Carol Bracken Orten v. Thaddeus Charles Orten - Dissenting

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 26, 2005
DocketE2004-02987-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Carol Bracken Orten v. Thaddeus Charles Orten - Dissenting (Carol Bracken Orten v. Thaddeus Charles Orten - Dissenting) 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
Carol Bracken Orten v. Thaddeus Charles Orten - Dissenting, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE July 13, 2005 Session

CAROL BRACKEN ORTEN v. THADDEUS CHARLES ORTEN Appeal from the Fourth Circuit Court for Knox County No. 95527 Bill Swann, Judge

Filed August 26, 2005

No. E2004-02987-COA-R3-CV

Sharon G. Lee, dissenting.

I respectfully dissent from the majority opinion. I would hold that the trial court erred in not setting aside the entry of the default judgment against Mr. Orten. In my judgment the evidence supports the conclusion that Mr. Orten did not intentionally fail to appear at the second Trial Management Conference, but simply forgot to appear. Entry of a default judgment against Mr. Orten is too drastic a measure in this case.

A review of the evidence indicates that Ms. Orten filed for divorce on October 30, 2003; Mr. Orten answered and denied that grounds for divorce existed. On February 27, 2004, Ms. Orten sent Mr. Orten interrogatories and a request for production of documents. The discovery requests are not in the record, but from statements in Mr. Orten’s deposition, it appears that among other things, records requested included cancelled checks and credit card statements for the past five years. On April 2, 2004, when Mr. Orten’s answers were two days late, Ms. Orten filed a motion to compel responses to the interrogatories and request for production of documents. There was no hearing date set for this motion.

On April 15, 2004, a Trial Management Order was entered setting a Trial Management Conference for April 19, 2004, and setting the case for trial on July 21, 2004. This order included the language noted by the majority that both counsel and parties must be present in open court.

On April 16, 2004, an Interim Order was entered, upon motion of Ms. Orten and the agreement of the parties, which, inter alia, ordered Mr. Orten to move out of the marital residence within 30 days.

On April 19, 2004, Mr. Orten appeared at the first Trial Management Conference. On that same date, the parties filed a joint property and debt listing as required by court rules. On that same date, April 19, 2004, a second Trial Management Order was entered which set a second Trial Management Conference for June 28, 2004, and left unchanged the trial date of July 21, 2004. This order also contained the mandatory appearance language of the first Trial Management Order. Also on April 19, 2004, an order was entered which required the parties to attend mediation.

On April 30, 2004, an order was entered from the first Trial Management Conference which provided, inter alia, that the trial date was still set for July 21, 2004, and ordered Mr. Orten to produce requested discovery to Ms. Orten by April 30, 2004. This order also set the date for the second Trial Management Conference for June 28, 2004, but, unlike the previous Order, it did not contain the mandatory attendance language.

Mr. Orten appeared at a discovery deposition on Friday, June 25, 2004, where he was deposed by Ms. Orten’s attorney.

On Monday, June 28, 2004, the trial court commenced the second Trial Management Conference, but Mr. Orten was not present. His counsel advised the trial court:

We did have depositions on Friday and in the course of agreeing to continue those depositions until a subsequent date, I have to assume, without having spoken to my client, I have to assume that must have caused some confusion in his mind. But I have no idea, your honor.

We have sent correspondence to him. He has indicated in the past he has not received all that correspondence. It has not come back to us. So I know that I have sent him notices with respect to today’s hearing, but as I have indicated, perhaps as a result of some confusion as a result of continuing the depositions, I can only imagine. Clearly this matter was set for today.

Ms. Orten’s counsel requested that a default judgment issue against Mr. Orten. Mr. Orten’s counsel requested the trial court issue sanctions against Mr. Orten rather than a default judgment. The trial court responded: “It is a severe blow to the husband’s case, but it is one he has brought upon himself. So motion denied. I am sorry.” The trial court awarded Ms. Orten a default judgment based on Mr. Orten’s failure to attend the conference and his failure to comply with discovery requests. The trial court allowed Mr. Orten’s counsel to withdraw from representation of Mr. Orten, and allowed Ms. Orten to present her case, in the absence of Mr. Orten and without counsel for Mr. Orten. On July 26, 2004, Mr. Orten’s new attorney entered an appearance in the case.

Subsequently, an order was entered from the June 28, 2004 hearing which, inter alia, granted Ms. Orten a divorce, divided the marital estate, approved Ms. Orten’s parenting plan, and awarded Ms. Orten alimony until her death or remarriage.

Mr. Orten filed a motion to alter or amend or, in the alternative, for a new trial. The trial court denied the motion finding that Mr. Orten was given “clear, complete and repeated” notice of the trial management proceeding and that Mr. Orten’s nonappearance was consistent with his

2 “obstructive and defiant behavior throughout the case and constitutes a further act of passive aggression.”

At the hearing on Mr. Orten’s motion, Mr. Orten testified that except for the second Trial Management Conference, he had attended every scheduled divorce event - the discovery deposition, the mediation session, and the first Trial Management Conference. He did not attend the second Trial Management Conference because he forgot it was set that day. He explained to the trial court that had he remembered the hearing was set, he would have attended; that had his lawyer reminded him of the hearing, he would have been there. For all his other required appearances, his lawyer had reminded him to be there before the scheduled date. He did not recall hearing any discussion about the Trial Management Conference at the deposition. As he was leaving the deposition, his lawyer told him he would call him to remind him of the date they were getting together, but he did not receive a call that weekend.

Mr. Orten admitted that he received the Trial Management Order regarding the June 28, 2004 conference, but that it was in “stuff boxed up to move” which remained in boxes after he moved from the marital residence. He did not have the conference date written on a calendar anywhere.

Mr. Orten’s discovery deposition, which was admitted into evidence, does not reveal any discussions about the upcoming second Trial Management Conference. In the deposition, Mr. Orten testified that he had not actually received the interrogatories or request for documents but had reviewed them at his lawyer’s office with his lawyer’s secretary. The discovery requests are not in the record, but it appears from questions asked of Mr. Orten in his deposition that he was asked to provide cancelled checks, check registers, check stubs, deposit slips, debit or credit memoranda, transaction advances and bank statements for all bank accounts he had any involvement with for the last five years. Mr. Orten did not bring these records to the deposition as requested by wife’s counsel. He told her he had previously told his attorney that he did not keep those records more than a couple of months. The records involved a joint account to which the wife had access and Mr. Orten’s separate account. Later in the deposition, Mr. Orten agreed that he would provide eighteen months of bank statements. When asked for five years of monthly credit card statements for Chase, Bank of America and Discover statements, Mr. Orten said he would bring the current statements but, “I am not going to go back that many years . . . there is no need to.” The deposition continued on other matters and at the conclusion, wife’s counsel stated that the deposition of Mr.

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Carol Bracken Orten v. Thaddeus Charles Orten - Dissenting, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carol-bracken-orten-v-thaddeus-charles-orten-dissenting-tennctapp-2005.