David Larkin Wall v. Amy Ballesteros Wall

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 14, 2011
DocketW2010-01069-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of David Larkin Wall v. Amy Ballesteros Wall (David Larkin Wall v. Amy Ballesteros Wall) 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
David Larkin Wall v. Amy Ballesteros Wall, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON January 26, 2011 Session

DAVID LARKIN WALL V. AMY BALLESTEROS WALL

An Appeal from the Chancery Court for Shelby County No. CH-06-01278-3 Kenny W. Armstrong, Chancellor

No. W2010-01069-COA-R3-CV - Filed July 14, 2011

This is a post-divorce petition to modify a parenting plan. In the divorce decree, the mother was designated as the primary residential parent of the parties’ daughter. Two years later, the father filed this petition to modify the decree to designate him as the primary residential parent, alleging that the mother had inadequate child care arrangements while the mother was at work, and that the mother had not been adequately caring for the child’s basic personal and educational needs. The parenting plan was temporarily modified to designate the father as the temporary primary residential parent. Nevertheless, the father was ordered to continue paying child support to the mother pending the trial, in order to maintain the status quo. After a hearing, the trial court found a material change in circumstances, but found it was not sufficient to change the designation of primary residential parent to the father on a permanent basis. The father was awarded substantially more parenting time. The father now appeals the denial of his petition to change the designation of primary residential parent and the award of child support to the Mother while he was the temporary primary residential parent. We affirm the award of child support, but reverse the denial of the petition to change the designation of the primary residential parent based on the mother’s consistently poor judgment in decisions related to the care of the child.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court is Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part, and Remanded

H OLLY M. K IRBY, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which A LAN E. H IGHERS, P.J., W.S., and D AVID R. F ARMER, J., joined. Rachel Emily Putnam, Memphis, Tennessee, for the Petitioner/Appellant David Larkin Wall.

Amy Balesteros Wall, Collierville, Tennessee, Respondent/Appellee, Pro Se.1

OPINION

F ACTS AND P ROCEEDINGS B ELOW

Petitioner/Appellant David Larkin Wall (“Father”) and Respondent/Appellee Amy Ballesteros Wall (“Mother”) were married in October 2000. At the time of their marriage, Mother had a son from her previous marriage, Kagen (“Kagen”), born November 28, 1996. Kagen lived with Mother and Father after they were married. The parties had one child during the marriage, Katelyn Alexis Wall (“Katelyn” or “the child”), born October 18, 2001.

During the marriage, the parties lived in Collierville, Tennessee. Father was employed as a pilot for Federal Express, and Mother was an apartment manager. Shortly before the divorce proceedings were initiated, Mother quit her job and obtained a license to sell real estate.

In June 2006, Mother and Father traveled to Anchorage, Alaska to visit Father’s family. While there, Father and Mother became engaged in a physical altercation. Shortly after that, the parties separated. A few weeks later, Father filed a petition for divorce in the Chancery Court of Shelby County, Tennessee, alleging inappropriate marital conduct and irreconcilable differences. During the separation, Father stayed in the marital home and accepted all of the debt on the home. Mother moved into a nearby apartment with the children. At the time divorce proceedings were initiated, both parties were thirty years old.

In November 2006, the parties executed a marital dissolution agreement (“MDA”). The MDA incorporated an agreed permanent parenting plan (“2006 PPP”) for Katelyn, which designated Mother as the primary residential parent, allocated Father eighty days of parenting time, and gave the parties joint decision-making authority as to all major decisions.2 The parenting plan stated that Father earned a gross income of $7,114 per month. At the time the parties agreed on the MDA, Mother had obtained her real estate license but had not yet begun working; nevertheless, the 2006 PPP imputed to her a gross income of $1,866 per month. Based on these agreed income levels in the 2006 PPP, Father agreed to pay Mother $1,100 per month in child support, an upward deviation from the amount required under the child

1 Mother was represented by counsel in the trial proceedings. In this appeal, she represented herself. 2 The 2006 PPP included a provision whereby Mother agreed “not to relocate to a residence more than 65 miles from her present residence for a period of three years.”

-2- support guidelines.3 On December 5, 2006, the parties were divorced by final decree, and the decree incorporated the MDA and the 2006 PPP.

After the final decree of divorce was entered, Mother discontinued her pursuit of a career in real estate. She became a dental assistant, and Katelyn, five years old at the time, was placed in daycare while Mother was at work, apparently during regular daytime business hours.4

In the August 2007, Katelyn started kindergarten at Sycamore Elementary School in Collierville, Tennessee. Over the course of the fall semester, Mother assured Father that Katelyn was doing well in school. In the Spring of 2008, Father visited Sycamore Elementary to have lunch with Katelyn. During the visit, Katelyn’s teacher, Ms. Martin, approached Father and told him that Katelyn had been coming to school improperly dressed, and that she had not brought snacks to school on her assigned snack day all year. Ms. Martin indicated to Father that she had not received any response from a parent to any of the notes sent home in Katelyn’s backpack. This information from Ms. Martin caused Father to become concerned about Mother’s care of Katelyn.

Around this same time, Mother left her job as a dental assistant and took a job in the administrative office of the Transportation Security Administration (“TSA”). For the first few weeks, Mother was in training for the TSA job, working 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. each weekday. In approximately May 2008, Mother completed her TSA training and began working in a permanent position. Initially, Mother worked a shift that began at 4:00 a.m. and ended at 12:30 p.m. In June 2008, Mother changed her work schedule to a shift that began at 6:00 a.m. and ended at 2:30 p.m.

In the wake of these developments, later in the Spring of 2008, Father called Mother to ask about her childcare arrangements for Katelyn for the coming summer. In the conversation, Father offered to find a babysitter for the child while Mother was at work. Mother refused and told Father that she planned to have neighbors in her apartment complex help her with both Katelyn and Kagen. Mother named Carrie Wilkinson (“Carrie”), who lived in the apartment directly above Mother, as one of the neighbors who would provide child care.

3 According to the worksheet attached to the 2006 PPP, under the child support guidelines in effect at the time, Father would have owed Mother $852 per month in child support. 4 In March 2007, Mother sent written notice to Father that she intended to relocate with the child to Florida, where some members of Mother’s family lived. Father filed a petition in the trial court objecting to Mother’s relocation with the child, noting that Mother’s request was in contradiction of the specific provision about relocation in the parties’ 2006 PPP. For reasons that are unclear in the record, Mother did not relocate to Florida. There is no order in the record adjudicating Mother’s petition to relocate, but it was apparently abandoned.

-3- Carrie’s son Will was Kagen’s age and friends with Kagen. When Father asked Mother for details about Carrie or the specific arrangements, Mother refused to give him any more information and told Father she did not want him involved in her personal affairs.

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