RENDERED: MARCH 3, 2023; 10:00 A.M.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
Commonwealth of Kentucky
Court of Appeals
NO. 2022-CA-0088-MR
JAMES ADAM HAYNES APPELLANT
APPEAL FROM CALLOWAY CIRCUIT COURT
v. HONORABLE JILL CLARK, JUDGE
ACTION NO. 20-CI-00173
SABRINA D. HAYNES (NOW
KLOTZ) APPELLEE
OPINION
AFFIRMING
** ** ** ** **
BEFORE: THOMPSON, CHIEF JUDGE; JONES AND KAREM, JUDGES.
JONES, JUDGE: The Appellant, James Adam Haynes, appeals the portion of the
Calloway Circuit Court’s August 23, 2021, order increasing his monthly child
support obligation from $500.00 to $829.00.1 James asserts the trial court erred
1
James also indicates that he is appealing the trial court’s denial of his Kentucky Rule of Civil
Procedure (“CR”) 59.05 motion to alter, amend, or vacate a judgment. However, orders denying
CR 59.05 motions are interlocutory and not subject to appellate review. Cabinet for Health and
Family Services v. Marshall, 606 S.W.3d 99, 103 (Ky. App. 2020). “Our case law is clear . . .
that there is no appeal from the denial of a CR 59.05 motion. The denial does not alter the
because it did not take into account the premiums he pays for the two children’s
health insurance as part of its calculations before setting his new child support
obligation as required by KRS2 403.211(7)(a). The Appellee, Sabrina D. Haynes
(now Klotz), counters that the trial court did not err because James failed to timely
present evidence regarding the amount he expends for the children’s health
insurance. Having reviewed the record and being otherwise sufficiently advised in
the law, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
James and Sabrina were divorced by a final decree entered by the
County Court at Law in Wichita County, Texas on October 31, 2012. At the time
of their divorce, the parties had two minor children, E.K. (born 2008) and C.J.
(born 2010). Pursuant to the Texas decree the parties were ordered to share joint
legal custody of the children. Sabrina was designated as the primary residential
parent with James having timesharing.3 James’s child support obligation was $500
per month.
judgment. Accordingly, the appeal is from the underlying judgment, not the denial of the CR
59.05 motion.” Ford v. Ford, 578 S.W.3d 356, 366 (Ky. App. 2019).
2
Kentucky Revised Statutes.
3
James was granted timesharing with the children during the first, third, and fifth weekends of
each month.
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At the time of the divorce, James was living in Jonesboro, Arkansas,
and Sabrina and the children had relocated to Murray, Kentucky. On motion of the
parties, the Calloway Circuit Court registered the Texas divorce decree in
Kentucky in February 2021.4 In March 2021, James moved the Calloway Circuit
Court to modify timesharing to designate him the primary residential parent as
allegedly desired by the children, permit the children to relocate to Jonesboro,
Arkansas, to reside primarily with him, and order Sabrina to pay child support to
him if he was designated the primary residential parent.
Sabrina responded to James’s motion by filing a countermotion to
modify timesharing and child support. For her part, Sabrina requested
modification of the timesharing arrangement to require James to exercise some of
his timesharing closer to Murray, Kentucky. She explained that the children were
now older and their frequent travel to Arkansas interfered with their extracurricular
activities. Noting that child support had not been altered since 2012, Sabrina
requested the trial court to review child support based on the parties’ current
incomes and if more than a 15% deviation existed to modify it according to
Kentucky’s child support guidelines. Sabrina attached proof of her current income
4
KRS 426.955 (“A judgment so filed has the same effect and is subject to the same procedures,
defenses and proceedings for reopening, vacating, or staying as a judgment of a court of this state
and may be enforced or satisfied in like manner.”).
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to her motion. She further averred that she was unaware of James’s current
income.
In July 2021, with the prior motions still pending, Sabrina filed
another, more detailed motion regarding child support. Sabrina attached her pay
stubs and tax returns to her motion in addition to a draft child support worksheet
completed by her counsel. According to the draft worksheet, Sabrina’s monthly
gross income is $3,733.00 and James’s monthly gross income is $4,931.66.
Notably, Sabrina left section 9 of the worksheet, which asks for the amounts the
parties contribute to the children’s health insurance premiums or cash medical
support, blank. She further handwrote a “?” mark in the far right-hand column of
section 9, indicating that she was unsure of the amounts James expended on health
insurance premiums for the parties’ two children. According to Sabrina’s
calculations, James’s current child support obligation should be $825.36.
On August 9, 2021, the trial court held a hearing for the purpose of
receiving testimony and proof related to timesharing and child support. Much of
the hearing focused on the timesharing issue, and James concedes that he failed to
offer any proof at the hearing regarding the amounts he contributes each month for
the children’s health insurance premiums.
Two days after the hearing, James filed four exhibits that his counsel
asserted were “documentation of health insurance costs paid by [James] for the
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minor children.” The first documents are James’s bi-weekly pay stubs for the three
periods immediately preceding the hearing: 1) June 20, 2021 to July 3, 2021,
showing that $345.28 was deducted from James’s paycheck for insurance; 2) July
4, 2021 to July 17, 2021, showing that $345.28 was deducted from James’s
paycheck for insurance; and 3) July 18, 2021 to July 31, 2021, showing that
$345.28 was deducted from James’s paycheck for insurance. The paycheck stubs
do not indicate what type of insurance is at issue or for whom the coverage applies.
The other document is a printout addressed to Haag Brown LLC, James’s
employer; it contains a chart labeled “ABCBS Metallic Plan-ABCBS Gold 1000
Elite.” The chart lists various age bands from 0-14 to 64+. Beside each band is a
sum denoted as “Total Monthly Health Cost.” It is unclear whether the “total
monthly” cost is the cost to the employee or the total cost to the employer. James
did not include an affidavit explaining the documents with his filings.
On August 23, 2021, the trial court entered an order on the parties’
pending motions to modify timesharing and child support. With respect to
timesharing, the trial court denied James’s motion to become the children’s
primary residential parent. As to child support, the trial court ruled as follows:
The parties have stipulated [James’s] income is $59,000
($50,000 salary and $9,000 farming) and [Sabrina’s]
income is $44,000. [James] now pays child support in
the amount of $500 per month. Neither party submitted
proof of health insurance payments for the children.
Effective March 9, 2021 (date [James] requested child
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support modification) [James] shall pay [Sabrina]
$829.00 per month in child support. (See attached chart).
Record (R.) at 153.
On September 1, 2021, James filed a CR 59.05 motion to alter,
amend, or vacate the trial court August 23, 2021, order. On October 3, 2021,
James filed a memorandum with the trial court in support of his CR 59.05 motion.
As related to child support, James argued:
11. KRS 403.211(7)(a) states in relevant part “[i]f health
care coverage is reasonable in cost and accessible to
either parent at the time the request for coverage is made,
the court shall order the parent to obtain or maintain
coverage, and the court shall allocate between the
parents, in proportion to their combined monthly
adjusted parental gross income, the cost of health care
coverage for the child, in addition to the support ordered
under the child support guidelines (emphasis added).
12. “In common or ordinary parlance, and in its ordinary
signification, the term ‘shall’ is a word of command
and . . . must be given a compulsory meaning.” Bevin v.
Commonwealth ex rel. Beshear, 563 S.W.3d 74, 89 (Ky.
2018); citing Vandertoll v. Commonwealth, 110 S.W.3d
789 (Ky. 2003).
....
35. KRS 403.211(7)(a) makes it compulsory upon the
Court to factor into a child support calculation and
allocate between the parents, in proportion to their
combined monthly adjusted parental gross income, the
cost of health care coverage for the child. No evidence
of health insurance coverage paid by [James] for the
children was provided during the hearing. Regardless,
because the statute states that the trial court “shall”
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allocate between the parents the cost of health care
coverage for the children in proportion to their combined
monthly adjusted gross income, to arrive at an accurate
child support amount for the paying party, the trial court
has an obligation to inquire as to any health insurance
coverage paid by either parent.
36. Following the hearing but prior to entry of the
Court’s Order, proof of health insurance coverage costs
paid by [James] was filed with this Court without
objection or response from [Sabrina]. [James] pays
$475.86 each month for the children at issue in this
matter. This amount must be factored into the child
support calculation and proper credit given to [James] for
the health insurance coverage costs he pays monthly.
37. Based on the agreed upon income of the parties and
including the health insurance coverage costs paid by
[James], the child support amount to be paid by [James]
should be $626.13 each month. A Kentucky Child
Support Worksheet is attached.
R. at 172-83.
On October 14, 2021, Sabrina filed a response in objection to James’s
CR 59.05 motion. As related to child support, Sabrina argued:
With regard to child support, the application of the health
insurance costs cannot be included in this case. This
hearing, that included a child support motion, was
properly noticed, and [James] had every opportunity to
present this evidence at the hearing where he could be
cross-examined. A request was never made to leave the
record open for supplementation. The documents later
filed by [James], after the hearing had concluded, were
not listed on [James’s] exhibit list or properly provided to
[Sabrina] through discovery. The Court cannot consider
evidence that was not presented at the hearing.
Additionally, the insurance cost documentation provided
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is not self-explanatory and the costs that [James] lists in
his Motion do not reconcile with the insurance costs
reflected on his pay stubs. If the Court, over objection, is
going to allow the insurance costs to be included,
[Sabrina] would request the opportunity to cross-examine
[James] regarding the costs and be required to provide
more sufficient documentation.
R. at 186-87.
On December 20, 2021, the trial court entered an order denying
James’s CR 59.05 motion as to child support as follows:
[James] is correct, this Court shall consider
payment of insurance when calculating child support.
Unfortunately, [James] chose not to present any proof of
insurance payments during the August 9, 2021 hearing.
[James] did file a piece of paper after the hearing
supposedly showing payment of insurance by [James].
[James] is incorrect in stating this Court must consider
inadmissible evidence. The authenticity is not evident on
the face of the document and [Sabrina] had no
opportunity to cross examine [James] on this claim.
Therefore, the Court’s order of $829.00 per month
child support effective March 9, 2021, shall stand. Any
arrearage accrued by [James] shall be paid at the rate of
$200 per month with interest at the rate of 6% per
annum.
R. at 199.
This appeal by James followed.
II. ANALYSIS
James spends the majority of his brief discussing KRS
403.211(7)(a)’s requirement for the trial court to consider health insurance
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contributions as part of its child support calculations. However, James fails to
appreciate that the trial court can only consider what the parties put before it as
evidence. Here, James failed to present any evidence at the hearing regarding his
contributions toward the children’s health insurance even though he clearly had
notice that child support was one of the issues to be determined at the hearing.
While James filed the documents after the hearing, the trial court is
correct that they were not properly authenticated. Equally problematic, James did
not include a sworn affidavit explaining the documents with his filings. The
paycheck stubs showed the total amount that James’s employer withheld from his
bi-weekly paychecks for “insurance” but did not breakdown what portion of this
amount was allocated for coverage of the two children. Since James and his
current wife also have children, that amount presumably provides coverage for
more than the two children at issue. Additionally, the age-band printout does not
make clear whether the quoted amounts are the employee’s portion of the health
insurance coverage or the total amount of coverage.
“A trial court has broad discretion in controlling its docket[.]”
Augenstein v. Deutsche Bank National Tr. Company as Tr. for Certificateholders
of Soundview Home Loan Tr. 2005-OPT4, Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2005-
OPT4, 647 S.W.3d 857, 863 (Ky. App. 2021). The trial court set a hearing on
child support. The parties received notice of the hearing and were ordered to file
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their lists of witnesses and exhibits in advance of the hearing. Despite being aware
that child support was at issue, James did not file a list of exhibits. Additionally,
James did not offer any testimony or exhibits at the hearing related to insurance. It
was incumbent on him to do so if he wished the trial court to take that information
into consideration prior to ruling on the motions. The trial court was not required
to accept the unauthenticated documents after the hearing or to convene a new
hearing for the purpose of allowing James to submit the documents. This is not a
case of the trial court failing to abide by the statute, it is a simple case of James
failing to present the proper evidence to the trial court at the proper time.
In sum, while the statute requires a trial court to consider insurance
premiums when calculating child support, the trial court is not required to leave the
record open in perpetuity. Since no evidence was properly entered for the trial
court to consider, it did not abuse its discretion.
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, we affirm the August 23, 2021, order
of the Calloway Circuit Court.
ALL CONCUR.
BRIEFS FOR APPELLANT: BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:
Chris Hendricks Alisha Kay Bobo
Murray, Kentucky Bradly A. Miller
Paducah, Kentucky
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