Rule of Evidence (KRE) 201(b). The matter of whether Catherine has refinanced a
home and, if so, when that occurred is not the type of unassailable adjudicative fact of which a
court may properly take judicial notice.
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interlocutory, not final and appealable. Watson v. Best Financial Services, Inc.,
245 S.W.3d 722, 726 (Ky. 2008) (citation omitted) (“A final adjudication is a
judgment that conclusively determines the rights of the parties in regard to that
particular phase of the proceeding.”).
For whatever reason, Catherine did not file a responsive brief.
Nonetheless, “this Court must determine on its own whether the order appealed
from lacks finality” because “[w]ith limited exceptions, an appeal may not be taken
from a non-final order. Therefore, this Court is without jurisdiction to consider the
merits of the appeal.” Energy and Environment Cabinet v. Concerned Citizens of
Estill County, Inc., 576 S.W.3d 173, 176 (Ky.App. 2019) (citation omitted).
Here, it is plain that the attorney fee advancement order was
interlocutory, not final, since it does not resolve all the issues before the court and
does not contain the finality language. Therefore, we must dismiss this appeal
without prejudice.6 Id.
Upon rehearing of this attorney’s fees matter we state that any award
of attorney’s fees prior to determination of success on appeal must demonstrate
dire financial circumstances, and the advance of funds is necessary to rightfully
6
Because we are dismissing the appeal, we express no binding opinion on whether the trial court
erred or abused its discretion in ordering Spencer to advance a portion of Catherine’s attorney
fees. However, the plain language of the parties’ settlement agreement provides that neither will
be responsible for the other’s attorney fees. When the case returns to family court, it must take
that clause into account when issuing any attorney fee decisions.
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appeal or to defend an appeal of the order of the court. In addition, the trial court
should consider the partial success of Spencer’s appeal in this controversy.
For the foregoing reasons, in 2019-CA-0546-ME, the Jefferson
Circuit Court is affirmed in part and reversed in part in accordance with the
analysis stated herein, and 2019-1863-MR is dismissed.
ALL CONCUR.
ENTERED: February 5, 2021 /s/ Kelly Thompson
Judge, Court of Appeals
BRIEFS FOR APPELLANT: BRIEFS FOR APPELLEE:
Spencer Stone, pro se Gwen Meehan
McLean, Virginia Louisville, Kentucky
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