Andrew Downs v. Crystal Bailey/Joni Downs

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 20, 2002
DocketW2002-01362-COA-R3-JV
StatusPublished

This text of Andrew Downs v. Crystal Bailey/Joni Downs (Andrew Downs v. Crystal Bailey/Joni Downs) 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
Andrew Downs v. Crystal Bailey/Joni Downs, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON November 20, 2002 Session

ANDREW ROBERT DOWNS v. CRYSTAL BAILEY and JONI DOWNS

An Appeal from the Juvenile Court for Tipton County Nos. J6285-7-294, J7720-8-473 William A. Peeler, Judge

No. W2002-01362-COA-R3-JV - Filed February 10, 2003

This is a child custody case. The two children involved were born to the mother and father during their marriage. In 1998, the mother and father were unable to care properly for the children, so the mother’s sister (the children’s aunt) obtained temporary custody. The mother and father divorced in 1999. In 2000, the father filed a petition for custody, claiming that he and his common-law wife could provide a stable home for the children. The aunt sought to retain custody. The mother intervened, arguing that, if permanent custody were not granted to the aunt, then custody should be awarded to her. After a hearing, the trial court granted custody to the father. The mother and the aunt appeal, both claiming that they are entitled to custody. We affirm, finding that the father’s rights are superior to those of the aunt, and that the trial court did not err awarding custody to the father rather than the mother.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Juvenile Court is Affirmed

HOLLY KIRBY LILLARD, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which W. FRANK CRAWFORD , P.J., W.S., and ALAN E. HIGHERS, J., joined.

J. Thomas Caldwell, Ripley, Tennessee, for the appellants, Crystal Bailey and Joni Downs.

G. Christopher Kelly, Atlanta, Georgia, for the appellee, Andrew Robert Downs.

OPINION

Petitioner/Appellee Andrew Robert Downs (“Father”) and Intervening Petitioner/Appellant Joni Downs (“Mother”) were married on April 8, 1995, and were divorced on October 26, 1999. During their marriage, they had two sons who are the subject of this petition for custody, Andrew John Downs (“A.J.”), born August 16, 1995, and Zachary Robert Downs (“Zachary”), born January 8, 1997. Mother and Father had a tumultuous relationship. A few months after A.J. was born, on January 29, 1996, Diane Bailey (“Grandmother”), A.J.’s maternal grandmother, filed a petition for temporary custody of A.J., asserting that Mother was unable to provide a stable environment for him. Grandmother’s petition for temporary custody of A.J. was granted. Subsequently, Zachary was born. Grandmother then filed a petition for temporary custody of Zachary. Pending a final decision on Grandmother’s petition for custody of Zachary, the trial court ordered that a home study be conducted at the home of Mother and Father by the Tipton County Department of Children’s Services. That home study, however, was never performed, and Grandmother did not follow up on her petition for custody of Zachary. Therefore, Zachary remained in the custody of Mother and Father, while Grandmother retained custody of A.J.

On August 28, 1998, Respondent/Appellant Crystal Bailey (“Aunt”), Mother’s sister, filed a petition for temporary custody of both A.J. and Zachary. Aunt’s petition was signed by both Mother and Grandmother. The petition stated that Grandmother sought to have custody of A.J. given to Aunt, because Grandmother was moving to Florida and believed it was best not to take A.J. away from his home. The petition also stated that custody of Zachary should be changed from Mother and Father to Aunt because “[F]ather is in jail in Kentucky and [M]other is going to Job Corp.”1 The trial court granted Aunt’s petition for temporary custody of both A.J. and Zachary. From that time until the order that is the subject of this appeal was entered, the boys lived with Aunt and her father in a two-bedroom mobile home in Covington, Tennessee.2 During this entire time, neither Mother nor Father made any regular child support payments to Aunt.3

After he was discharged from the Army in August 1998, Father moved to Thomasville, Alabama. Mother joined Father in Alabama for a short time, but then the two separated and Mother moved back to Tennessee. Mother lived in Tennessee for the first few years after her separation from Father. While she lived in Tennessee in 1999, Mother and Father divorced. In 2001, Mother moved to Jacksonville, Florida, to live with Grandmother.

While in Alabama, Father met Kimberly Deas (“Deas”). Father and Deas had a son, Andrew Robert Downs, Jr. (“Drew”), born on October 28, 1999, just two days after Mother’s and Father’s

1 At the hearing on Father’s subsequent petition for custody, he claimed that he did not know at the time that Aunt had petitioned for custody of the boys. He testified that, at the time Aunt filed her petition, he was not in jail, but rather he was in Kentucky processing out of the Army, with a less than honorable discharge. In his testimony, Father stated that, while he was in the Army, he had Mother call the Red Cross and tell them that he was needed hom e becau se of an emergency. After he went home on a two-week leave, he never reported back to the Army and was considered AWO L. For that reason, the Army gave Father a less than honorable discharge, and held him in Kentucky for app roxim ately two weeks to process out. During that two-week period, Mother agreed to allow Aunt to have temporary custody of the children, alleging that Father was “in jail.”

2 At all pertinent times, A unt lived with the children in the Covington mobile home, except during the period between February and October 1999, in which Aunt lived alone with the children in a rented two-bedroom mobile home.

3 Bo th Mother and Father testified that they occasionally bought the children things such as clothes, shoes, or school supplies. It is und isputed , howe ver, that neither m ade regular supp ort pa yments to Aunt.

-2- divorce became final. Deas is now Father’s common-law wife under the laws of Alabama. Father, Deas, and Drew still live in Alabama.

On July 25, 2000, Father filed a petition seeking permanent custody of A.J. and Zachary. At the time the petition was filed, A.J. and Zachary were staying with Father and Deas, with Aunt’s permission. In the petition, Father asserted that circumstances had changed since the filing of the court’s order granting Aunt temporary custody, because Father “now has a stable home environment and wishes to have primary physical and legal custody of his minor children.” He further alleged that he was “remarried and that his new wife is a fit and proper person to assist him in raising the minor children, that he has a long held job with steady income and that he has a home which is large enough for his children.” Father also claimed that Aunt “and her boyfriend have no home of their own and are currently living with another couple,” and that Aunt’s “boyfriend is physically and verbally abusive to the minor children.” He alleged that Aunt’s boyfriend drank alcohol, gave alcohol to the children, and had physically attacked Aunt in front of the children. Therefore, Father asserted, to prevent irreparable harm to the boys, it would be in their best interest to change custody to him. Based on the charges in the petition, the trial court granted Father temporary custody of the children pending a hearing.

On August 17, 2000, Mother filed an intervening petition for custody. Mother alleged that the children had been in Aunt’s custody and, therefore, in the family environment of Mother all along. She requested that she get custody “if the Court should find their custody should be awarded to one of the biological parents.” Mother maintained that Father should not be awarded custody because he had “been committed to a mental institution and suffered from emotional and psychological illness,” and that the children may be exposed to danger if custody were granted to Father.

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Bluebook (online)
Andrew Downs v. Crystal Bailey/Joni Downs, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrew-downs-v-crystal-baileyjoni-downs-tennctapp-2002.