Barbaro v. Smith

Decision Date16 July 2019
Docket NumberNO. 2017-CA-00914-COA,2017-CA-00914-COA
Citation282 So.3d 578
Parties Tamara A. BARBARO, Appellant v. Coty A. SMITH, Appellee
CourtMississippi Court of Appeals

ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: JEFFREY BIRL RIMES, SARAH LINDSEY OTT

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: JOSHUA CECIL McCRORY, PEARL

BEFORE CARLTON AN D J. WILSON, P.JJ., AND TINDELL, J.

J. WILSON, P.J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Pursuant to an agreed judgment, Tamara Barbaro was granted physical custody of her son, Will,1 and Will's father, Coty Smith, was granted visitation. About one year later, when Will was eighteen months old, Barbaro alleged that Smith had allowed Will to ingest two opioids. In support of her claim, Barbaro submitted the results of a drug test that purported to show that Will had tested positive for the drugs. Barbaro also informed the court that Smith had been arrested recently and charged with drug trafficking. Smith maintained his innocence, denied that he exposed Will to the drugs, and accused Barbaro of fabricating the positive drug test. After an emergency hearing, the court temporarily suspended Smith's visitation and appointed a guardian ad litem (GAL).

¶2. After investigating Barbaro's allegations, the GAL concluded that Barbaro not only fabricated the drug test but also participated in a scheme to plant drugs in Smith's truck. Law enforcement also concluded that Smith had been setup and remanded the charge against him to the file. The GAL recommended that the chancellor grant Smith custody of Will. After a trial, the chancellor agreed with the GAL's recommendation, granted Smith sole physical and legal custody of Will, and granted Barbaro visitation. Barbaro filed a motion to alter or amend the judgment, which the chancellor denied, and then appealed.

¶3. On appeal, Barbaro argues that the chancellor erred by denying her motion to alter or amend the judgment as untimely. She also argues that the chancellor erred by finding that she falsified the drug test and played a role in a scheme to plant drugs, by finding a material change in circumstances that adversely affected Will, and by finding that it would be in Will's best interest to modify custody. Finally, Barbaro contends that the chancellor "abused his discretion to the extent that he gave any weight to the [GAL's] report." We find no reversible error and affirm the judgment of the chancery court.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶4. Will was born in November 2014. In April 2015, the chancery court entered an agreed judgment granting physical custody to Barbaro, joint legal custody to Barbaro and Smith, and visitation to Smith.

¶5. On Friday, May 13, 2016, Barbaro was scheduled to meet Smith for a visitation exchange. Barbaro testified that she suspected that Smith had been giving Will some type of medication or drug to make him sleepy and more compliant, so she decided to have Will drug tested before she left him with Smith and again after she picked him up. She took Will to Capital DNA on May 13 for a urine sample drug test. That test was negative.

¶6. When Smith returned Will to Barbaro on Sunday, May 15, Barbaro again took Will to Capital DNA for a urine sample drug test. Subsequent results of the test indicated that Will's urine contained 3,100 nanograms per milliliter of hydrocodone

and 1,590 nanograms per milliliter of hydromorphone, also known as Dilaudid.

¶7. On May 25, a narcotics investigator with the Rankin County Sheriff's Department pulled over a pickup truck driven by Smith after he witnessed Smith commit traffic violations. The investigator had received a tip that Smith would be transporting drugs in his truck. Smith told the investigator that he did not have any drugs, and he gave the investigator permission to search the truck. A drug-sniffing dog alerted the officer to an unlocked toolbox in the bed of the truck. The investigator found pills, marijuana, and possible steroids in the toolbox. Smith was arrested and charged with trafficking controlled substances.

Hearing on Barbaro's Emergency Motion

¶8. On May 30, 2016, Barbaro filed an emergency motion to suspend Smith's summer visitation. The chancery court held a hearing on the motion the next day.

¶9. Barbaro testified that when Smith returned Will to her on May 15, Will was groggy and lethargic. Barbaro called Brandy Jones of Capital DNA, and Jones met her at Capital DNA's office. Barbaro testified that the "instant-read" cup that she used to collect Will's urine sample immediately showed a positive result for "opiates." According to Barbaro, Jones sent her a text message with the results of the laboratory test—showing levels of hydrocodone

and hydromorphone—on Friday, May 20.

¶10. Smith denied giving Will any substance that would have resulted in a positive drug test. He testified that he had only given Will medicines prescribed by Will's pediatrician. Smith testified that he was sick and went to a doctor after his last visit with Will. The doctor prescribed a codeine

cough syrup, and Smith had the prescription filled. However, that all occurred after his last visit with Will. Smith denied that he had any codeine in his possession during his last visit with Will. Smith testified that no one else had given Will any drugs the weekend of May 13-15. During that weekend, Smith's mother, Gail Hopkins, and Smith's girlfriend, Layla Mitchell, had also been with Will.

¶11. Mitchell also testified at the hearing. Mitchell provided childcare for Will until April 2016, which was around the time she started dating Smith. Mitchell suspected that Barbaro stopped using her for childcare because of her relationship with Smith. Mitchell had been with Smith and Will the weekend of May 15. Mitchell said that Will seemed to have a cold and that he was a little cranky and sleepy. Smith gave him some Bromfed

, which Will had been prescribed. Bromfed does not have hydrocodone, hydromorphone, or codeine in it. Other than his cold, Will's behavior seemed normal.

¶12. At the conclusion of the hearing, the chancellor suspended Smith's visitation. He appointed a GAL to investigate the allegations of abuse and neglect. He ordered Smith and Barbaro to submit to both urine and hair follicle drug tests. He also ordered a hair follicle test to be performed on Will.

Hearing on GAL's Emergency Motion

¶13. On June 20, 2016, the GAL filed an emergency motion seeking an injunction against Barbaro and a change of custody to Smith. The chancery court held a hearing on the motion two days later.

¶14. Gail Hopkins, Smith's mother, testified that she had been with Will and Smith the weekend of May 13-15, that Will had a cough

, and that the only medicine she gave him was his usual allergy medicine. Hopkins testified that Will was not groggy or lethargic and behaved normally throughout the weekend.

¶15. Brandy Jones of Capital DNA testified that Barbaro requested urine sample drug tests for her and Will on Friday, May 13. Barbaro requested another urine sample drug test for Will on Sunday, May 15. Will was fitted with a urine collection bag to capture a sample. Jones testified that Will was agitated on May 15, which was normal for an eighteen-month-old child being fitted with a urine collection bag. Jones denied that Will seemed lethargic. The drug tests were all "private" tests, meaning they were neither court-ordered nor personally observed by testing personnel. Jones explained to Barbaro the differences between a private test and an observed test, and Barbaro opted for a private test.

¶16. Capital DNA sent Will's sample to a laboratory for testing. On May 20, the results came back showing that the urine contained 3,100 nanograms per milliliter of hydrocodone

and 1,590 nanograms per milliliter of hydromorphone.

¶17. Jones also testified as an expert in drug testing. She testified that the cutoff level for Will's urine tests was 300 nanograms per milliliter, meaning that lower levels of a substance would not result in a "positive" test. Will's sample contained more than ten times the cutoff level for hydrocodone

and more than five times the cutoff level for hydromorphone. Jones testified that the strength of a dosage would vary based on body type and other factors, but she stated that those were "significant" levels of hydrocodone and hydromorphone in an eighteen-month-old child.

¶18. Jones explained the differences between urine tests and hair follicle tests. She testified that hydrocodone

or codeine typically will show up in a child's urine within "about an hour" or "one to three hours." Jones further testified that, depending on factors such as the size of the dose and the person's body weight and metabolism, a urine test can reveal drugs consumed during the previous twenty-four to forty-eight hours. In contrast, depending on the rate of hair growth and other factors, it "typically" takes fourteen to thirty days for a drug to show up in a hair follicle test, and a hair follicle test can reveal drugs taken up to one year prior to the test.

¶19. Jones also testified about the results of the court-ordered drug tests of Smith, Barbaro, and Will that were conducted on May 31. Smith's May 31 hair follicle test came back positive for hydrocodone

. Jones testified that the positive test result indicated that Smith had used the drug between two weeks and one year prior to the test. Smith's urine test was negative. Both of Barbaro's tests were negative. Will's hair follicle test was negative, but Jones stated that it can take up to thirty days for a drug to show up in a hair follicle test.

¶20. Brett McAlpin, a narcotics investigator with the Rankin County Sheriff's Department, testified as a fact witness and an expert in narcotics investigations. McAlpin was the officer who arrested Smith on May 25. McAlpin testified that another officer in his office had received a tip from Jesse Tatum, an officer with the Jackson Police Department. McAlpin learned that an informant had advised law enforcement that Smith would be transporting drugs in his truck when he returned home from his job in Jackson. The tip included Smith's...

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