Andrews v. Andrews

344 S.W.3d 321, 2010 Tenn. App. LEXIS 553, 2010 WL 3398826
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 31, 2010
DocketW2009-00161-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 344 S.W.3d 321 (Andrews v. Andrews) 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
Andrews v. Andrews, 344 S.W.3d 321, 2010 Tenn. App. LEXIS 553, 2010 WL 3398826 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

HOLLY M. KIRBY, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court, in which

DAVID R. FARMER, J. and J. STEVEN STAFFORD, J., joined.

This is a divorce case. The plaintiff husband is a successful physician and the defendant wife is a stay-at-home mother. They have one minor child. After twelve years of marriage, the husband left the marital home and filed for divorce. The wife counter-claimed for divorce, and protracted and contentious litigation ensued. The initial trial judge appointed a guardian ad litem and an attorney ad litem. After several trial judges recused themselves, a senior judge was assigned. After nearly three years of dispute, the case proceeded to trial. The trial court granted a divorce to the wife; it found that she was economically disadvantaged but capable of partial rehabilitation, and that the husband had *324 the ability to pay spousal support. The wife was awarded alimony in futuro, rehabilitative alimony, attorney fees as alimony in solido, and discretionary costs. The husband appeals the award of alimony, attorney fees, and costs. We affirm, finding no abuse of the trial court’s discretion under the circumstances.

Facts and Procedural History

Background

Plaintiff/Appellant James McKay Andrews, M.D. (“Husband”), and Defendant/Appellee Susie Heasook Cho Andrews (“Wife”) married on December 30, 1993 in Atlanta, Georgia. 1 It was Husband’s second marriage and Wife’s first marriage. Their marriage produced one child, a son (“Son”), born in March 1995.

Husband earned his medical degree in 1985, completed an almost four-year residency in internal medicine and then a two- and-a-half-year pulmonary residency, all in Memphis, Tennessee. After completing his residencies, Husband moved to Oak Ridge, Tennessee to work in private practice as a pulmonary physician. In Oak Ridge, Husband’s first marriage ended in divorce, and he met Wife.

At the time of the marriage, Husband was thirty-four years old, and Wife was thirty-six years old. Wife graduated from college with a degree in economics. After college, Wife worked as a software salesperson for a computer company. When she met Husband, Wife had been selling computer software for three or four years.

In 1993, Husband took a position with a multi-specialty practice in Canton, Georgia, a suburb of Atlanta. Wife accompanied Husband to Georgia, and they married just before Husband started his new job. Around the time the parties married, Wife left the workforce to be a full-time homemaker. In March 1995, Wife gave birth to their son and remained at home to take care of him.

Around the time of the son’s birth, Husband engaged in an extramarital affair with an employee of the hospital in which he practiced. After Wife discovered the affair, the parties resolved that they wanted to remain married. As a result, they spent several months attending weekly counseling sessions with a psychiatrist.

The parties in fact remained married, but the emotional health of the relationship is the subject of some dispute. From Wife’s standpoint, after she recovered from the initial distress of learning of Husband’s infidelity, and after the intensive counseling, the couple returned to a mostly normal status, with regular marital relations. Husband’s view of the relationship differed greatly. From Husband’s perspective, despite the intensive counseling, Wife remained angry at Husband and punished him by making him tell all family members of his indiscretion and by engaging in regular verbal abuse, even in the presence of the parties’ son. From Husband’s description, he accepted Wife’s abuse out of guilt for having been unfaithful. Husband said that he and Wife were seldom intimate. Both parties agree that Husband worked long hours in his medical practice; Husband would later explain that his long working hours were in part an escape from his unhappy home life.

For the next few years, the family continued to reside in Georgia. Husband eventually became dissatisfied with his employment in Georgia. In 2001, the parties decided to move to Memphis, so that Hus *325 band could join a medical practice with old friends and earn more money.

In Memphis, Husband began practicing with Mid-South Pulmonary Specialists, P.C. (“MSPS”). Initially, Husband was an employee of MSPS, but after two years he became a partner. Typically, Husband worked a total of sixty hours over a span of four days each week at MSPS. MSPS paid Husband a regular annual salary of $195,000 plus substantial quarterly bonuses.

In addition to his practice at MSPS, Husband did “moonlighting” at St. Francis Hospital (“St. Francis”) in Memphis. At St. Francis, Husband served as an in-house critical care doctor, spending the night at the hospital the nights that he worked there. Typically, he worked at St. Francis two weekends out of each month, as well as a few weeknights each month. From his moonlighting at St. Francis, Husband earned from $12,000 to $15,000 per month.

Meanwhile, Wife continued as a homemaker and the primary caregiver for the parties’ son. Son was enrolled in a private elementary school, and Wife volunteered almost daily at Son’s school. She also regularly did volunteer work in the community.

In 2001, when the family moved to Memphis, they resided for a time in a rented house. In 2004, the parties purchased a home in Germantown, Tennessee, a suburb of Memphis. Standing three stories tall, the Germantown house had 8100 square feet, at least five bedrooms, a pool, and a theater room. The parties purchased the home for $1.35 million. Once the parties purchased the Germantown house, they put their Georgia home on the market for sale. It did not sell for some time.

After the family moved to Memphis, Husband began another extramarital relationship. The relationship began towards the end of 2003, and continued for about three or four years. Husband also engaged in another brief relationship as well. By all accounts, Wife remained unaware of Husband’s extramarital relationships in Memphis until after the parties separated.

Pretrial Proceedings

On February 7, 2006, Husband left the marital residence with little more than a few items of clothing. Husband maintains that his departure came after an especially rancorous argument in which Wife demanded that he move out of the parties’ home until the next month. By Wife’s account, Husband simply left, with no warning. By all accounts, Husband did not talk to the parties’ son about his departure until after it occurred.

At about the same time that Husband left the marital home, he apparently withdrew the majority of the available funds from the parties’ joint bank accounts. He left about $2000 in one account for Wife’s use and apparently cancelled Wife’s access to the parties’ joint credit cards.

Two days after he left the marital home, on February 9, 2006, Husband filed a complaint for divorce in the Shelby County Circuit Court. 2

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
344 S.W.3d 321, 2010 Tenn. App. LEXIS 553, 2010 WL 3398826, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrews-v-andrews-tennctapp-2010.