LARRY D. VAUGHT, Judge.
Appellant Markita Bell appeals the order of the Sebastian County Circuit Court denying her motion for indigency for the purpose of receiving appointment of appellate counsel. She contends that the trial court abused its discretion in denying the motion. We affirm.
On May 27, 2015, an order terminating Bell's parental rights was entered. Thereafter, on June 9, 2015, Bell moved for an
At the June 15, 2015 indigency hearing, Bell testified that she received $831 monthly in Social Security benefits. She further testified that she lived with her mother, but did not support her, and that she split rent, food, and utility expenses with her mother. Bell also conceded that the utility expenses listed on her affidavit were incorrect, stating that her monthly electric bill was actually $150-$200 and her monthly water bill was $100-$120. At one point she testified that her monthly food expense was $75, but she later stated that it could have also been $175. Bell testified that the transportation expenses listed on the affidavit were incorrect because her car had been repossessed two weeks prior. Without a vehicle, she said that her monthly transportation expenses were $65-$0. Bell also admitted, that at the termination hearing, she testified that she earned $600-$700 per month as a hair stylist. However, she contended that her income as a hair stylist varied and that she made only $200 in May and nothing in June.
Appellee Arkansas Department of Human Services (DHS) opposed Bell's motion, arguing that her testimony at the indigency hearing was not consistent with her testimony at the termination hearing or in her sworn affidavit. DHS argued that the inconsistencies called Bell's credibility into question. DHS also argued that the evidence presented demonstrated that Bell's income was above the federal guidelines for poverty. The attorney ad litem also opposed the motion, arguing that Bell's testimony demonstrated that she was not indigent.
The trial court denied Bell's indigency motion from the bench. The court stated that its decision was based on the 2015 United States Federal Poverty Guidelines, the testimony and demeanor of Bell, and her affidavit. The trial court found that Bell's testimony was inconsistent with her affidavit. The trial court later entered an order denying Bell's motion:
Bell moved for reconsideration. This motion was deemed denied. Bell timely appealed.
On appeal, Bell contends that the trial court abused its discretion in denying her motion for indigency because it improperly relied on her expected income, rather than her actual income, and it acted arbitrarily when it found that discrepancies between her affidavit and her hearing testimony diminished her credibility.
The burden of establishing indigency is on the person claiming indigency status. Cordero v. Ark. Dep't of Human Servs., 2014 Ark. 64, at 3, 2014 WL 585978. Whether a person is indigent is a mixed
According to the applicable federal poverty guidelines, a single person is not considered "in poverty" unless the person receives less than $11,770 in annual income. Annual Update of the HHS Poverty Guidelines, 80 Fed. Reg. 3236-03 (Jan. 22, 2015). Bell admitted that at the termination hearing (when she was fighting for custody of her child), she testified that her actual monthly income was $831 from Social Security and an additional $600-$700 from working as a hair stylist. Her annual income, based on her testimony at the termination hearing, would range from $17,172-$18,372, which is greater than the poverty guidelines and supports the trial court's finding.
Bell's subsequent indigency affidavit contained the same income figures that she testified to at the termination hearing, but she wrote on the affidavit that her hairstyling income was "not consistent." At the indigency hearing, Bell claimed that her monthly hairstyling income ranged from $0 to $700. In response to questioning by the trial court on this issue, Bell stated that she had not earned any hairstyling income in June 2015 because she was depressed and had not had any clients. However, the trial court did not believe Bell's testimony. The trial court, noting Bell's demeanor and the discrepancies between her hearing testimony and her affidavit, specifically found that she "was not being honest in stating her financial information." The record supports this finding.
Bell's affidavit stated that she supported her mother, but her indigency-hearing testimony was that she and her mother (who had her own job and income) split expenses. Bell's affidavit, which she signed on June 8, 2015, listed monthly transportation expenses of $160. A week later at the indigency hearing, she testified that her vehicle had been repossessed two weeks prior and that her monthly transportation expense had been reduced to $65-$80. Based on this testimony, when Bell signed the affidavit listing the $160 transportation expense, her vehicle had already been repossessed. Her affidavit also stated that she had food expenses of $175 and utility expenses of $120. But at the indigency hearing, she testified at one point that her monthly food expenses were $75 and at another point she said that they were $175. She testified at the hearing that her monthly utilities, which she split with her mother, ranged between $250-$320. Finally, Bell's testimony concerning her hairstyling income changed depending on the context in which it was given. At the termination hearing, she testified that she earned $600-$700 styling hair. In her indigency affidavit, she stated that the $600-$700 figure was "not consistent." And at the indigency hearing, she testified that she had made $200 styling hair in the past two months.
In sum, Bell had the burden of proving her indigency. Based on the evidence she presented and the federal poverty guidelines, the trial court found that she was not indigent. Additionally, the trial court discounted Bell's testimony of limited finances based on its finding that she was
Affirmed.
Harrison and Hixson, JJ., agree.