Curtis R. Thrapp v. Mary Elizabeth Thrapp

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 31, 1998
DocketE2006-00088-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Curtis R. Thrapp v. Mary Elizabeth Thrapp (Curtis R. Thrapp v. Mary Elizabeth Thrapp) 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
Curtis R. Thrapp v. Mary Elizabeth Thrapp, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE November 7, 2006 Session

CURTIS R. THRAPP v. MARY ELIZABETH THRAPP (SCHOEDEL)

Direct Appeal from the Circuit Court for Blount County No. E-20416 Hon. W. Dale Young, Circuit Judge

No. E2006-00088-COA-R3-CV - FILED MARCH 8, 2007

The parties were divorced in Oregon where the Court ordered the custodial arrangement for the only child of the marriage. The Mother then moved to Colorado, where she filed suit in Colorado in the custody dispute. She then moved to Tennessee, where the Father sued her over the ongoing dispute. The Colorado Court ultimately declined jurisdiction and the Tennessee Court ordered a change of the custody. The mother has appealed. We affirm the change of custody.

Tenn. R. App. P.3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed in Part and Reversed in Part.

HERSCHEL PICKENS FRANKS, P.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which D. MICHAEL SWINEY , J., and SHARON G. LEE, J., joined.

Elizabeth K.B. Meadows, and Mandy M. Hancock, Knoxville, Tennessee, for appellant.

Hilary Williams Burgin and Charles A. Carpenter, Maryville, Tennessee, for appellee.

OPINION

BACKGROUND

Curtis R. Thrapp (the “Father”) and Mary Elizabeth Thrapp (Schoedel) (the “Mother”) married in Colorado on May 31, 1998. They moved to Lane County, Oregon, and on February 21, 2002 William Ashby Thrapp (the “Son”) was born. On April 17, 2002, the Mother and the Son moved to Larimer County, Colorado, but she filed for divorce in Oregon. The Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Lane County (the “Oregon Court”) held a four-day divorce trial in December 2002.

On January 29, 2003, the Oregon Court issued a Judgement of Dissolution of Marriage divorcing the parties and awarding primary residential parent status to the Mother. The Father’s visitation rights under the Oregon Custody and Parenting Plan depended upon the distance separating the parents, the Father’s visitation rights being more generous if the Father lived within 80 miles of the Mother.

On April 23, 2003, the Mother filed a Petition for Emergency Ex-Parte Parental Responsibility with the District Court of the State of Colorado for Larimer County (the “Colorado Court”) arguing the overnight visitations would be harmful to the Son. That same day the Colorado Court suspended the Father’s overnight visitation rights until May 12, 2003. In May 2003, the Mother filed a motion with the Colorado Court requesting that the Court communicate with the Oregon Court and accept jurisdiction over child custody issues, and she also filed a motion in the Oregon Court requesting that the Oregon Court decline jurisdiction. The Father opposed the Mother’s request to decline jurisdiction. The Colorado Court refused to initiate communication with the Oregon Court and refused to extend the Ex-Parte Parental Responsibility Order, and the Oregon Court denied the Mother’s motion.

The Oregon Court described the Mother’s motivation as follows: “the [Mother] is now attempting to transfer jurisdiction to Colorado and to avoid having to modify the Oregon judgment which she finds unsatisfactory.” The Court also noted the Mother’s, “ongoing history of misrepresentations made to the Court and to the parties involved (erroneous affidavits, fleeing to Colorado under false pretenses, etc).” The Oregon Court concluded that “[c]onsidering the nature and motivation of [the Mother’s] relocation to Colorado, she should not be allowed to elude or to be excused from Oregon’s jurisdiction simply because she has lived in Colorado with her child for the past year.”

The Father moved to Colorado on August 4, 2003, which entitled him to three to four consecutive days of custody each week. The Mother immediately sought another Emergency Ex- Parte Temporary Restraining Order, asking the Colorado Court to reduce the Father’s parenting time. The Colorado Court denied the Mother’s motion, and reasoned that the Mother’s Motion was “not sufficient to confirm that Oregon no longer has jurisdiction.” On August 13, the Mother filed a Motion for Modification of Parenting Time with the Colorado Court, and the Colorado Court then concluded it had child custody jurisdiction because both parents lived in Colorado.

In September 2003, the Colorado Court approved and adopted the parents’ Stipulation to Temporary Parenting Time, and the parents later agreed to a modification of parenting time in February, 2004. The Colorado Court then adopted the Modification as an order of the court on February 24, 2004. In March of 2004, the Father returned to Oregon. He testified that financial considerations necessitated his return to Oregon. Subsequently, the Colorado Court ordered the Mother not to interfere with the Father’s visitation.

-2- On August 27, 2004, the Father traveled to Colorado for his scheduled weekend visit, but the Mother never complied. On the same date, the Mother filed Notice of Change of Address with the Colorado Court and asked the Court not to release her new address to the Father. The Mother, her new husband, and the Son moved to Blount County, Tennessee on August 31, 2004, and on September 3, the Father filed an emergency motion with the Colorado Court, alleging that since the Oregon custody determination the Mother had denied the Father’s visitation at least 12 times. The Colorado Court then ordered the Mother to inform the Father of her current address and to bring the Son to Colorado for the Father’s September visitation.

On September 17, 2004, the Father filed a Motion to Enforce Parenting Time and a Motion for Modification of Custody/Decision Making Responsibilities. The Motion also alleged the Mother denied the Father his September weekend visitation and had not provided her new address. The Mother then filed two Responses to the Motions, arguing that the Colorado Court no longer had jurisdiction because neither parent resided in Colorado and the child resides in Tennessee. On October 26, 2004, the Colorado Court issued an Order stating that the Court would withhold ruling on the Father’s Motions until a magistrate judge decided the jurisdictional question. The Colorado Court concluded, “While [the Father’s] allegation that [the Mother] is not in compliance with the parenting time orders may be correct, the court does not believe it can or should rule on the enforcement motion until the jurisdictional matter is decided.” The court further stated, “[the Mother] should not construe this ruling as approval of any action she may have taken if she has disregarded the February 24, 2004 parenting time orders which adopted the stipulation of the parties. The Court expects that the existing orders will be followed by her at this time because they remain in full force and effect until modified.” On October 29, 2004, the Father filed a Motion requesting parenting time with the Son during the Thanksgiving holiday, which the Colorado Court denied because the child is young and not acclimated to longer periods of parenting time with the Father and travel.” The court noted, however, that the Mother’s moves have been one of the primary causes of this problem, and until the jurisdictional matters are resolved at the hearing set for December, the Court reasserted that it had continuing jurisdiction of the case.

The Mother responded to the Court’s Order and argued that “[t]he State of Colorado no longer has exclusive, continuing jurisdiction because the child and the child’s parents no longer reside in Colorado.” Her Statement also argued that “[t]he State of Tennessee meets the standards of initial jurisdiction . . . . [T]he [Mother] and child have significant connections to Tennessee.

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Bluebook (online)
Curtis R. Thrapp v. Mary Elizabeth Thrapp, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curtis-r-thrapp-v-mary-elizabeth-thrapp-tennctapp-1998.