Deanna Lynn Akers v. Neil E. Powers

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 19, 2022
DocketE2021-01028-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Deanna Lynn Akers v. Neil E. Powers (Deanna Lynn Akers v. Neil E. Powers) 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
Deanna Lynn Akers v. Neil E. Powers, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

07/19/2022 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE April 13, 2022 Session

DEANNA LYNN AKERS v. NEIL E. POWERS

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Bradley County No. V-13-589 Lawrence Howard Puckett, Judge ___________________________________

No. E2021-01028-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

Deanna Lynn Akers (“Wife”) and Neil E. Powers (“Husband”) were divorced by the Circuit Court for Bradley County (the “trial court”) in 2016. Wife was awarded $1,100.00 per month in alimony in futuro. Following a slew of post-trial motions and proceedings, Husband filed a petition to terminate Wife’s alimony on August 6, 2019. A hearing was held after which the trial court terminated Wife’s alimony and entered a judgment against Wife for the overpaid amount. Because the trial court erred in terminating Wife’s alimony altogether, the trial court’s decision is vacated and remanded for reinstatement of Wife’s in futuro support. Because Husband established, however, a substantial and material change in his earning ability, a modification of the amount of alimony is appropriate and should be determined by the trial court on remand.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Judgment of the Circuit Court for Bradley County Vacated and Remanded

KRISTI M. DAVIS, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which JOHN W. MCCLARTY and THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, JJ., joined.

Sheridan C.F. Randolph, Cleveland, Tennessee, for the appellant, Deanna Lynn Akers.

Arthur Bass, Cleveland, Tennessee, for the appellee, Neil E. Powers.

OPINION

The parties were married for approximately seventeen years prior to their divorce. The divorce trial was held on April 8, 2016, but a final order was not entered right away. Rather, Wife filed a motion soon thereafter, on May 6, 2016, requesting the trial court “re- open the proof” and award Wife increased spousal support. This motion was apparently heard on May 31, 2016 and denied; an order was not entered denying that motion until November 2, 2016.

The final decree of divorce was not entered until August 2, 2017. Husband was ordered to pay Wife $1,100.00 per month alimony in futuro.1 On September 12, 2017, Wife filed a “motion to enforce” Husband’s alimony obligation, asking for a judgment in an unspecified amount for unmade payments. Wife also requested that the trial court alter or amend the final decree to award Wife increased support. A hearing was held on November 2, 2017, at which Wife’s motion to alter or amend was determined untimely and the parties were ordered to mediate.

No order was entered after the November 2, 2017 hearing, however, and Wife filed a motion on June 4, 2018, asking that one be entered. In her June 4, 2018 motion, Wife again requested increased spousal support, this time specifying that her need was due to health problems. Wife testified at the trial of this matter that she has lupus and Sjogren’s disease, among other issues. Husband responded that the parties had been previously ordered to mediate. Eventually, on July 25, 2018, the trial court entered an order nunc pro tunc as to the November 2, 2017 hearing, confirming that the parties were to mediate the alimony issue. Although what came of the mediation is unclear from the record, the parties were apparently unable to settle the dispute.

On August 6, 2019, Husband filed a motion to “terminate the alimony payments which he is currently required to pay to [Wife,]” citing an involuntary change in employment. The modification hearing then took place over several non-consecutive days in August and October of 2019.2 The primary issues at the hearing were both parties’ deteriorating health, Husband’s changing employment, and Wife’s cohabitation with both a paramour, Darrell Hawkins, and renters. The hearing concluded on October 22, 2019, and the trial court entered a final order on January 28, 2020. The trial court’s ruling is best summarized by quoting the final page of its order:

The Court finds [Wife’s] need is -0- dollars per month since she started receiving Social Security in December 2018, took in boarders and

1 The final decree itself is not in the record. It is undisputed, however, that Husband was ordered to pay Wife $1,100.00 per month in alimony in futuro. Additionally, in the final order on this modification proceeding, the trial court included the findings as relevant from the underlying divorce proceeding, including the trial court’s application of the statutory alimony factors. 2 There was confusion at trial over which party was the petitioner and which party was the respondent for purposes of the modification, insofar as both parties sought changes to the spousal support and multiple pleadings had been filed regarding same. Ultimately the parties and the trial court agreed that Husband was the petitioner for purposes of the modification action. In the transcript, both the parties and the trial court refer to Husband’s modification petition as having been filed on April 6, 2018. No such petition is in the record, however, and the only motion for modification filed by Husband that is in the record was filed August 6, 2019. Consequently, we treat the August 6, 2019 petition as the operative motion.

-2- lived with Mr. Hawkins with him working as a cook and disc jockey while drawing nine hundred dollars ($900.00) per month in Social Security Disability. [Husband] has overpaid alimony by paying the one thousand, one hundred ($1,100.00) per month previously ordered from December 2018 to the date of this order when [Wife] had no need.

Further, based upon [Husband’s] reduced ability to pay because of his declining health and income and his increased tax burden, he had no ability to pay alimony in 2019 going forward because of these material and substantial changes in his finances found by the Court. [Husband] continues to lack the ability to pay alimony because he has no retirement funds available from which to do so as he had in 2018 and 2019.

Because this ruling results in an overpayment of alimony by [Husband], a separate order shall be entered setting [Husband’s] overpayment of alimony.

Counsel for the parties shall calculate and/or agree upon the overpayment and submit their proposed order of overpayment to the Court for approval or shall set this issue for trial.

The previous alimony of one thousand, one hundred dollars ($1,100.00) per month [Husband] was ordered to pay is hereby modified and terminated as of December 2018.

Wife filed a motion to alter or amend the trial court’s ruling in February of 2020.3 The trial court deemed this motion premature, however, because the parties still had to address Husband’s overpayment. On May 6, 2021, the trial court entered an order providing that Husband overpaid Wife alimony from December of 2018 through January of 2020 and entered a judgment against Wife for $16,095.04. The trial court then entered an order denying Wife’s motion to alter or amend that was filed in February of 2020. Wife appealed to this Court.

ISSUES

Wife frames her issues on appeal as follows:

1. Where a party’s income is several multiples than a disadvantaged spouse’s, and debts are largely of his own making, does a spouse making over $11,000 per month have ability to pay alimony of $1,100 per month?

3 The file stamp date on this motion is indiscernible.

-3- 2. Where a disadvantaged spouse’s health condition has deteriorated, and her income is diminished since the divorce decree, and she presently lives alone, should her alimony be terminated?

3. If a private investigator gives the only evidence of cohabitation, rebutted by testimony, and that testimony is hearsay, permitted in error over objection, and that investigator has been impeached, is it an abuse of discretion to deny alimony on the basis of that evidence?

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Bluebook (online)
Deanna Lynn Akers v. Neil E. Powers, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deanna-lynn-akers-v-neil-e-powers-tennctapp-2022.