Autumn Laine McDaniel v. Kevin Eugene McDaniel

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 18, 2008
DocketW2007-01587-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Autumn Laine McDaniel v. Kevin Eugene McDaniel (Autumn Laine McDaniel v. Kevin Eugene McDaniel) 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
Autumn Laine McDaniel v. Kevin Eugene McDaniel, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON April 22, 2008 Session

AUTUMN LAINE McDANIEL v. KEVIN EUGENE McDANIEL

Appeal from the General Sessions Court for McNairy County No. 7741 Van McMahan, Judge

No. W2007-01587-COA-R3-CV - Filed December 18, 2008

This is a divorce case. The parties were married in 2004, had one child in early 2005, and separated in late 2005. The wife filed a complaint for divorce soon after, and the husband counterclaimed for divorce. During the separation, the wife was the primary residential parent. The wife took various prescription medicines for several conditions, and had previously been addicted to pain medication. At the time of trial, the husband was cohabiting with a young woman whom he began dating when she was seventeen years old. During a substantial portion of the husband’s scheduled parenting time, the parties’ minor child was in the care of either the husband’s parents or the husband’s paramour. At trial, the wife testified as to the amount of her annual income, but proffered no documentary proof or other evidence. The trial court designated the wife as the primary residential parent, reduced the husband’s residential parenting time, and used the amount of income to which the wife testified to set the husband’s child support obligation. The husband appeals. He argues that the trial court erred in designating the wife as the primary residential parent, in reducing his residential parenting time, and in failing to impute to the wife the income level set forth in the child support guidelines. We affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the General Sessions Court Affirmed

HOLLY M. KIRBY , J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which ALAN E. HIGHERS, P.J., W.S., and WALTER C. KURTZ, SP. J., joined.

C. Timothy Crocker, Daniel E. King, and Michael A. Carter, Milan, Tennessee, for the appellant Kevin Eugene McDaniel

Ryan B. Feeney, Selmer, Tennessee, for the appellee Autumn Laine McDaniel OPINION

This appeal involves a short-lived marriage. Plaintiff/Appellee Autumn Laine McDaniel (“Wife”) and Defendant/Appellant Kevin Eugene McDaniel (“Husband”) were married on May 28, 2004. This was Husband’s first marriage, and Wife’s second. At the time they married, Husband was 22 years old and Wife was 21 years old. The parties had one child together, Meagan, born on February 17, 2005.

Wife and her sister are the co-owners of the Yellow Song Salon in Selmer, Tennessee. Wife works at the salon as a hair stylist. Husband is a supervisor at a manufacturing company in Jackson, Tennessee.

After a short and turbulent marriage, the parties separated in October 2005. On November 8, 2005, Wife filed her complaint for divorce with the McNairy County General Sessions Court. On the same date, the General Sessions Court entered a temporary parenting plan order, designating Wife as the primary residential parent and requiring Husband to pay child support in the amount of $544 per month. The temporary parenting plan prohibited either party from allowing a paramour to stay overnight while spending residential parenting time with the child.

Husband filed an answer and counterclaimed for divorce. He sought, among other things, to be designated as the primary residential parent for the parties’ child. The parties later entered into an agreed temporary parenting plan, under which Wife remained the primary residential parent and Husband’s child support was reduced to $412 per month. The order continued to enjoin both parties from having a paramour spend the night with the child present.

During the parties’ separation, both embarked on new relationships. Wife began dating a friend she knew in high school, whom she knew had used illegal drugs in the past. During the relationship, the friend was involved in an automobile accident that resulted in his arrest for driving under the influence and for possession of marijuana.

In April 2006, Husband began a relationship with a young woman he met at a restaurant, Kayla Kennamore. When they met, Kennamore was seventeen years old.

The trial in General Sessions Court was held on January 15, 2007. By the time of trial, Husband was 25 years old and Wife was 24 years old. Wife was living with their child in her parents’ home. Husband lived with his parents for a time during the parties’ separation, but by the time of trial, he had moved back into the marital home.

Wife testified at the outset of the trial. As a co-owner of the Selmer hair salon, and in her work there as a hair stylist, she said that she paid herself a yearly salary of “approximately $15,000.” At the time of the trial, Wife was also working part-time at a store in Jackson, but did not plan to keep the position for very long. She had no pay stubs, personal income tax returns, or other documents to corroborate her testimony on her income. Wife said that she hoped to take online courses towards a bachelor’s degree in fine arts.

-2- Wife described an altercation that prompted the parties’ separation. She testified, “[Husband] was intoxicated and I wanted to go to sleep and he wanted to have sexual intercourse and I wouldn’t, so he – we got into an argument and he threw me to the floor.”

Wife then testified about her use of prescription medications. She said that she was taking Seroquel to treat her bipolar disorder. She was also taking Lomotil as an anti-seizure and an anti- depressant, and to treat her migraine headaches. Wife stated that she had previously taken Hydrocodone regularly for TMJ and migraine headaches, but said that she had not taken Hydrocodone for almost two years. She admitted that she sometimes drank alcohol while taking her prescription medications. She also conceded that, in the past, she had been addicted to Hydrocodone and had purchased it “on the street.” Wife also admitted dating her high school friend with substance abuse problems, but said that she was no longer dating him.

Regarding the parties’ parenting, Wife testified that, when the parties were living together, she was their daughter’s primary caretaker. She said, “He didn’t change diapers. He didn’t get up in the middle of the night. It was me or my mother. . . . He didn’t prepare bottles, he didn’t wash her clothes, he didn’t give her a bath.” After the parties’ separation, Wife asserted, Husband’s parents were the child’s primary caretakers during Husband’s scheduled parenting times. She said that Husband’s mother regularly was the one who picked Meagan up for Husband’s scheduled times, and that she kept the child at her house.

After Wife testified, the trial court heard testimony from Husband’s girlfriend, Kayla Kennamore. Kennamore said that she met Husband while she was working at a Sonic restaurant when she was only seventeen years old. She said that she informed Husband at the time that she was seventeen, but that they nevertheless started dating. She added, however, that they did not have sexual intercourse until she turned eighteen. She testified that, at the time of trial, she was living with Husband in the former marital home. She conceded that this included the periods of time in which Meagan was spending residential parenting time with Husband, and that she sometimes took care of the baby by herself.

Husband testified next. Husband gave his version of the altercation that Wife described as prompting their separation:

Q (by Wife’s counsel): Tell me specific information about the altercation. A (by Husband): We had went out to eat that night at Logan’s and we both had had a drink and come back home and she went to bed, and I wanted to have sex and she didn’t. We got in an altercation about that.

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Bluebook (online)
Autumn Laine McDaniel v. Kevin Eugene McDaniel, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/autumn-laine-mcdaniel-v-kevin-eugene-mcdaniel-tennctapp-2008.