Benita Renee Yocum v. Jason Richard Yocum

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 15, 2015
DocketE2015-00086-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Benita Renee Yocum v. Jason Richard Yocum (Benita Renee Yocum v. Jason Richard Yocum) 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
Benita Renee Yocum v. Jason Richard Yocum, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE August 26, 2015 Session

BENITA RENEE YOCUM v. JASON RICHARD YOCUM

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Sevier County No. 12-CV-1153-IV O. Duane Slone, Judge

No. E2015-00086-COA-R3-CV-FILED-DECEMBER 15, 2015

This is a divorce action involving a five-year marriage between a husband who was employed overseas at the time of the parties‟ separation and a wife who had worked primarily during the marriage as a homemaker and caretaker of the parties‟ three minor children, including a child with special medical needs. Following a hearing in December 2012, during which the husband testified telephonically, the trial court ordered the husband to pay $3,500.00 per month in temporary support. Following subsequent hearings in April and May 2014, during which the husband also testified telephonically, the court, inter alia, granted the parties a divorce on stipulated grounds, delineated a residential co-parenting schedule, entered a judgment against Husband for support arrearage, and set the husband‟s child support obligation in the amount of $1,842.00 monthly and spousal support obligation in the amount of $1,000.00 monthly. The court reserved remaining issues for a bench trial, which it set for September 23, 2014, with notice that it would not allow the husband to testify telephonically unless the wife waived any objection to such testimony. At the beginning of trial, the court denied the husband‟s counsel‟s motion to allow the husband to testify telephonically upon the wife‟s objection. Also at the beginning of trial, the court ordered that the $1,000.00 previously ordered be continued as an award to the wife of alimony in futuro. The court also directed that its previous orders as to co-parenting time and child support be incorporated as a permanent parenting plan order. At the close of proof, the trial court distributed the marital estate and awarded to Wife $10,500.00 toward her attorney‟s fees. The husband appeals. Having determined that no income shares worksheet for child support purposes was attached to the final judgment, we vacate the amount of child support awarded and remand for the limited purpose of child support calculation according to the Child Support Guidelines based upon the trial court‟s previous findings concerning the parties‟ respective incomes and co-parenting time. We affirm the trial court‟s judgment in all other respects.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Vacated in Part, Affirmed in Part; Case Remanded THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which D. MICHAEL SWINEY and JOHN W. MCCLARTY, JJ., joined.

George T. Underwood, Jr., Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Jason Richard Yocum.

Benita Renee Yocum, Chillicothe, Ohio, Pro Se.

OPINION

I. Factual and Procedural Background

The plaintiff, Benita Renee Yocum (“Wife”), and the defendant, Jason Richard Yocum (“Husband”), were married on April 28, 2007, in Ohio. They were married for five years prior to their separation in September 2012. Although Husband was employed overseas at that time, the parties had established a marital residence in Sevier County, Tennessee. They each had been married once before. Husband had adopted Wife‟s son from a prior relationship, and he also maintained co-parenting time with his daughter from a prior relationship. At the time of the September 2014 trial, the parties‟ oldest son was ten years old, and two younger sons born to the marriage were, respectively, six and three years of age (collectively, “the Children”). It is undisputed that the six-year-old child, A.Y., had been diagnosed with epilepsy, asthma, and some developmental delays, such that he required specialized medical care and more intensive caretaking in general than a typical child his age.1

Husband was thirty-three years old at the time of trial, and Wife was thirty-six years of age. Husband had been employed throughout the marriage as a safety manager by Exelis Mission Systems, working primarily in Afghanistan and Pakistan. During the marriage, Wife had primarily worked as a homemaker and caretaker of the Children. While residing in Tennessee, she had also been the registered owner of a small business known as Smoky Mountain Risk Management, which had apparently stopped doing business by the time of trial. According to Wife, she had earned some income completing projects at home for Goodwill Industries, Inc. (“Goodwill”). The trial court found that Husband earned approximately $130,000.00 per year while Wife earned approximately $5,000.00 yearly.

1 In an effort to protect the privacy of the Children, we will not name them individually in this opinion. However, because care required by A.Y. impacted the trial court‟s awards of child support and spousal support, we will identify him solely by initials for purposes of our analysis. 2 Wife, acting through her former counsel, attorney Michael J. Green, Jr., filed a complaint for divorce in the Sevier County Circuit Court (“trial court”) on September 19, 2012. She alleged irreconcilable differences or, in the alternative, inappropriate marital conduct on the part of Husband. She requested, inter alia, that the trial court designate her the primary residential parent of the Children, adopt her proposed temporary parenting plan, and grant her temporary spousal and child support. Wife proposed that the Children reside with her all 365 days of the year and that Husband be granted only supervised visitation with the Children until he had completed a mental health evaluation, parenting classes, and anger management classes.

On September 28, 2012, the trial court entered an agreed order consolidating the divorce action with an order of protection matter pending between the parties. Husband was represented at the time by his former counsel, attorney Felisha B. White. Wife previously had obtained an ex parte order of protection against Husband. The agreed consolidation order provided that the ex parte order of protection would “remain in effect with no presumption of correctness, nor finding of fault against either party” pending further proceedings. The agreed order also granted to Husband a few days of unsupervised co-parenting time with the Children during Husband‟s September 2012 return to Tennessee while on leave from his employment.

On October 3, 2012, Husband filed, inter alia, an answer to the complaint for divorce and a counter-complaint. He admitted that irreconcilable differences existed between the parties but denied all other allegations against him. Husband averred that Wife had engaged in inappropriate marital conduct and adultery. As to co-parenting, Husband filed a proposed temporary parenting plan, proposing that while he was working overseas and home on leave for twenty-one days every three months, the Children reside with him for the full twenty-one days of his leave periods. Wife subsequently filed an answer to Husband‟s counter-complaint, denying all allegations against her. Upon motion, the trial court entered an order on November 26, 2012, allowing Husband‟s counsel to withdraw from representation.

Meanwhile, Wife filed motions on November 9, 2012, requesting leave to relocate with the Children to Ohio, requesting that the trial court find Husband in contempt of court for failure to timely pay support, and giving notice of a hearing scheduled for December 10, 2012. As to the motion to relocate, Wife averred that A.Y. had been referred by his physician in Tennessee to Nationwide Children‟s Hospital (“Nationwide”) in Columbus, Ohio, for further diagnosis and treatment. She further averred that her family, as well as some friends and family members of Husband, resided near Nationwide and that she had been offered employment and secured a residence near Nationwide.

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Bluebook (online)
Benita Renee Yocum v. Jason Richard Yocum, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benita-renee-yocum-v-jason-richard-yocum-tennctapp-2015.