Christy L. Taylor v. Randall Robinson, Jr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 5, 2007
DocketM2006-00109-COA-R3-JV
StatusPublished

This text of Christy L. Taylor v. Randall Robinson, Jr. (Christy L. Taylor v. Randall Robinson, Jr.) 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
Christy L. Taylor v. Randall Robinson, Jr., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE January 11, 2007 Session

CHRISTY L. TAYLOR v. RANDALL ROBINSON, JR.

Appeal from the Juvenile Court for Rutherford County No. 3815C Donna Scott, Judge

No. M2006-00109-COA-R3-JV - Filed on June 5, 2007

The mother of a twelve year old boy filed a petition to establish the paternity of the child. A DNA test confirmed that the man named in the petition was indeed the biological father, and he agreed to pay temporary child support during the pendency of the case. The mother asked the court to order the father to pay retroactive child support back to the date of the child’s birth, in accordance with the child support guidelines. After a hearing, the trial court decided that a deviation from the guidelines was warranted because of the mother’s failure to inform the father of his possible paternity prior to filing the legitimation petition. The court accordingly ordered that retroactive support be paid only from the date of the filing of the petition. We affirm the trial court, but remand this case so the court can state in its order the “the total amount of retroactive support that would have been paid retroactively to the birth of the child, had a deviation not been made by the court,” as is required by Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-2-311(a)(11)(F).

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Juvenile Court Affirmed

PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which FRANK G. CLEMENT , JR., J., and J. S. DANIEL, SR. J., joined.

Donald M. Bulloch, Jr., Murfreesboro, Tennessee, for the appellant, Christy L. Taylor.

Terry A. Fann, Murfreesboro, Tennessee, for the appellee, Randall Robinson, Jr.

OPINION

I. BACKGROUND

The child at the center of these proceedings, Zachary Lee Taylor, was born on October 10, 1991. His mother, Christy Taylor (“Mother”) identified two men with whom she had been intimate at around the time that Zachary was conceived, the appellee, Randall Robinson, Jr., and David Holbrook, who was briefly her fiancé.1 The proof indicates that Mr. Robinson knew that Ms. Taylor had become pregnant, but the parties dispute the extent of his awareness, both before and after the child’s birth, that he might be the father.

Ms. Taylor testified that when she found out she was pregnant, she did not tell her gynecologist or her obstetrician whom she believed to be the father. She did not list Mr. Robinson as the child’s father on her application for TennCare, and she did not tell the hospital to place his name on the birth certificate. Ms. Taylor and Mr. Robinson and their respective families all lived in Murfreesboro and had known one another for many years, but the proof shows that over the next twelve years there was very little contact between them, most of which was through a few telephone calls. Because the proper resolution of this case turns largely on Mr. Robinson’s knowledge of the possibility that he was Zachary’s father, we will later discuss in detail the testimony as to the nature of those phone calls.

In 1993, Ms. Taylor married Michael Boyle. Mr. Boyle testified that his wife never told him the identity of Zachary’s father and that he was led to believe that she did not know. One child, a boy named Brandon, was born of the marriage. Mr. Boyle had a steady job with Bridgestone and provided for both children during the course of the marriage. In 1997, Mr. Boyle and Ms. Taylor divorced. Shortly after her divorce from Mr. Boyle, Ms. Taylor married a man named David Robinson, who was also apparently a good provider. That marriage lasted until 2003 and also ended in divorce.

II. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

On December 2, 2003, about eight months after her divorce from David Robinson, Mother filed a Petition in the Juvenile Court of Rutherford County to establish Zachary’s paternity. The petition named Randall Robinson as the defendant and explicitly alleged for the first time that he was her child’s natural and biological father. Mr. Robinson agreed to undergo DNA testing. A resulting Parentage Test Report found a probability of greater than 99.99% that Randall Robinson was Zachary’s father. Hereinafter in this opinion, we will sometimes refer to Mr. Robinson as “Father.”

Father subsequently admitted parentage and agreed to pay Mother temporary child support of $400 per month, pending a final support hearing. Father had married in 1995, and he and his wife had two young daughters. He added coverage for Zachary to the family medical insurance policy provided through his job.

Father provided Mother with his past income tax returns in response to a request in the legitimation petition. Mother used those returns to prepare a child support worksheet, which set out her claim for retroactive child support dating from Zachary’s birth. The total claim for support

1 The proof shows that Mr. Robinson and Ms. Taylor stopped dating shortly after she conceived, and that Ms. Taylor and Mr. Holbrook never married.

-2- amounted to $56,995. The claim for Zachary’s medical, dental, orthodontic and educational expenses as well as for attorney fees amounted to an additional $16,054.

The trial of this case was conducted over two days, beginning on August 17, 2004, and resuming on August 24, 2005.2 Testifying witnesses aside from Mother and Father were Jackie Mullinax Marshall, who had dated Father around the same time that Mother became pregnant with Zachary, Michael Boyle, Michael Boyle’s current wife Lisa, Father’s current wife, also named Lisa, and Father’s mother, Jane Manley.

Ms. Marshall testified that after she returned from a high school senior trip to Florida with Father and his parents, Mother called her and told her she was pregnant and wanted to get in touch with Father. Ms. Marshall said that she relayed that information to Father, who responded by saying that he didn’t think the child was his, since he knew Mother had been sexually involved with others.3

Mother testified that after several attempts she reached Mr. Robinson by telephone and told him she was pregnant. She also testified that she told Mr. Holbrook about her pregnancy. Father allegedly responded to her announcement by saying that he could not take the responsibility because he had other things going on in his life. When Father took the stand, however, he denied that Mother ever called him during her pregnancy, and he also denied Mother had ever spoken to him about it. He admitted, however, that he heard from someone around that time that Mother was pregnant.

The next phone call testified to allegedly occurred in 1994. Mother, who was still married to Michael Boyle at the time, testified that she called Father to ask him what he would think about the possibility of Mr. Boyle adopting Zachary. She testified that Father said that Michael was a good man. Father denied that this phone call had ever occurred.

By 1998 Mother had re-married, and she again called Father to talk about adoption, asking if he would be willing to sign adoption papers. He said yes. In 1999, Mother called again and reached Lisa Robinson, Father’s wife. Mother said that Zachary had a learning disability and had been complaining of chest pains, and that she wanted to learn about Father’s medical history.4 Lisa Robinson gave her the information she asked for.

2 There was an interval of over one year between the two days during which the trial of this case was conducted. The lengthy delay apparently resulted in large part from an extended illness suffered by the judge. The first day’s testimony was transcribed, and the judge thus had the opportunity to review it a few days before the second hearing day.

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Related

In re T.K.Y.
205 S.W.3d 343 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 2006)

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Bluebook (online)
Christy L. Taylor v. Randall Robinson, Jr., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christy-l-taylor-v-randall-robinson-jr-tennctapp-2007.