Clinton William Clarneau v. Angela Dawn Clarneau

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 2, 2005
DocketM2003-02182-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Clinton William Clarneau v. Angela Dawn Clarneau (Clinton William Clarneau v. Angela Dawn Clarneau) 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
Clinton William Clarneau v. Angela Dawn Clarneau, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE November 5, 2004 Session

CLINTON WILLIAM CLARNEAU v. ANGELA DAWN CLARNEAU (NOW ATWOOD)

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Bedford County No. 23,185 J. B. Cox, Chancellor

No. M2003-02182-COA-R3-CV - Filed June 2, 2005

This is a custody dispute. The trial court granted the father’s petition to modify custody and changed primary custody of the parties’ two minor children from the mother to the father, based on findings of a material change of circumstances and the best interests of the children. On appeal, we reverse the trial court’s modification of custody finding there has not been a material change of circumstances justifying a change of custody and that the children’s best interests are served by remaining with Mother.

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

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

Lance B. Mayes, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Angela Dawn Clarneau (now Atwood).

Jason Ryan Reeves, Shelbyville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Clinton William Clarneau.

OPINION

Father, Clinton William Clarneau, and Mother, Angela Dawn Clarneau (now Atwood), married in September of 1997 and divorced three years later in December of 2000. They were awarded joint custody of their two minor daughters, H.C. and S.C. Mother was awarded primary physical custody of the children, but Father was given a liberal visitation schedule.1

1 Father was awarded visitation every Tuesday at 5 P.M. until Thursday at noon, every other weekend from Friday at noon until Sunday at noon, and from Sunday at 8 A.M. until noon on his “off” weekend. He was awarded four non-consecutive weeks of visitation during the summer, and the parties were instructed to equally share all major holidays. Although there were numerous conflicts in the interim,2 the parties adhered to the initial custody arrangement until January 11, 2002 when the court entered an ex parte order which granted total parenting responsibilities to Mother and required Father to show cause why his parenting responsibilities should not be limited. This change of custody was in response to Mother’s petition to modify the permanent parenting plan3 based on child neglect allegations brought against Father and his new wife, Valerie Clarneau, by the Department of Children’s Services. Specifically, Father and his new wife had been charged with child neglect for disciplining Valerie Clarneau’s two children, ages four and seven at the time. It was alleged that Father had locked them in the bathroom by securing boards across the bathroom door. This was accomplished by screwing the boards into the frame around the door.

Tiffany Clarneau Brown, Father’s sister, testified at an August 2002 hearing that she had witnessed such an episode. She explained she observed Father locking his step-child in the bathroom. She also explained that Father would remove the light bulb to further punish the child because he was aware the child was afraid of the dark, which fear was so significant the child slept with the light on.

Following a hearing, the trial court admonished Father concerning his “method of discipline” and changed custody, awarding the children to Mother.4 The trial court also held Mother in contempt for allowing the minor children to miss residential sharing time with Father, as previously ordered by the Court.

A mere eleven months later, December 2002, Father filed a petition to modify custody based on an allegation of domestic abuse against Mother by her new husband, Mike Atwood. It was further alleged the abuse was precipitated by Mike Atwood’s addiction to his prescription medicine. Mother responded by attacking Father’s fitness, emphasizing his “criminal background and his child abuse/child neglect charges,” and asserting that modification of custody would be harmful to the children’s well-being.

2 For example, Father filed a petition to show cause and contempt in May of 2001 asserting that Mother allowed overnight visitors of the opposite sex in contravention of the court’s verbal order and that Father should be awarded full custody of the children. Five months later, Mother filed an answer and counterclaim alleging that Father was behind on child support payments and home equity payments. Father responded by asserting that Mother refused to allow him to see the children on Sundays. The court ordered the parties to mediation and a hearing was conducted in November of 2001 at which time the court held both parties in contempt for their failure to follow prior orders of the court. The numerous conflicts between these parties, while not necessarily pertinent to this appeal, are indicative of their disdain for one another.

3 The record does not contain a permanent parenting plan. It appears plans have been proposed but not adopted by the court.

4 Custody was altered so that Father would exercise residential sharing with the children “every other weekend from Friday at 5:00 P.M. until Sunday at 5:00 P.M. and every W ednesday night from 4:00 P.M. until Thursday at 12:00 Noon or until Ms. Atwood returns to work and the meeting time will need to be adjusted.”

-2- At the hearing on Father’s petition to modify custody, the court considered the testimony of Angela Perry, a licensed certified social worker, as well as testimony from the parties and extended family members. The court ultimately found:

[T]he exposure of the minor children to the drug addiction of Respondent’s husband [Mike Atwood] is a material change of circumstances that directly affects the best interests of the minor children and was not reasonably foreseeable by Petitioner at the time of the last Order. That, further, this Court believes that exposure to drug addiction is detrimental to the minor children and directly affects their best interests.

That this Court must resolve the credibility issue raised by the testimony of Angela Perry, certified and licensed social worker, relaying to the Court statements of the minor child that she had witnessed physical abuse of Respondent by Respondent’s husband, as compared with the denial of Respondent that there was never any physical abuse in her home. The Court resolves this issue squarely in favor of the testimony of Angela Perry and against Respondent. That, further, this Court finds that there has been physical violence in Respondent’s home and that this violence was witnessed by the minor children. That, therefore, based on the testimony of Angela Perry, social worker, this Court finds that the physical violence in Respondent’s home is a material change of circumstances that directly affects the best interests of the minor children and such violence was not reasonably foreseeable by Petitioner at the time of the last Order. That, finally, this Court believes that exposure to physical violence between Respondent and her husband is detrimental to the minor children and directly affects their best interests, although the children have suffered no apparent physical harm themselves.

After finding there had been a material change of circumstance, the trial court then analyzed the factors within Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-6-106 to determine what was in the best interest of the children. Following that analysis, the trial court granted Father primary physical custody of the parties’ two minor children.5

Mother appealed and presents three issues. First, she asserts the trial court erred by qualifying social worker Angela Perry as an expert and allowing her to testify regarding statements made by one of the parties’ two minor children.

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Bluebook (online)
Clinton William Clarneau v. Angela Dawn Clarneau, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clinton-william-clarneau-v-angela-dawn-clarneau-tennctapp-2005.