Christopher Grey Cummings v. Pepper Lynne Werner Cummings

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 15, 2004
DocketM2003-00086-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Christopher Grey Cummings v. Pepper Lynne Werner Cummings (Christopher Grey Cummings v. Pepper Lynne Werner Cummings) 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
Christopher Grey Cummings v. Pepper Lynne Werner Cummings, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE February 18, 2004 Session

CHRISTOPHER GREY CUMMINGS v. PEPPER LYNNE WERNER CUMMINGS

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Williamson County No. 28924 Russ Heldman, Chancellor

No. M2003-00086-COA-R3-CV – Filed October 15, 2004

The trial court granted the husband a divorce on the ground of the wife’s adultery and made various rulings regarding the parenting arrangement for the parties’ one year old son, child support, property division, and award of attorney’s fees. The parties have appealed most of the those rulings. Although we affirm the equal sharing of residential placement, we find the six month alternating schedule is not in this child’s best interests. We also find other parts of the plan must be vacated in view of recent holdings by the Tennessee Supreme Court. Therefore, we vacate the parenting plan and remand for entry of a new permanent parenting plan addressing the residential schedule, the designation of primary residential parent, allocation of decision-making authority, and child support. In the interim, we reinstate the trial court’s pendente lite arrangement, as modified, and establish interim support. We affirm the division of property, modify the allocation of debt, and modify the award of attorney’s fees.

Tenn. R. App. P. Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed in Part, Modified in Part, Vacated in Part, and Remanded

PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which WILLIAM C. KOCH , JR., P.J., M.S., and FRANK G. CLEMENT , JR., J., joined.

Thomas F. Bloom, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Pepper Lynne Werner Cummings.

Robert Todd Jackson, Virginia Lee Story, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Christopher Grey Cummings.

OPINION

In this appeal from the trial court’s order in their divorce action, the parties have raised a number of issues. The parties were married only fourteen months before the divorce action was initiated. As with many divorce actions, the parties view their experiences from very different perspectives. The wife tells a story of abandonment, neglect, and loneliness. The husband’s is one of betrayal and deceit.

I. THE MARRIAGE

Christopher Grey Cummings and Pepper Lynn Werner met and began dating in May of 2000. Mr. Cummings, then thirty-five years of age, was unemployed and living in his parents’ Brentwood home. His future wife, who taught Interior Design at Watkins Institute, was two years younger and lived on a rented farm in Leiper’s Fork. After they had dated for a while, Chris Cummings left his parents’ home and moved in with Ms. Cummings, then Ms. Werner.

At some subsequent point, Mr. Cummings bought a trash pick-up service and began to devote himself to operating this new business. He demonstrated energy and ambition in this enterprise, working extremely long hours to get his business off the ground. According to Ms. Cummings’ testimony, on some days he worked from 4:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m., and in some weeks he worked all seven days. Mr. Cummings’ other interests included hunting, watching sports, and participating in the activities of his Masonic Lodge. He stayed at a hunting lodge with his long-time friends every weekend during hunting season and two weekends a month during the rest of the year. On Thursdays, he went to meetings at his Masonic Lodge. These activities, combined with his new business, meant Mr. Cummings was rarely home.

In March of 2001, Ms. Cummings discovered that she was pregnant. After Mr. Cummings’ initially angry reaction, Ms. Cummings agreed to marry him if he promised to reduce hours away from home and to put an end to his habit of chewing tobacco and leaving his spit cups all over the house. He promised to do both those things. The parties drove to Gatlinburg and got married on Sunday, May 20, 2001. They returned home almost immediately because Mr. Cummings had to work on Monday. Since there was no honeymoon, Mr. Cummings promised that the couple would celebrate their one year anniversary by taking a special trip. That trip never happened.

After the marriage, the parties rented a home in Brentwood near Mr. Cummings’ parents. They used the furnishings from Ms. Cummings’ home in Leiper’s Fork to set up the new household, as Mr. Cummings had none of his own. Ms. Cummings testified that her husband did not change his ways after the marriage, despite his promises to do so. She herself had promised, at Mr. Cummings’ insistence, to stop working after the baby was born so she could be a stay-at-home mother.

Ms. Cummings gave birth to the parties’ son, Grey Cummings, on November 21, 2001.1 Even after the birth of their child, Mr. Cummings continued to divide his time between his work and his

1 According to the testimony of Ms. Cummings, her husband went hunting with his friends two days after Grey was born. Mr. Cummings denied having done so. W e note that this was one of the few factual matters about which the parties and their witnesses testified in direct contradiction to each other.

-2- friends, devoting very little time or attention to his wife, the baby, or household tasks. Ms. Cummings, who had few friends of her own, gave up her job in accordance with the parties’ agreement, and became a full-time mother and housekeeper. Mr. Cummings continued to chew tobacco regularly.

By March of 2002, the parties were operating on entirely different schedules. Mr. Cummings was going to bed at 1:00 or 2:00 a.m. every night, while his wife had to go to bed at 9:00 or 9:30 so she would be able to get up during the night to feed the baby. Ms. Cummings testified that around this time, her husband stopped communicating with her. Shortly thereafter, in May, Ms. Cummings developed a friendship with Bruce Thompson, the manager of a stable where she boarded her horses. The friendship deepened after Ms. Cummings’ mare gave birth to a colt that died the following day. The relationship between Ms. Cummings and Mr. Thompson escalated in June into a sexual affair.

Mr. Cummings found some photos showing his wife, Mr. Thompson, and the baby together, and he began to suspect that his wife was having an affair. He confronted her with his suspicions, but she denied any such relationship. Mr. Cummings did not believe her. He became openly hostile, essentially hounding his wife. When their discussions became confrontational, and Ms. Cummings would attempt to walk away, her husband would follow, pointing his finger at her and screaming that she was a fornicator and an adulterer.

The parties continued (tensely) to share the same home, but Mr. Cummings withdrew financial support from his wife. He stopped making payments on her car and credit cards, and closed their checking account without telling her. Her checks bounced, and unpaid bills accumulated. She went back to work, taking two part-time jobs that generated about $800 per month. She also enrolled in graduate school, with the intention of obtaining a Master’s Degree in Business Administration to enhance her earning potential.

Ms. Cummings testified that on the two days a week when she worked the opening shift at the Y.M.C.A., she would leave for work at 4:00 a.m. and return at 8:00 a.m. to find that the baby had not been fed, bathed or clothed. Mr. Cummings testified to the contrary, stating that on those days he properly cared for Grey. Ms. Cummings also testified that when she went to work on Wednesday evenings, her husband did not himself take care of the baby, but took him to his parents’ house.

After an initial hearing in the divorce action, the trial court ordered that the parties share residential placement and primary custodial responsibility for Grey on an alternating week basis. The parties continued to live in the same house. On the weeks Mr.

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