Chad Ellis Everett v. Melissa B. Everett Burchfield

192 So. 3d 1053, 2015 Miss. App. LEXIS 640, 2015 WL 8097000
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedDecember 8, 2015
Docket2014-CA-00904-COA
StatusPublished

This text of 192 So. 3d 1053 (Chad Ellis Everett v. Melissa B. Everett Burchfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chad Ellis Everett v. Melissa B. Everett Burchfield, 192 So. 3d 1053, 2015 Miss. App. LEXIS 640, 2015 WL 8097000 (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

ISHEE, J.,

for the Court:.

¶ 1. In 2013, Chad Everett and Melissa B. Everétt Burchfield divorced after seven years of marriage. They have four children together. ■ Pursuant to their child-custody agreement, Everett and Burch-field shared joint custody of the children by alternating weeks of custody. The parties’ property-settlement agreement reflected this arrangement by allowing Everett to claim two children as dependents on his. tax forms and Burchfield, the other two. .In 2014, Everett filed a, petition to modify the child-custody agreement and sought, sole physical custody' of the children. Burchfield filed a response and a counterclaim also seeking full physical custody of the children. The Lafayette County Chancery Court'held a hearing on the merits and determined that the evidence warranted a change in physical custody. The chancellor granted full physical custody to Burchfield and altered the parties’ property-settlement agreement to allow Burchfield to, include all four children as dependents on her tax forms. Aggrieved, Everett appeals. We affirm the chancellor’s judgment with regard to custody. However, the parties’ property-settlement agreement was not properly before the chancery court for amendment. Accord *1055 ingly, we reverse and render the chancellor’s ruling as to Burchfield’s right to claim all four children as dependents for tax purposes.

STATEMENT OF FACTS

¶2. Everett and Burchfield were married on March 18, 2006. Burchfield brought two children into the marriage— Hannah, born in 1998, and Hailey, born in 2000. Following his marriage to Burch-field, Everett adopted Hannah and Hailey. Everett and Burchfield have two biological children together — Natalie, born in 2008, and Wyatt, born in 2009.

¶ 3. In July 2018, the parties’ divorce was -finalized through the entry of a child-custody agreement and a property-settlement agreement. Everett and Burchfield agreed to joint custody of the children in the child-custody agreement, with each party alternating weeks of custody. By extension, the property-settlement agreement allowed for each party to list two of the children as dependents on their respective tax forms.

¶4. Following the divorce, Burchfield remarried. Her husband, John Burch-field, has custody of his two children, Wesley and Madelyn, from a previous marriage. The Burchfields soon purchased a home that includes four bedrooms and three bathrooms. They continue to reside in the home at present and pay a monthly mortgage on the property.

¶ 5. The record indicates that Everett lives in a home purchased by his mother. The record also reflects that Everett’s mother pays the monthly mortgage on the property. In addition, Everett’s mother loaned him a substantial sum of money for him to purchase.another home in Clarks-dale, Mississippi. In general, Everett’s mother plays a substantial financial role in his life. In addition to the two homes mentioned above, Everett’s mother also owns the liquor store that Everett has managed for approximately a year and a half. From this job Everett gains income and health insurance. However, the familial ties also offer him flexibility at work. He testified that he usually works from about 8:00 in the morning until 2:00 in the afternoon, five days a week.

¶ 6. Burchfield serves as a clinic-operations director at Clarksdale HMA Physician Management, which is located approximately an hour and fifteen minutes away from the Burchfields’ home. She has worked there for over seven years. Her employer affords her flexibility in her Work hours to accommodate the children’s school schedules. Burchfield leaves work at 4:00 p.m, to pick up Wyatt, the youngest child,- from school every day by 5:15 p.m. The other children1 ride the bus to and from school. John ensures that the three older children reach the bus safely in the mornings before dropping off Wyatt at school. In the afternoons, the older three children arrive home just under an hour and a half before Burchfield returns with Wyatt. Nonetheless, the record indicates that Burchfield has family nearby who can transport the children to after-school activities or . check on them, if needed, before Burchfield arrives home.

¶ 7. The record indicates that the post-divorce relationship between Everett and Burchfield has been1 less than amicable ■since Burchfield married John. There is evidence that in addition to showing hostility toward John, Everett has instructed the children to dislike John. The record also shows that Everett has promoted tension by failing to co-parent with Burch-field. . Everett’s solution to a parenting disagreement with Burchfield appears to be threatening to call the authorities. Nonetheless, Everett repeatedly violated rules that Burchfield set in place, mostly for the older children. While numerous *1056 examples were littered throughout the record, several were quite notable. Everett allows the children to have social-media accounts, despite Burchfield’s prohibition on them. He allows the older child to date an older boy from out of town, of which Burchfield does not approve. He purchased motorcycle lessons for one of the children without informing Burchfield, and then proceeded to offer to buy the child a motorcycle if she would live with him permanently.

¶ 8. Despite Everett’s parental- misgivings, he claims that the Burchfields’ home is unfit for the children. In this vein, Everett has accused Burchfield of sexual misconduct. . This accusation aróse out of an incident when, around 12:30 at night, the Burchfields had sexual relations in ■their marital bed while Wyatt was asleep on the floor in the room. Though Wyatt was unaware of the circumstances,-Hailey, unbeknownst to the Burchfields and without permission, had snuck out of bed to watch television in a room adjacent to the master bedroom and heard the incident.

¶ 9. Another incident occurred in 2014 wherein Wesley, John’s son, offered to show Hailey his penis in exchange for her showing him her breasts. Hailey reported the incident to a school counselor two days later. The counselor called the Burch-fields, who immediately met with the counselor, Hailey, and Wesley. Wesley was quickly placed in counseling, and strict privacy rules were set in place for all of the children at the Burchfields’ home.

¶ 10. Immediately thereafter, Everett had the children during his week of custody. At the end of the week, he returned three of the children to the Burchfields’ home but refused to return Hailey. After a heated discussion arose between Everett and Burchfield in the presence of one or more of the children, the authorities were called to help resolve the matter. Two days later, Everett returned to the home with authorities to serve a restraining order on John. The restraining order claimed that John had inappropriately touched the children and that he had threatened to kill Everett. Everett demanded that John and Wesley leave the Burchfields’ home until the matter was resolved. John and Wesley complied.

¶ 11. At a trial on the restraining order, the evidence showed that there was no basis for the restraining order. Most notably, Hannah and Hailey admitted that John had never sexually abused them. To the contrary, the evidence supported the theory that Everett had prompted Hannah and Hailey to falsely accuse John of sexual abuse. Hence, the restraining order was dissolved.

¶ 12.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
192 So. 3d 1053, 2015 Miss. App. LEXIS 640, 2015 WL 8097000, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chad-ellis-everett-v-melissa-b-everett-burchfield-missctapp-2015.