Alfonzo Silvestre Arze v. Mary Anne Bracken Arze

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 23, 2005
DocketE2004-01325-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Alfonzo Silvestre Arze v. Mary Anne Bracken Arze (Alfonzo Silvestre Arze v. Mary Anne Bracken Arze) 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
Alfonzo Silvestre Arze v. Mary Anne Bracken Arze, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE February 18, 2005 Session

ALFONZO SILVESTRE ARZE v. MARY ANNE BRACKEN ARZE

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Washington County No. 33035 G. Richard Johnson, Chancellor

No. E2004-01325-COA-R3-CV - FILED MAY 23, 2005

Alfonzo Silvestre Arze (“Father”) and Mary Anne Bracken Arze (“Mother”) were divorced in 2000. The divorce was based upon stipulated grounds of irreconcilable differences, and the parties submitted a marital dissolution agreement (“MDA”) to the Trial Court for approval. The terms of the MDA were agreed upon through mediation. At the time of the divorce, Father was employed as a physician with gross earnings of approximately $150,000. Mother was unemployed. Due to the significant disparity in income, Father agreed to pay Mother $2,000 in child support even though he was not obligated legally to do so since he was the primary residential parent for the parties’ four children. When the oldest child turned eighteen, Father reduced his child support payments by twenty-five percent, $500. After Mother challenged Father’s unilateral reduction in child support, the Trial Court entered an order which required Father to pay child support in an amount consistent with the Child Support Guidelines (“Guidelines”). We conclude that because Father was not legally obligated under the Guidelines to pay any child support, the payment of $2,000 was purely a contractual obligation which was not governed by the Guidelines. We also conclude that Father was within his contractual rights when he reduced the child support payments by $500 when the oldest child became emancipated.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed in Part and Modified in Part; Case Remanded

D. MICHAEL SWINEY , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which CHARLES D. SUSANO , JR., J., joined, and PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, J., dissented.

Mark D. Slagle, Johnson City, Tennessee, for the Appellant Alfonzo Silvestre Arze.

M. Stanley Givens, Johnson City, Tennessee, for the Appellee Mary Anne Bracken Arze. OPINION

Background

Mother and Father were married on January 7, 1984, and had four children who currently are ages 11, 14, 16, and 20. The parties were divorced on June 20, 2000, based upon the stipulated ground of irreconcilable differences. The Trial Court’s final divorce decree approved and incorporated the terms of an MDA which had been negotiated and ratified by the parties through mediation. The MDA provided that the parties would have joint legal custody of the children, Father would be the primary residential parent for all four children, and Mother would have an extended visitation schedule.

Father is a practicing physician specializing in gynecology and obstetrics. Father’s gross income for the year prior to the divorce was approximately $150,000. Although Mother was a registered nurse, she was not actively employed at the time of the divorce. The obvious disparity in income was taken into account in the MDA which provides:

Although [Father] is the primary physical custodian of the parties’ minor children, due to the disparity in income of the parties and the fact that [Mother] is unemployed and the fact that [Mother] has visitation with the children over and above standard visitation; [Father] shall pay to [Mother] the sum of $2,000 per month child support beginning July 2000 and on each and every month thereafter. This sum shall be paid directly to [Mother]. Due to the reasons set forth above this sum deviates from the guidelines set forth by the State of Tennessee.

The MDA then sets forth the manner in which the parties agreed to divide the marital property and marital debts. The parties also agreed that Mother would receive transitional and/or rehabilitative alimony in the amount of $1,000 per month for three years and this alimony payment was “non modifiable. It may not be extended, increased, or decreased.”

In October of 2002, Mother filed a motion seeking to modify the final divorce decree. Mother sought, among other things, an increase in child support payments claiming there had been a substantial and material increase in Father’s monthly income. Mother also sought to have Father held in contempt of court. According to Mother, when the parties’ oldest child graduated from high school and turned eighteen, Father violated the final decree by unilaterally decreasing his monthly child support payments twenty-five percent from $2,000 to $1,500.

Father filed an answer to Mother’s motion and admitted that he reduced his child support payments in the amount alleged by Mother. Father claimed, however, that this reduction had previously been agreed to by the parties. Father also filed a counter-petition seeking modification of the final decree. Father claimed he should not have to pay any child support because he was the

-2- children’s primary residential parent. Father argued that the reason he agreed to pay child support in the first place was because Mother was unemployed, but that Mother had become gainfully employed as a full-time registered nurse since that time. Father also pointed out that he was paying the entire cost of the college education for the parties’ oldest child.

A hearing was held on the competing motion and petition after which the Trial Court concluded that although Mother’s visitation with the children was more than the amount typically contemplated by the Guidelines, Mother was not entitled to an increase in child support because Father was paying for all of the children’s medical and dental healthcare expenses. Relying on the Guidelines, the Trial Court then held that Father was entitled to a reduction in child support because the oldest child had reached the age of eighteen. The Trial Court instructed the parties to determine what Father’s child support payments would have been under the Guidelines for three children as of the date the oldest child reached the age of eighteen. The Trial Court also determined that Father was entitled to a downward deviation from the amount established by the Guidelines because Father had physical custody of the children for twenty out of thirty days each month. Finally, the Trial Court concluded that because Father had remarried and had a new child, the new child should be taken into account in Father’s child support payments as of July 2003 when the legislature changed the law “to included calculations based on the presence of another child of the family.”1

We have not been provided with the specific amount of Father’s new child support payment as calculated following the Trial Court’s ruling. However, based on Father’s income it is likely that his monthly child support payments would be much higher than $2,000, even with the unspecified downward deviations allowed by the Trial Court.

Father has appealed from the Trial Court’s final judgment. Father claims the decision of the Trial Court was in error because he should not have to pay any child support to Mother. In the alternative, Father claims the Trial Court erred by not reducing his $2,000 child support payment as a result of the parties’ oldest child attaining the age of eighteen.

Discussion

The factual findings of the Trial Court are accorded a presumption of correctness, and we will not overturn those factual findings unless the evidence preponderates against them. See Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d); Bogan v. Bogan, 60 S.W.3d 721, 727 (Tenn. 2001). With respect to legal issues, our review is conducted “under a pure de novo standard of review, according no deference to the conclusions of law made by the lower courts.” Southern Constructors, Inc. v. Loudon County Bd.

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Bluebook (online)
Alfonzo Silvestre Arze v. Mary Anne Bracken Arze, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alfonzo-silvestre-arze-v-mary-anne-bracken-arze-tennctapp-2005.