Carol Denice Pettijohn v. Patrick Carl Pettijohn

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 28, 2011
DocketE2010-01255-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Carol Denice Pettijohn v. Patrick Carl Pettijohn (Carol Denice Pettijohn v. Patrick Carl Pettijohn) 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 Denice Pettijohn v. Patrick Carl Pettijohn, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE January 31, 2011 Session

CAROL DENICE PETTIJOHN v. PATRICK CARL PETTIJOHN

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Polk County No. CV-09-088 Lawrence H. Puckett, Judge

No. E2010-01255-COA-R3-CV - Filed February 28, 2011

In this divorce case, the trial court’s judgment ended the relatively-long marriage of Carol Denice Pettijohn (“Wife”) and Patrick Carl Pettijohn (“Husband”). Husband appeals the trial court’s division of the marital property, its award of alimony in solido to Wife, and the duration of the alimony in futuro award. We affirm.

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

C HARLES D. S USANO, J R., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which H ERSCHEL P. F RANKS, P.J., and D. M ICHAEL S WINEY, J., joined.

D. Mitchell Bryant, Athens, Tennessee, for the appellant, Patrick Carl Pettijohn.

Philip M. Jacobs, Cleveland, Tennessee, for the appellee, Carol Denice Pettijohn.

OPINION

I.

Husband and Wife separated in late 2009 after 24 years of marriage and two children. Wife filed for a divorce on the grounds of inappropriate marital conduct and irreconcilable differences. Specifically, Wife complained that Husband’s drinking had “created an intolerable environment” and that Husband was “obsessive compulsive to the extent that he . . . caused great mental and emotional anguish” to Wife and their children. Husband denied that he was an alcoholic, suffered from a personality disorder or was guilty of any inappropriate marital conduct. He filed a counterclaim alleging that he was entitled to a divorce based on Wife’s inappropriate marital conduct. Mediation was unsuccessful. A bench trial was held in April 2010. Evidence was presented in the form of testimony from Husband and Wife and the deposition of Wife’s physician.1 At the time of trial, Husband was 49 and Wife was 46. The parties’ 19-year-old daughter attended a local community college, and their 15-year-old son was a junior in high school.2 Both children remained in the marital home with Wife, while Husband was living rent-free in a two-bedroom house owned by his mother.

Two years into the marriage, the parties made a down payment on a home in Polk County that they would share for the next 23 years. Wife’s father financed the balance of the purchase price. In 1999, Wife and her sister each received a gift of $10,000 from their father. Wife used her gift to pay the balance on the loan owed to her father.

Both parties started college, but neither finished before entering the work force. Throughout the marriage, Husband worked for Bowater, Inc. By the time of trial, he was earning $98,588.02 a year as a “back tender” or papermaker. Wife also worked, but, with Husband’s approval, she left her job six months after their first child was born and became a homemaker; she did not return to the work force until years later when their second child entered pre-school. Over the years, Wife primarily attended to the children and maintained the household, while Husband worked long hours and accepted many overtime shifts. On Wife’s return to work, she was employed by the State of Tennessee, Division of Forestry, as a secretary in the tree sales department. Wife’s position was seasonal and she was laid off each summer for two months during which time she received unemployment benefits. At the time of trial, Wife earned about $18,000 a year at her secretarial job and received $2,063 in unemployment compensation. According to information in their proposed parenting plans, Husband’s current gross monthly income was $9,329 and Wife’s was $1,450.

Hard work and savings allowed the family to travel and enjoy recreational activities together – they purchased a boat, a camper, and four wheelers, all without incurring any debt. By all accounts, however, Husband and Wife argued constantly and the marriage ultimately suffered. Husband concluded, “me and her cannot live together under the same roof,” while Wife attributed the collapse of the marriage to Husband’s beer drinking and demanding personality. Husband added that, despite her asthma and other health problems, Wife continued to smoke – he conceded that he nagged her about her smoking the same way she stayed on him about his drinking. Husband admitted that Wife had asked him to stop drinking “a hundred times,” but he didn’t want to, “[j]ust like her . . . telling me [to] forget it” when he asked her to go outside to smoke. Husband did not testify to any health problems

1 The deposition of Dr. Greg Riley is not included in the record before us. 2 The minor child’s date of birth is July 29, 1993.

-2- of his own. He described his job as “hot and dirty work” and emphasized that he “worked his butt off,” to reach his present position. According to Husband, he was able to work more overtime shifts when he was younger, but had to keep working now to put both children through school.

Wife admitted that Husband was a “hard worker.” She credited his efforts, together with her father’s generosity, for allowing them to get ahead and pay cash for everything. She conceded that Husband had never missed work or gotten into any criminal trouble as a result of his drinking although she said “he certainly could have.” According to Wife, she loved Husband and the divorce was difficult; she felt that Husband had chosen drinking over his family.

The evidence showed that Wife had various health concerns. She suffered from “flare-ups” of rheumatoid arthritis and chronic asthma, and had undergone two back surgeries, most recently in 2005, to repair ruptured disks. Wife also had hypothyroidism, a condition that resulted in fatigue, mood swings, weight gain and depression for which she was prescribed medications including anti-depressants. It was essential for Wife to keep her job in order to keep her health insurance.

At the conclusion of trial, the court granted Wife a divorce, adopted Husband’s proposed parenting plan and set Husband’s child support obligation at $1,034 a month pursuant to the Child Support Guidelines. With a few significant exceptions, the parties agreed to the value and distribution of the marital assets and there were no marital debts. The total net value of the marital estate was approximately $604,060, but the parties, by agreement, gave certain assets to their children, leaving approximately $481,509 to be divided between them. Marital assets to be divided included Husband’s 401(k) account ($216,847.24), a 2002 Malibu Sportster boat ($11,280), a 2000 John Deere tractor ($4,500) and the four wheelers. There were various items used in maintaining the marital property including a wood stove ($200), a kerosene heater ($400), hedge trimmers ($100), a portable air tank ($250), a chain saw ($50), and a bench grinder ($100).

The court awarded each party one-half of Husband’s 401(k). Wife received the boat, the wood stove, the chain saw and the air tank, while Husband received the tractor, the four wheelers, the heater, the hedge trimmers and the bench grinder. Excluding their interest in the marital home ($87,500 each), the trial court divided the marital assets as follows: $150,595.45 to Husband and $155,914.04 to Wife. Wife was awarded alimony in futuro of $750 a month, to increase to $1,750 when Husband’s child support obligation ceased in May 2011. As particularly pertinent to this appeal, the trial court awarded to Wife, as alimony in solido, Husband’s one-half interest in the marital real property.

-3- The trial court set forth its factual findings and conclusions of law in its final decree as follows:

The assets shall be divided as stated on the . . . Master Asset List. . . . The Court believes that this is an equitable distribution of property with regard to non real property assets.

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Carol Denice Pettijohn v. Patrick Carl Pettijohn, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carol-denice-pettijohn-v-patrick-carl-pettijohn-tennctapp-2011.