Brian Lee Higdon v. Aehui Nmi Higdon

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 29, 2020
DocketM2019-02281-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Brian Lee Higdon v. Aehui Nmi Higdon (Brian Lee Higdon v. Aehui Nmi Higdon) 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
Brian Lee Higdon v. Aehui Nmi Higdon, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

10/29/2020 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE September 2, 2020 Session

BRIAN LEE HIGDON v. AEHUI NMI HIGDON

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Rutherford County No. 75CH1-2018-CV-471 Darrell Scarlett, Judge

No. M2019-02281-COA-R3-CV

This appeal arises from a divorce. Brian Lee Higdon (“Husband”) filed for divorce from Aehui Higdon (“Wife”) in the Chancery Court for Rutherford County (“the Trial Court”). The parties executed a marital dissolution agreement (“the MDA”). The Trial Court approved the MDA and entered a Final Decree of Divorce. Wife later filed a motion pursuant to Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure 60.02 seeking to have the MDA and Final Decree of Divorce set aside on grounds of mistake of fact, fraud, and fundamental unfairness. After a hearing at which both Husband and Wife testified, the Trial Court denied Wife’s motion. Wife appeals, arguing among other things that she was coerced into signing the MDA. Deferring to the Trial Court’s implicit credibility determinations, we do not find that Wife was coerced into signing the MDA. Wife failed to meet her burden of clear and convincing evidence that there was mistake of fact, fraud, or fundamental unfairness in the execution of the MDA. In sum, we discern no abuse of discretion in the Trial Court’s decision to deny Wife’s Rule 60.02 motion. We affirm.

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

D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOHN W. MCCLARTY and KRISTI M. DAVIS, JJ., joined.

Brock East and Benjamin Lewis, Murfreesboro, Tennessee, for the appellant, Aehui Higdon.

C. Diane Crosier, Franklin, Tennessee, for the appellee, Brian Lee Higdon. OPINION

Background

Husband was serving in the United States Air Force and deployed to South Korea where he met Wife. Husband and Wife married in 1993. The parties have a daughter, Lauren, who is of majority age. During the marriage, Husband and Wife lived apart much of the time. Wife, who taught English to college students in South Korea, spent much of the marriage living in South Korea and not with Husband and their daughter. Wife periodically sent Husband large sums of money—upwards of $70,000 per year—for Husband and Lauren’s support. After over twenty years of service, Husband retired from the Air Force and went to work for Nissan. Husband draws $1,800 a month for service- related disability and $3,616 a month in military retirement.

In March 2018, Husband sued Wife for divorce in the Trial Court. Husband was represented by counsel; Wife elected to proceed pro se. Husband’s attorney drafted the MDA, which Husband and Wife executed. The MDA’s property division made no provision for Wife to receive any of Husband’s military pension. In May 2018, affidavits from Husband and Wife, a Final Decree of Divorce, and the MDA all were lodged with the Trial Court. In June 2018, the Trial Court entered the Final Decree of Divorce with the MDA attached.

In April 2019, Wife, then represented by counsel, filed a motion pursuant to Tenn. R. Civ. P. 60.02 seeking to set aside the Final Decree of Divorce and the MDA. Wife asserted, among other things, that she “felt threatened by Husband and Husband was insistent on several issues: a. That [Husband’s] attorney was representing both of the parties and the deal was fair and equitable; b. That the marital retirement through Husband’s military service was not something that Wife was entitled to nor something that could be divided….” Wife also stated that she did not comprehend the terms of the MDA as English is her second language. Wife stated further that Husband failed to disclose assets and liabilities.

In May 2019, Husband filed a response to Wife’s motion. Husband denied that he misled or coerced Wife into signing the MDA. With respect to disclosure, Husband stated: “Admitted that the values were not indicated on the Agreement; however, Plaintiff would state that he provided Defendant with a Statement of Assets and Liabilities indicating the values of the assets.” Husband stated further: “Plaintiff denies that he did not disclose the assets because he provided her with a Sworn Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Exhibit 3 Plaintiff would state that Defendant did not provide a full disclosure to him.”

-2- In November 2019, the Trial Court heard Wife’s Rule 60.02 motion. The bulk of the testimony received at this hearing came from Husband and Wife. Wife testified that, while she was living in South Korea, Husband mailed her a petition for divorce. Wife asked Husband by telephone what the documents meant. Husband responded that he was divorcing her. Ms. Crosier, Husband’s attorney, sent Wife a letter stating in part: “I have been retained to represent Mr. Brian Higdon in the above-styled divorce action.” Wife testified to receiving a letter from Ms. Crosier but stated “[m]aybe I didn’t read it because … It was too hurt [sic]. I didn’t read it.”

Wife testified that, in May 2018, she returned to the United States to attend Lauren’s graduation from the University of Tennessee Knoxville. She stayed with Husband for the visit. According to Wife, upon her return, Husband threatened her into signing the MDA. Wife testified that she was not presented with an asset and liability disclosure at the time. Wife also testified that Husband told her she was not entitled to any of his military pension. In addition, Wife stated that Husband led her to believe Ms. Crosier represented both of them. Wife was asked about the circumstances leading up to her signing the MDA, as well as what eventually prompted her to call Ms. Crosier:

Q. Where -- where were you? A. We were at home. It was just me and him. And he took me to a -- maybe, post office, something like that. And he pointed some spot, sign; and he flipped over, sign; flip over, sign. Q. What was your understanding of -- well, strike that. Did you feel like you had a choice? A. No. He threatened me. I know he had so many guns in the gun safe, and he has handgun. I cannot open the gun safe. He has it. And he has hand gestured having gun on his head and chest (indicating). I don’t love you….

***

Q. I’m going to bring you back to that day. Now, Ms. Higdon, were you presented with an affidavit or an asset disclosure as has now -- A. No. Q. -- been presented to you? A. It’s -- when I asked him -- because I knew he was investing with Janus. I asked him how much we had in Janus. He said, Zero, nothing. And I didn’t see affidavit. Q. Okay. A. Diane, the lawyer, didn’t send me affidavit, and he didn’t show me. Q. Okay. Number two, what was your understanding of the military retirement? -3- A. I knew I get 50 percent, but he said, No. I said, Yes. And he said, Because you didn’t live with me in the last few years, you cannot get it. Q. What was your understanding of Ms. Crosier’s role in this divorce? A. Because he told me, She is our lawyer and that she is United States lawyer; she doesn’t lie. I said, you know, I suppose to get 50 percent of retirement. And he said, It’s all legally made because the lawyer is our lawyer, and she doesn’t lie.

Q. All right. When did you learn that you may have had an interest in the retirement of your husband -- or under your husband’s name? When did you learn that? A. I just automatically knew what -- I mean. Q. Okay. Let me say this. What prompted you -- did you call Ms. Crosier? A. I called her. Q. Okay. Why did you call her? A. Well, because I got the wrong information, because, you know, all my military friends all say, you know, Did you get the 50 percent? I said, No, because -- and him and his lawyer said I’m not supposed to because I didn’t live with him few years end of his Air Force. So they said I’m not -- I cannot get it. But my friends said it is not true. You -- you supposed to get it.

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Bluebook (online)
Brian Lee Higdon v. Aehui Nmi Higdon, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brian-lee-higdon-v-aehui-nmi-higdon-tennctapp-2020.