Adelsperger v. Adelsperger

970 S.W.2d 482, 1997 Tenn. App. LEXIS 855, 1997 WL 749450
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 5, 1997
Docket01A01-9705-CH-00206
StatusPublished
Cited by212 cases

This text of 970 S.W.2d 482 (Adelsperger v. Adelsperger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adelsperger v. Adelsperger, 970 S.W.2d 482, 1997 Tenn. App. LEXIS 855, 1997 WL 749450 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

KOCH, Judge.

This appeal presents a custody and visitation dispute. The parties were declared divorced in the Chancery Court for Rutherford County, and the wife received sole custody of the parties’ three minor children. Six months later, the wife moved to Mississippi, and the father petitioned for a change of custody. Following a bench trial, the trial court granted the father custody of the children after concluding that there had been a material change of circumstances and that placing the children in the father’s custody would be in their best interests. The mother asserts on this appeal that the evidence does not support the trial court’s decision. We agree and, therefore, reverse the judgment.

I.

Fairly H. Adelsperger and David R. Adel-sperger were married on April 22, 1989, in Mississippi where Ms. Adelsperger’s family made its home. The parties first lived in Indiana near Mr. Adelsperger’s family but later decided to move because, as Mr. Adel-sperger put it, they wished to “to get away from my family.” Despite Ms. Adelsperger’s proposal to return to Mississippi where her family lived, the parties decided to move to Murfreesboro instead.

The parties separated in October 1995, and Ms. Adelsperger filed for divorce in the Chancery Court for Rutherford County. Mr. Adelsperger became concerned during the proceeding that Ms. Adelsperger might return to Mississippi, but Ms. Adelsperger assured him that she had no present intention to move and that his visitation with the children was important to her. In February 1996, the trial court declared the parties divorced pursuant to Tenn.Code Ann. § 36-4-129 (1996) and granted Ms. Adelsperger custody of the children. The order granted Mr. Adelsperger extremely generous visitation rights but did not require Ms. Adelsper-ger to obtain approval of either the trial court or her husband before moving.

The divorce was far from amicable, and the parties continued to return to court for post-trial disputes concerning how they should exchange the children during visitation, their responsibilities for providing the children clothing during visitation, and the details of mid-week and telephone visitation. They also asked the trial court to intervene in disputes involving family photographs and overnight guests in their homes. The trial court eventually found each of the parties to be in contempt, and both of them spent brief periods in jail.

Ms. Adelsperger changed jobs after the divorce when her former employer was acquired by another company. She went to work for a car dealership with the expectation that she would work normal business hours. As it turned out, she was required to work six days a week with an irregular day off during the week, and she was occasionally required to work at night. This schedule interfered with her parenting responsibilities, and Ms. Adelsperger found it difficult to find help with the children because she had no family or other close friends in the Middle Tennessee area. She asked Mr. Adelsperger for assistance with the children on several occasions, but he was never available to help her.

Several months later, she received a job offer from a trucking company near her home in Mississippi that included a higher salary and more regular working hours. When she attempted to discuss this offer with Mr. Adelsperger in late July 1996, Mr. Adelsperger refused to talk with her until he consulted his lawyer. In early August 1996, Ms. Adelsperger accepted the job and moved to Mississippi after her lawyer informed her *484 that she was not required to first obtain the court’s permission to move.

Ms. Adelsperger’s decision to move to Mississippi sparked new disputes with Mr. Adel-sperger. He filed a petition to change custody and insisted on maintaining his weekend visitations. Ms. Adelsperger was required to drive the children from Mississippi to Mur-freesboro every other weekend because Mr. Adelsperger refused to meet Ms. Adelsper-ger somewhere along her route. Mr. Adel-sperger made no effort to visit the children in Mississippi until October 1996 when the trial court ordered him to do so. The stress of the continuing litigation with Mr. Adel-sperger and traveling to Murfreesboro every other weekend affected Ms. Adelsperger’s job performance, and her new employer terminated her after two and one-half months. She then accepted a job with her father’s company.

Mr. Adelsperger filed a petition to change custody several days after Ms. Adelsperger moved to Mississippi. He implied that Ms. Adelsperger had been less than truthful when she stated during the divorce proceedings that she did not intend to return to Mississippi and alleged that she had moved to Mississippi “to limit, impede, and reduce ... [his] extremely liberal visitation, involvement, and relationship with the minor children.” He also alleged that Ms. Adelsperger had been “delivering the minor children to the child care facility in an unfit, unsanitary, and unhealthy condition.” Following a hearing in November 1996, the trial court filed a detailed opinion concluding that the parties’ circumstances had changed materially since January 1996 and that the children’s interests would be served best by changing their custody to Mr. Adelsperger. The trial court also directed Ms. Adelsperger to begin paying $660 per month as child support. After Ms. Adelsperger moved back to Tennessee from Mississippi, the trial court entered an order staying the change of custody pending this appeal.

II.

We first take up Ms. Adelsperger’s assertion that the trial court erred by failing to grant her Tenn. R. Civ. P. 41.02(2) motion for involuntary dismissal at the close of Mr. Adelsperger’s proof. We need not tarry long with this issue because Ms. Adelsperger elected to present her proof rather than to rest on her motion. Following the denial of a Tenn. R. Civ. P. 41.02(2) motion, the moving party may stand on its motion and bring an appeal or present its evidence; it cannot do both. See Bituminous Constr., Inc. v. Rucker Enters., Inc., 816 F.2d 965, 967 (4th Cir.1987); duPont v. Southern Nat’l Bank, 771 F.2d 874, 881 (5th Cir.1985). 1 By proceeding with her proof, Ms. Adelsperger waived her opportunity to take issue with the trial court’s denial of her Tenn. R. Civ. P. 41.02(2) motion.

III.

The pivotal issue in this ease involves the evidentiary foundation for the trial court’s conclusions that the parties’ circumstances changed materially during the six months following their divorce and that their three children’s interests would be best served by requiring them to live in Tennessee with their father rather than in Mississippi with their mother. We have determined that the evidence does not support the trial court’s conclusion that Ms. Adelsperger’s life has become so unstable since the divorce that she should lose custody of her children.

A.

No decisions in divorce cases require a more delicate touch than those involving child custody and visitation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
970 S.W.2d 482, 1997 Tenn. App. LEXIS 855, 1997 WL 749450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adelsperger-v-adelsperger-tennctapp-1997.