Donna Bunker v. Roger Finks

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 16, 2002
DocketE2001-01496-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Donna Bunker v. Roger Finks (Donna Bunker v. Roger Finks) 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
Donna Bunker v. Roger Finks, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE April 16, 2002 Session

DONNA J. (FINKS) BUNKER v. ROGER FINKS

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Hamilton County No. 96DR0800 L. Marie Williams, Judge

FILED MAY 8, 2002

No. E2001-01496-COA-R3-CV

Donna J. (Finks) Bunker (“Mother”) and Roger Finks (“Father”) were divorced in Ohio in 1993. The parties had two minor children. Mother and the children relocated to Chattanooga, Tennessee, and Father stayed in Ohio. The Ohio Divorce Decree was brought properly before the Tennessee Trial Court. Father filed a petition seeking a change of custody and visitation, while Mother filed a cross-petition seeking an increase in child support. The Trial Court found that while Father proved a material change in circumstances, he failed to carry his burden of showing that a change of custody was warranted. The Trial Court also restricted Father’s visitation with the children to take place only in Chattanooga. The Trial Court did not increase Father’s child support obligation. Both Father and Mother raise issues on appeal. Father’s issues on appeal concern custody and visitation, primarily of the parties’ younger child (“Younger Child”). We affirm, as modified, and remand.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed as Modified; Case Remanded.

D. MICHAEL SWINEY , J., delivered the opinion of the court in which HERSCHEL P. FRANKS, J., and CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., J., joined.

Catherine M. White, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the Appellant, Roger Finks.

Leslie B. McWilliams, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the Appellee, Donna J. (Finks) Bunker. OPINION

Background

Mother and Father were divorced in Ohio in 1993. They have two minor children.1 The Ohio Divorce Decree incorporated a shared parenting plan which contemplated both Mother and Father serving as “residential parents” of both children with Mother as the primary custodian; granted Father visitation; and ordered Father to pay child support. In 1993, Mother and the children moved to Chattanooga, Tennessee, and still live there today. Father lives a few miles from his parents and sister in Ohio.

In 1996, Mother filed a Petition to Register and Modify Foreign Custody Order in the Trial Court in Hamilton County. In this petition, Mother sought a modification of Father’s visitation schedule. Father filed an Answer and Counter-Petition denying that his visitation scheduled should be modified. Father also requested the Trial Court modify custody to award him custody of the children. As support for his request to modify custody, Father alleged Mother had numerous live-in boyfriends and was uncooperative with Father regarding the children. Father also alleged Mother had set upon a course of alienating the children from him. In August 1996, the Trial Court entered an Order (“1996 Order”) granting Mother’s request to register the Ohio Divorce Decree, modified Fathers’ visitation schedule, denied Father’s request to modify custody, increased Father’s child support obligation, and ordered counseling for the children to take place in Ohio and Tennessee.2 The Trial Court, acting sua sponte, in its 1996 Order, also entered a permanent restraining order against both parties, enjoining them from making derogatory remarks about the other party or allowing anyone else from doing so in front of the children.

The next pleading filed was Father’s Petition for Contempt and to Address Existing Parenting Issues and/or Custody filed in June 2000. Father alleged a number of grounds for his petition, including Mother’s interference with his Spring Break and summer visitation and telephone contact with the children and her failure to set up counseling with the Chattanooga counselor as ordered by the 1996 Order. Father also alleged that a material change of circumstances had occurred in the children’s home environment such that a change in custody was warranted. Father alleged that Mother’s then husband, Dale Bunker, was physically abusive towards Mother and that Dale Bunker had been indicted for rape of a child. In addition to a change of custody, Father requested emergency mediation to address a number of issues, including summer visitation and custody issues.

The Trial Court ordered the parties to attend a parenting seminar and emergency mediation. The record shows that mediation failed. Thereafter, along with her reply to Father’s

1 The parties’ older child is from a previou s marriag e of M other’s. Th e reco rd show s Father adopted this child during the parties’ marriage.

2 In the 199 6 O rder, the Trial Court specified the Chattanooga counselor by name and ordered that the Chattano oga counselo r wo uld b e resp onsible for selectin g an Oh io counselor.

-2- petition, Mother filed a counter-petition seeking an increase in Father’s child support obligation due to an increase in his income and a reduction in his visitation time. Mother alleged the children were afraid of Father and that the children complained they did not want to visit Father for long periods of time.

Father filed a motion in October 2000, requesting the Trial Court address the issue of Thanksgiving and Christmas visitation because the children told Father they did not want to visit him. The Trial Court entered an order in December 2000 (“December 2000 Order”), holding that Father would exercise visitation with only the Younger Child over the upcoming Christmas Break. The Trial Court also ordered Father to arrange for the Younger Child to attend counseling in Ohio during Christmas visitation. The Trial Court stated that the Ohio counselor should contact the Younger Child’s Chattanooga counselor to discuss her best interests.

Trial of the parties’ pending petitions took place in April 2001. At the time of trial, the older child was nearly 17 years old, and the Younger Child was 10 years old. Two expert witnesses provided testimony. A psychologist, Dr. Jolie S. Brams, testified on behalf of Father by telephonic deposition. A licensed clinical social worker, Katie Rhodes, provided testimony at trial on behalf of Mother. The record shows that Brams’ and Rhodes’ opinions regarding the Younger Child were very different.

Dr. Brams testified she met separately with Father and the Younger Child one time during the Younger Child’s visitation with Father in Ohio over the Christmas 2000 holidays. Dr. Brams testified the purpose of her session with Father and the Younger Child was to conduct a partial visitation and custody evaluation but that she had no opinion regarding with whom the Younger Child should be placed. Dr. Brams described Father as inflexible and rigid, not amenable to change, not a stellar parent, but a hard-working individual. While Dr. Brams stated that Father had done very little to improve his relationship with the children, Dr. Brams testified further that Father appeared to take care of the Younger Child and spoke of her with affection. Dr. Brams testified that while Father may be boring, Father could offer the Younger Child stability.

Dr. Brams characterized the Younger Child as having a mental health impairment that is causally-related to her upbringing by Mother and opined that the Younger Child needed psychiatric counseling. Dr. Brams also predicted that the Younger Child would, in the future, have a personality disorder. The Younger Child related to Dr.

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Donna Bunker v. Roger Finks, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donna-bunker-v-roger-finks-tennctapp-2002.