Dawn Noles Martin (Gorham) v. Matthew Kendall Martin

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 20, 2015
DocketW2014-01007-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Dawn Noles Martin (Gorham) v. Matthew Kendall Martin (Dawn Noles Martin (Gorham) v. Matthew Kendall Martin) 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 Noles Martin (Gorham) v. Matthew Kendall Martin, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON March 10, 2015 Session

DAWN NOLES MARTIN (GORHAM) ET AL. v. MATTHEW KENDALL MARTIN ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Carroll County No. 20-DR-147 Paul G. Summers, Judge

No. W2014-01007-COA-R3-CV – Filed May 20, 2015

This is an appeal from the trial court‘s order modifying child support and setting arrearage. The trial court‘s calculation of child support arrearage includes a set off for credits given the Appellee Father for necessaries provided. The trial court also found that Father was responsible for one-half of the children‘s private school tuition for the three year period prior to Appellant Mother filing her petition for reimbursement of those expenses. The trial court further found that the parties had sufficient income to continue sending their children to private school and that each party should be responsible for one- half of the costs of the private school tuition and fees. Mother appeals. We reverse in part, vacate in part, and remand for a fresh determination of child support arrearages from April 2007 forward, and sufficient findings on the issue of wage assignment in accordance with this opinion.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the trial court is Affirmed in Part; Vacated in Part and Remanded.

KENNY ARMSTRONG, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ARNOLD B. GOLDIN, J., and BRANDON O. GIBSON, J., joined.

Thomas C. Gorham, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Dawn Noles Martin (Gorham)

Steven L. West, Huntingdon, Tennessee, for the appellee, Matthew Kendall Martin

OPINION

I. Factual History and Procedure

Appellant Dawn Noles Martin (―Mother‖) was divorced from Appellee Matthew Kendall Martin (―Father‖) by a Divorce Judgment entered on October 9, 2000, in the Chancery Court of Carroll County. At the time of divorce, the parties had a son, age four, and a daughter, age two. At the time of the modification hearing in December 2013, which is the subject of this appeal, the parties‘ son and daughter were 17 and 15, respectively. The Divorce Judgment set Father‘s child support obligation at

$350.00 per month . . . being paid as follows, namely [Father] shall pay [Mother‘s] car payment in the amount of $278.00 per month and shall pay directly to the [Mother] the sum of $50.00 per week beginning October 13, 2000 and continuing each and every week thereafter until [Mother‘s] car is paid off, at which time the [Father] shall pay unto the [Mother] the sum of $87.50 per week pending further orders of the court.

Both of the payment options listed above created a payment schedule in excess of the court ordered child support amount of $350.00 per month. The parties acknowledged that Father paid child support through September 2003. We will analyze Father‘s child support obligation based on the court ordered amount of $350.00 per month rather than the schedule of payments outlined in the Divorce Judgment.

In contradiction of the Divorce Judgment, the parties exercised equal parenting time, alternating parenting time on a weekly basis. Accordingly, the parties mutually agreed to cut Father‘s child support obligation in half because they were equally dividing parenting time, but never obtained a court order approving the modification.

In December 2000, Mother moved to Nashville. In August 2001, the parties‘ son started school and moved in with Father. The parties‘ daughter continued to live primarily with Mother. The parties still alternated weekends so that the children spent every weekend together with one of the parents. This parenting schedule was maintained until December 2009. From October 2003 through December 2009, Father paid no child support, nor did he file a petition to modify support.

In December 2009, the parties‘ son moved to Nashville and began living with Mother. The parties agreed to send their son to a private high school. The testimony of the parties conflicted as to what child support payments were actually made by Father in 2010. Upon cross examination, Father admitted he had no receipts or proof of child support payments for the year 2010. In January 2011, Father began paying child support via payroll deduction in the amount of $200 every two weeks, which is the equivalent of $433.33 per month. Mother testified that the money paid by Father above the original child support amount was for the children‘s private school tuition. Father argued that the additional funds were given to Mother in order to ―help out,‖ but that they were not 2 designated for tuition.

Mother submitted a ledger of child support payments from October 2003 through December 2012, which included interest on the unpaid amounts. Mother‘s ledger indicated that Father should have paid $43,050 in child support but paid only $13,700 plus an additional $3,600 in tuition. Mother‘s ledger calculated the total amount owed by Father to be $52,956.38, which consisted of $29,350.00 in unpaid support plus interest owed in the amount of $23,606.38.

On April 1, 2013, Mother filed a petition for contempt, to modify the marital dissolution agreement1 and child support, and to reimburse for extraordinary expenses. Thereafter, Father filed a counter-petition alleging that he made child support payments directly to the parties‘ son in the amount of $725 per month from August 2001 through December 2009. Mother testified that she never received any of these payments. Father alleged that direct payments to the parties‘ son were for his housing, food, clothing, transportation, healthcare, and education.

The trial took place on December 13, 2013, and a final order was entered on January 29, 2014. Both parties filed motions to alter or amend the trial court‘s final order. A hearing was held on March 5, 2014, to address the motions to amend and clarify the prior order of the court. An amended final order (which was actually an amended parenting plan) was entered on April 17, 2014. In its order, the trial court gave Father a $250 monthly credit for necessaries during the 76 month period when the parties‘ son lived primarily with Father. This finding resulted in a child support arrearage of $100 per month accruing interest at 12% annually from the due date. Based on this finding, the trial court awarded Mother child support arrears in the amount of $23,983.31 including medical expenses of $985.03. The trial court ordered Father to pay the arrears at a rate of $468.88 per month.

Father was also ordered to pay 50% of the private school tuition, plus 50% of any fees and meal ticket, if required. Additionally, the trial court ordered the parties to share equally in any additional school related-expenses. However, the trial court did not specifically indicate what it meant by the term ―school related expenses.‖ The trial court did expressly find that neither parent was ―financially able to incur the expense [of private school education] alone, but relied upon the support and representations of the other parent.‖ Mother was awarded a judgment in the amount of $17,204.25 for past

1 We note that, although Mother‘s petition claims that the parties were divorced pursuant to a Final Decree of Divorce that incorporated a Marital Dissolution Agreement, there is neither a Martial Dissolution Agreement nor a Final Decree of Divorce in the record. However, the record does contain a Divorce Judgment, in which the division of marital property and the pertinent information regarding the parenting schedule and child support obligation is delineated. 3 tuition. This award was based in contract due to the fact that Father signed the school contracts agreeing to be jointly and severally liable with Mother for tuition. The trial court found that this judgment shall not be considered as child support for collection purposes.

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Dawn Noles Martin (Gorham) v. Matthew Kendall Martin, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dawn-noles-martin-gorham-v-matthew-kendall-martin-tennctapp-2015.