Carrie Mobley v. Mark Adam Mobley

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 30, 2013
DocketE2012-00390-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Carrie Mobley v. Mark Adam Mobley (Carrie Mobley v. Mark Adam Mobley) 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
Carrie Mobley v. Mark Adam Mobley, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE March 4, 2013 Session

CARRIE MOBLEY v. MARK ADAM MOBLEY

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Monroe County No. V10021S J. Michael Sharp, Judge

No. E2012-00390-COA-R3-CV-FILED-APRIL 30, 2013

This is divorce case pertaining to the marriage of Carrie Mobley (“Mother”) and Mark Adam Mobley (“Father”). The parties were married for 15 years. They have three minor daughters (collectively “Children”). Following a two-day trial, the court divorced the parties, divided their marital property, and made decrees regarding the custody of the Children. With respect to the Children, the trial court designated Father as the primary residential parent; it then ordered a 50/50 shared residential parenting arrangement. Following the divorce, the court found Mother to be in willful contempt of multiple provisions of its judgment. It sentenced her to ten days in jail on each of five counts. The court suspended the sentences on condition that there be no further violations. Mother appeals. She challenges the trial court’s judgment as to (1) the designation of Father as the primary residential parent, (2) portions of the residential parenting schedule, and (3) the inclusion of a “paramour provision” in the divorce judgment. In addition, she appeals the contempt findings, sentences, and award of fees to Father on the contempt proceedings. We reverse in part and affirm in part.

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

C HARLES D. S USANO, JR., P.J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D. M ICHAEL S WINEY and T HOMAS R. F RIERSON, II, JJ., joined.

John W. Cleveland, Sr., Sweetwater, Tennessee, for the appellant, Carrie Mobley.

Randy Sellers, Cleveland, Tennessee, for the appellee, Mark Adam Mobley. OPINION

I.

A.

Father and Mother were married on June 2, 1995. At the time of trial, the Children were ages ten, eight, and five. The parties are college-educated school teachers. For the past 19 years, Mother has taught at Rural Vale Elementary School in Monroe County, where all three Children attend. Father is a special education teacher and a coach of boys’ basketball at Central High School in McMinn County. Pending trial, the couple agreed to a temporary parenting plan under the terms of which Mother was the primary custodian and Father had typical visitation with the Children of every other weekend and one night a week. When the temporary plan was in effect, Mother and Children remained in the marital home in Tellico Plains, while Father moved to a three-bedroom, brick home with a “nice yard” in Etowah, some 25 minutes away.

From the start, the parties experienced problems in their relationship. After they were married, their disputes continued. A particularly intense argument took place in the presence of the Children in 2006. Mother repeatedly hit Father on the back of the head. Father raised his fist at her and attempted to slam a chair down on her, but never actually touched her. The parties threw each other’s clothes into the yard. Janet Hooper, Mother’s mother, went to the home. She found the police there, Father “irate,” and Mother and the Children crying. When Mother and her mother asked the officers about getting a protective order, Father ran at Mother with his fist clenched and accused her and everyone else of telling lies about him. Both parties testified to other such incidents; the police were called more than once. Father said Mother frequently slapped him. He recalled five or six times that Mother had physically struck him when they argued. She once hit him with a metal sprayer on a hose pipe, cutting his head and rendering him unconscious.

Following the 2006 incident, the parties separated after Wife sought a protective order. They attended marital and family counseling and Husband saw a counselor of his own approximately 25 times. While Mother and Father were in marital counseling, she confronted him about the fact that he had discussed their marital relationship with his teaching assistant, with whom Mother suspected he was having an affair. According to Mother, Father “admitted that he had let it go too far and that it was inappropriate,” but he failed to take steps to have her transferred to another classroom. Ultimately, the parties reconciled, but their contentious relationship did not improve. Mother alleged that Husband was sexually abusive in that he constantly prodded her into having sexual intercourse even while she was recovering from surgeries for “female problems.” Father countered this by

-2- testifying that the two resumed consensual relations only after Mother’s doctor said it was safe to do so. Father denied ever sexually abusing Mother, striking her, or pushing her, but admitted he sometimes had anger issues. In a journal, he had written that he “sometimes [was] . . . rash and loud” when he became impatient. Father said he was generally not a confrontational type of person, but guessed that he and Mother knew how to upset each other. While trying to “make things right,” Father saw a doctor and was prescribed medications for an obsessive/compulsive disorder, but he was not under a doctor’s care at the time of trial. The parties separated again in 2009. Mother filed for divorce in January 2010.

Mother was the Children’s primary caregiver. She felt that, once the Children came along, Father was jealous and resentful of the time she spent with them. She said Father was always upset about something and used a loud, “hateful” tone and angry hand gestures with the Children. He spanked them. Mother said Father’s coaching obligations often conflicted with the temporary parenting schedule. Father testified that, although it brought in extra income the family needed, he had no problem giving up coaching entirely if he were awarded custody of the Children. He testified: “But if I do get the kids, there is just no way that I could care for them as well as I need to and be a coach and a single parent.” Father coached after school most years from October through March.

Pending trial, Mother twice called the Department of Children’s Services alleging sexual abuse by Father against one or more of the Children. Before Mother filed for divorce, both parties remained in the home but slept in separate bedrooms. During this time, Mother said Father refused to sleep anywhere but with the oldest child in her bed. Mother testified that her call to DCS was prompted by the oldest child telling her that Father had been “touching” her. Father admitted that the parties separated for several months before the divorce complaint was filed and that he remained in the marital home for financial reasons. He agreed that he slept in the oldest child’s bedroom and that she sometimes slept with him, which, according to him, was not unusual. According to Father, the Children always ended up moving around at night, sleeping “wherever,” – on the couch, with Father or with Mother, and had never consistently stayed in their own beds all night. Father adamantly denied any inappropriate interactions with any of the Children. He noted that the Children “didn’t have any vanity” about using the restroom with the door wide open, undressing or bathing in front of him. Although he had always enjoyed roughhousing with the Children, Mother’s allegations left him worried that even playing with them could bring about more accusations designed to hurt him.

Mother conceded that she had not mentioned sexual abuse of herself or the Children in her discovery responses. She also signed an agreed order for Father to have unsupervised, overnight visitation with the Children after reporting Father to DCS. DCS conducted an investigation that included interviews with the Children and concluded the allegations were

-3- unfounded.

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Carrie Mobley v. Mark Adam Mobley, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carrie-mobley-v-mark-adam-mobley-tennctapp-2013.