Citrina Louise Gensmer v. Luke August Gensmer

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 30, 2017
DocketW2017-00443-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Citrina Louise Gensmer v. Luke August Gensmer (Citrina Louise Gensmer v. Luke August Gensmer) 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
Citrina Louise Gensmer v. Luke August Gensmer, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

11/30/2017 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON September 20, 2017 Session

CITRINA LOUISE GENSMER V. LUKE AUGUST GENSMER

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Henry County No. 21044 Carma Dennis McGee, Chancellor

No. W2017-00443-COA-R3-CV

The divorced mother and father of a nine year-old child were sharing residential time equally when the mother notified the father of her intent to relocate to Gulfport, Mississippi, eight to nine hours away. The father opposed the relocation and asked the court to designate him as the primary residential parent. After determining that the parties spent substantially equal intervals of time with the child during the twelve months immediately preceding the trial, the court conducted a best interest analysis to determine whether it was in the child’s best interest to relocate with the mother. Concluding that it was not in the child’s best interest to relocate, the court designated the father as the primary residential parent and entered a new parenting plan in which the mother was awarded sixty-four days per year of residential time with the child. The mother appealed several aspects of the trial court’s decision, and we affirm the judgment in all respects.

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

ANDY D. BENNETT, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which J. STEVEN STAFFORD, P.J., W.S., and BRANDON O. GIBSON, J., joined.

Shon DeBrock Johnson, Jasmine Monique McMackins, and Ethan Daniel Lavelle, Paris, Tennessee, for the appellant, Citrina Louise Gensmer.

Teresa McCaig Marshall, Paris, Tennessee, for the appellee, Luke August Gensmer.

OPINION

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

This is a post-divorce case in which Citrina Louise Gensmer (“Mother”) sought to relocate to Gulfport, Mississippi with the parties’ child (“the Child”) a little over four years following the parties’ divorce. Luke August Gensmer (“Father”) opposed the relocation and filed a petition to modify the permanent parenting plan in place since the parties’ divorce in 2009. Father sought to change the primary residential parent from Mother to himself, asserting that a change of material circumstances warranted such a change.

The trial court held a two-day hearing on June 10 and 11, 2015, during which Mother, Father, and several other witnesses testified. Recognizing that the relocation statute applies differently to situations in which parents spend substantially equal time with their child(ren) as provided in Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-6-108(c), than to situations in which the parents do not spend substantially equal time with their child(ren) as provided in Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-6-108(d), the court bifurcated the hearing to determine, first, which section of the relocation statute should be applied to this case.

Mother, Father, and Father’s former girlfriend testified regarding the parties’ time spent with the Child. In addition, Father introduced a calendar for the months August 2014 through May 2015 on which he marked the days the Child spent with each parent. Mother stated that she also had a calendar on which she had marked the days the Child spent with each parent, but she did not present the calendar as evidence at the trial. Mother disputed Father’s calendar to the extent that it showed the Child was with Father on May 221 and regarding a few other days when Mother testified that Father did not pick the Child up from Mother’s house until 5:00 or 6:00 in the evening. Other than those discrepancies, Mother testified that Father’s calendar was correct. Mother testified that she spent 57% of the twelve-month period preceding the trial with the Child and that Father spent 43% of that time with the Child.

The trial court concluded that the parties spent substantially equal intervals of time with the Child and that Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-6-108(c) would apply to determine whether Mother would be permitted to relocate with the Child. The court announced its decision in open court following the first part of the trial. It stated, in relevant part:

In January 2014, the mother sent notice of her intended relocation or notified father of her intended relocation. From January 13 to March 13, 2014, the father was in Fort Bragg, North Carolina, for training and was deployed for approximately two months during the summer of 2014. In 2015, the father has been to a five-day training in January. During this time, the mother testified that she did not keep exact records of the father’s schedule with the child, but that the parties cooperated for the father to have the child as much as possible. Upon return from deployment in August ‘14, the father has kept a calendar since that time of the days that the child has spent with each parent. That has been admitted into evidence as Exhibit 1.

1 Mother testified the Child was with her on that day. -2- The dates reflected on that are undisputed by the mother with the exception of May 22, 2015, and two other dates which she alleges were split by the parties. The mother does not have a record that she has kept of those dates. She stated that she had a calendar, but she did not have that with her today. However, she estimated the time that she had spent with the child since August 2014 to be 57 percent of the total time. Additionally, the father’s former longtime girlfriend, Magen Washburn, testified that she was familiar with the schedule that the child had spent with the parties and she testified that she agreed that there had been basically an equal split since the day of move to Paris in 2012 with the exception of this period of deployment or training after that time.

....

The Court finds that the relevant time period in this matter that the Court examined in looking at whether the parties had spent substantially equal intervals of time with the child should be that of one year prior to today’s hearing. The Court notes specifically that this matter regarding relocation commenced in January of 2014. We are approximately 18 months after that date for today’s hearing. The Court is unaware of the reasons for the delay in the time period, but the Court must consider the situation that the child is in now and the situation that the child has been accustomed to for the past 12 months. The Court is not stating that anyone bears the fault for this matter having not been heard more quickly. As I said, the Court is unaware why this matter has not come up for a final hearing any earlier than it has. The Court is making the relevance in the last 12 months or the relevant time period.

The Court finds, based upon the evidence presented, that the parents have spent substantially equal intervals of time with the child during the past year. Again, as stated earlier, the statute is not looking for exactly equal. It is substantially equal intervals of time that is stated in the statute. Therefore, this case would fall under TCA § 36-6-108(c), which states: “If the parents are actually spending substantially equal intervals of time with the child and the relocating parent seeks to move with the child” -- and skipping down to the pertinent parts – “the Court shall determine whether or not to permit relocation of the child based upon the best interest of the child. The Court shall consider all relevant factors, including those factors found in TCA § 36-6-106(a), 1-15.”

The best interest factors enumerated in Tenn. Code Ann. §

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Bluebook (online)
Citrina Louise Gensmer v. Luke August Gensmer, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citrina-louise-gensmer-v-luke-august-gensmer-tennctapp-2017.