Billy Steagall v. Nancy Steagall

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 15, 1999
DocketM1998-00948-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Billy Steagall v. Nancy Steagall (Billy Steagall v. Nancy Steagall) 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
Billy Steagall v. Nancy Steagall, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE April 15, 1999 Session

BILLY RHODES STEAGALL v. NANCY ROSE STEAGALL

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Marshall County No. 7194 F. Lee Russell, Judge

No. M1998-00948-COA-R3-CV - Filed July 27, 2001

This appeal involves a post-divorce dispute regarding the custody of a 15-year-old boy. In August 1997, the boy’s father petitioned the Chancery Court for Marshall County to change the minor’s custody because of his concern that the mother’s attempt to home school the boy had undermined his education and development of social skills. The mother opposed the petition and requested an increase in child support. During the June 1998 trial, the father presented evidence raising serious questions about the progress of the child’s education and development of social skills, as well as other aspects of the mother’s approach to parenting. The mother presented no evidence of her own. Instead, after the close of the father’s proof, she asserted that the trial court could remediate the acknowledged deficiencies without changing custody. Thereafter, the parties and the court discussed at length the provisions of a proposed remedial order, and the hearing was adjourned when the parties and the court believed they had agreed on the contents of the proposed order. Before the trial court entered the proposed order, the wife took issue with a provision requiring her to enroll the child in public school. The trial court informed the parties that it had understood that both parties had agreed to send their child to public school and that it would resume the trial if its understanding was incorrect. Rather than requesting the trial court to resume the hearing, the mother filed this appeal claiming that the trial court had infringed on her constitutionally protected right to raise her child. We have determined, in accordance with Tenn. R. App. P. 36(a), that the mother is not entitled to appellate relief because she is, in part, responsible for the error and because she failed to pursue the reasonably available steps that would have nullified the harmful effect of the error. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment.

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

WILLIAM C. KOCH , JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which WILLIAM B. CAIN and PATRICIA J. COTTRELL , JJ., joined.

Gregory D. Smith, Clarksville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Nancy R. Steagall.

Barry B. White, Lewisburg, Tennessee, for the appellee, Billy Rhodes Steagall. OPINION

Nancy Rose Steagall and Billy Rhodes Steagall married in 1981. Their only child, a son, was born in March 1986. The parties were divorced by the Chancery Court for Marshall County in March 1988. In accordance with their marital dissolution agreement, Ms. Steagall received sole custody of their son, and Mr. Steagall received non-specific visitation rights. Mr. Steagall was also required to pay Ms. Steagall $70 per week in child support. Thereafter, Ms. Steagall and the parties’ son moved to Culleoka in Maury County. Mr. Steagall remained in Lewisburg and eventually remarried. Ms. Steagall is employed as a paramedic by the Williamson Medical Center Emergency Medical Service, and Mr. Steagall is employed as a paramedic by the Rutherford County Ambulance Service.

After the divorce, Ms. Steagall, as the custodial parent, made all the major decisions regarding the child’s education, his exposure to his extended family, and the nature of his visitation with Mr. Steagall. Even though she was elected to the Maury County Board of Education, Ms. Steagall withdrew her son from public school after the third grade and began home schooling him. Her decision was based, in large part, on her Christian beliefs and her apprehensions about the public school curriculum. Ms. Steagall home schooled the parties’ son for the fourth, fifth, and sixth grades. During these years, Mr. Steagall grew increasingly concerned about the boy’s attitude about his studies and his social skills.

Things came to a head in 1997. Mr. Steagall decided that Ms. Steagall’s style of parenting and her heavy-handed attempts at gate-keeping between him and his son were adversely affecting the child’s development. He was concerned about the adequacy of the boy’s education and the development of his social skills. He was also concerned that Ms. Steagall had gone too far in trying to shape the boy’s world view. Finally, he was concerned that his own differing views about parenting were causing his efforts at visitation to become extremely contentious. In August 1997, after the boy expressed a desire to live with him, Mr. Steagall petitioned the Chancery Court for Marshall County to change custody. Ms. Steagall objected to changing custody and requested an increase in child support.

The trial court conducted a hearing in Jun 1998 on the issues of custody and child support. Mr. Steagall, as the moving party, had the burden of proving that there had been a material change in the child’s circumstances and that it would be in the child’s best interests to change custody. He undertook to carry this burden by suggesting that the trial court interview the parties’ son in chambers and by presenting his own testimony as well as that of Ms. Steagall. At the lawyers’ request, the trial court interviewed the parties’ son in chambers before hearing the other witnesses. The lawyers were present during the interview, but the parents were not.1 Thereafter, Mr. Steagall’s

1 The record does not contain a transcript or summary of the trial court’s interview with the parties’ son. However, the transcribed comments of the trial court and the lawyers at other stages o f the procee ding indicate that the child told that trial court that he desired to live with Mr. Steagall, at least in part, to enable him to see the other members of Mr. Steagall’s family more.

-2- lawyer called Ms. Steagall as his first witness. Ms. Steagall’s testimony plainly did not help her cause. Mr. Steagall’s lawyer was able to elicit testimony that made her appear extremely overprotective2 and unable to accept that Mr. Steagall had remarried and was moving on with his life.3

Most significantly, Ms. Steagall admitted that her attempts at home schooling had not been entirely successful. She conceded that she had refused to permit the parties’ son to take the standardized achievement tests until after Mr. Steagall filed his petition to change custody. She explained her decision by saying that school officials had declined to permit her to examine the test in advance and because she believed that the test contained inappropriate personal questions about the household.4 She also conceded that the parties’ son had recently taken a standardized test and that this test had revealed that he was two years below grade level in science and that he was one year below grade level in reading and language arts.5

Mr. Steagall testified that he had initially agreed that Ms. Steagall could home school their son, even though he had reservations about home schooling. He stated that he became increasingly concerned as time went on about what the boy was studying and his attitude about his homework. He estimated that at least thirty percent of the school work was religious6 and that he had observed a “drop in . . . [his son’s] eagerness” to do his homework after Ms. Steagall withdrew the boy from public school. He also testified that Ms. Steagall had made visitation “as complicated as it could be” and recounted how Ms. Steagall had instructed him not to permit their son to accompany his new wife to Roman Catholic services because Roman Catholics were not going to heaven because they prayed to the Virgin Mary rather than to Jesus. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
Billy Steagall v. Nancy Steagall, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/billy-steagall-v-nancy-steagall-tennctapp-1999.