Dawn Marie Pennington v. Joel David Pennington, III

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 1, 2024
DocketW2023-01691-COA-T10B-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Dawn Marie Pennington v. Joel David Pennington, III (Dawn Marie Pennington v. Joel David Pennington, III) 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
Dawn Marie Pennington v. Joel David Pennington, III, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

02/01/2024 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON Assigned on Briefs December 1, 2023

DAWN MARIE PENNINGTON v. JOEL DAVID PENNINGTON, III

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Henry County No. 25408 Bruce Irwin Griffey, Judge ___________________________________

No. W2023-01691-COA-T10B-CV ___________________________________

This is an accelerated interlocutory appeal as of right pursuant to Rule 10B of the Rules of the Supreme Court of Tennessee from the chancery court’s denial of a motion to recuse. An attorney negotiated a settlement on behalf of a client in litigation over the administration of an estate. The same attorney subsequently assisted his client in the prior litigation in filing a related suit in which the party obtained default judgment. The Plaintiff in the present case is seeking to set aside that default judgment and to obtain other relief, asserting the Defendant acted unscrupulously in filing a suit on matters which had previously been settled. The trial judge reported the attorney, who is no longer the attorney representing the Defendant, to the Board of Professional Responsibility based on the filing of the suit which resulted in the default judgment. The Defendant seeks recusal of the trial judge, asserting that the judge’s impartiality might reasonably be questioned. The judge denied the motion for recusal, finding that he could be fair and impartial, had not pre- judged any matters, and that a person of ordinary prudence would find no reasonable basis for questioning his impartiality. We affirm.

Tenn. Sup. Ct. R. 10B Interlocutory Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed

JEFFREY USMAN, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which J. STEVEN STAFFORD, P.J., W.S., and JOHN W. MCCLARTY, J., joined.

Charles C. Exum and Craig P. Sanders, Jackson, Tennessee, for the appellant, Joel David Pennington, III.

Colin B. Calhoun, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Dawn Marie Pennington. OPINION

I.

The origins of the present dispute are found in prior litigation involving the administration of the estate of Joel David Pennington, Sr. (Mr. Pennington, Sr.).1 Mr. Pennington, Sr. had a son named after him, Joel David Pennington, Jr. (Joel). The Plaintiff in the present case is Dawn Marie Pennington (Dawn); she was Joel’s wife. After the birth of his son Joel, Mr. Pennington, Sr., married Gloria Pennington (Gloria) and adopted her son, who was renamed after Mr. Pennigton, Sr., as Joel David Pennington, III (David). In order to avoid confusion among the three Joel David Penningtons, we will refer to Joel David Pennington, Sr., as “Mr. Pennington, Sr.,” to Joel David Pennington, Jr., as “Joel,” and to Joel David Pennington, III, as “David.” Similarly, with two Ms. Penningtons, we refer to Dawn Marie Pennington as Dawn, and Gloria Pennington as Gloria. We intend no disrespect to any of these individuals by the use of first names.

At the time of his death in 2008, Mr. Pennington, Sr., had filed a complaint for divorce against Gloria, which was pending. Joel served as the executor of Mr. Pennington, Sr.’s estate. The settlement of the estate of Mr. Pennington, Sr., turned acrimonious, with Gloria and her son David seeking to remove Joel as executor. However, the parties settled their dispute in August 2013. The complaint alleges that the settlement agreement covered “all matters in controversy in connection with” the estate of Mr. Pennington, Sr.

In 2015, David, nevertheless, filed suit against Joel and Joel’s wife Dawn. According to the complaint in the present case, David’s 2015 suit was filed by the same attorney who had represented David and Gloria in arriving at the earlier settlement agreement. The complaint alleges that the 2015 suit asserted claims for malfeasance in managing the estate, did not reference the prior settlement agreement, and did not make any allegations of misconduct against Dawn personally.

Dawn acknowledges she was served with the 2015 lawsuit. However, she alleges that Joel had become physically abusive of her, that he insisted on handling all correspondence and all documents associated with the suit, and that she was afraid to investigate the status of the lawsuit, although she was a named party. Based on Joel’s representations to her, Dawn believed the 2015 suit had been resolved. Joel died in 2019. Dawn alleges that she discovered after the death of her husband that a default judgment had been entered against her on January 26, 2017, when a debt collector attempted to

1 The facts recited here are taken from the Order Denying Recusal and the Complaint, which are attached to the petition for appeal. Page 3 of the trial court’s order, from the section summarizing the facts, is missing. -2- collect $323,327.05. She alleges that David subsequently placed a lien on her home.

Dawn filed a complaint in August 2022, seeking a temporary restraining order and seeking to vacate, pursuant to Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure 60.02(4) and (5), the default judgment that had been entered on January 26, 2017. She also asserted claims for fraud, abuse of process, and reckless and intentional infliction of emotional distress.

David filed a motion to dismiss and then filed a motion for recusal. The recusal motion stated that the trial judge had filed a complaint against David’s former attorney with the Tennessee Board of Professional Responsibility (BPR) based on that attorney’s act of filing the 2015 lawsuit in which David obtained default judgment against Dawn. David asserted that the BPR complaint suggested the judge had “made conclusions about the propriety of the underlying case and the default judgment,” that the complaint committed the court to a result in the pending motion to dismiss, and that the judge’s impartiality might reasonably be questioned by a person of ordinary prudence. David asserted the judge had more than a de minimis interest in the outcome of the case and had reviewed extraneous material and conducted an independent investigation by looking at documents pertaining to the underlying default judgment, which had been granted by a different judge. He sought recusal based on an “acrimonious relationship” between the judge and David’s former counsel. The motion included the affidavit of one of David’s attorneys, who stated David’s former counsel “indicated that the board complaint evinces this Court’s position that the underlying default judgment was obtained via some type of fraud or wrongdoing” and that David’s current attorney believed the court reviewed documents pertaining to the default judgment.

Dawn opposed the recusal, noting that the judge had a duty to report a violation of the Rules of Professional Conduct. Dawn asserted that the judge was permitted to take judicial notice of the court’s own records, that there was no indication the court had determined impropriety with respect to the default or committed to any particular result, and that there was no indication the judge had an interest in the outcome of the case. Dawn likened the judge’s actions to an adverse ruling and argued that a person of ordinary prudence would find no basis to question the judge’s impartiality.

A transcript of the recusal hearing, attached to the Rule 10B petition, reflects that the trial judge noted that he respected David’s former attorney and “with some difficulty . . . and concern” felt he had the duty to make the report. The judge stated during the hearing that he felt compelled to report the attorney when he was reviewing documents and saw “that there was apparently a global settlement, and then all of a sudden there’s a new complaint filed approximately a year later. . . .” He asserted that he had no personal animus and that he had recommended the attorney for a job previously.

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Bluebook (online)
Dawn Marie Pennington v. Joel David Pennington, III, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dawn-marie-pennington-v-joel-david-pennington-iii-tennctapp-2024.