Donna Michele Locastro Corbin v. Richard Todd Corbin

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 24, 2009
DocketW2008-00437-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Donna Michele Locastro Corbin v. Richard Todd Corbin (Donna Michele Locastro Corbin v. Richard Todd Corbin) 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 Michele Locastro Corbin v. Richard Todd Corbin, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON SEPTEMBER 18, 2008 Session

DONNA MICHELE LOCASTRO CORBIN v. RICHARD TODD CORBIN

Direct Appeal from the Chancery Court for Shelby County No. D-27409 Arnold Goldin, Chancellor

No. W2008-00437-COA-R3-CV - Filed February 24, 2009

This appeal involves retroactive child support. The parties were divorced in 1996 and submitted a marital dissolution agreement that was approved by the trial court. In 1999, the parties submitted a consent order modifying the marital dissolution agreement to provide that the father would not pay child support, but he would be responsible for providing health insurance coverage and paying for one-half of uncovered medical, dental, orthodontic, and optical expenses. The consent order was approved by the trial court. In 2006, the mother sought to have the consent order set aside on the basis that it was void as against public policy, and she sought an award of retroactive child support to the date of the 1999 consent order. The trial court granted retroactive child support only to the date of the mother’s petition seeking such support. Mother appeals, claiming that retroactive child support should be awarded to the date of the 1999 consent order. We affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed

ALAN E. HIGHERS, P.J.,W.S., delivered the opinion of the court, in which DAVID R. FARMER , J., and J. STEVEN STAFFORD , J., joined.

Richard F. Vaughn, Collierville, TN, for Appellant

William Bryan Penn, Memphis, TN, for Appellee

OPINION I. FACTS & PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Richard Corbin (“Father”) and Donna Corbin (“Mother”) were married in 1986. They had a son in 1987 and a daughter in 1990. The parties were divorced in October of 1996, and the trial court approved a marital dissolution agreement (“MDA”) submitted by the parties. The MDA provided that Father and Mother would have “joint custody” of the parties’ children, but Mother would be their primary caretaker. Specifically, the children would reside with Mother, but visit with Father every other weekend, every Wednesday evening, on certain holidays, and for one month during the summer. The MDA provided that Father would pay $495 per month in child support to Mother.

Soon after the divorce, on January 30, 1997, a consent order was entered which modified the divorce decree and MDA. The consent order provided that the parties would continue to share “joint custody” of the children, but Father would be the primary custodian of the parties’ son, and Mother would be the primary custodian of their daughter. Each parent was to have specific visitation privileges according to the schedule originally set out in the MDA. The consent order further provided that neither parent would pay child support to the other. Both parties agreed to maintain medical insurance coverage on both minor children until they reached the age of eighteen, and the parties agreed that each would pay one-half of the children’s uncovered medical, dental, and optometric expenses.

In November of 1997, Mother filed a petition to modify the consent order, seeking an increase in visitation rights with the parties’ son because Father was allegedly denying her visitation with the son. On February 23, 1999, a second consent order modifying the final decree and MDA was entered which provided:

The custodial parent of Son will hereafter be [Mother], with [Mother] having sole custody of both minor children of the parties until they reach majority . . . . [T]he visitation of the said minor children with [Father] should be at the discretion of [Mother]. . . . [N]either party will pay child support to the other, but both parents will continue to provide health and dental insurance coverage as previously agreed in the first consent order, with each parent to pay one-half of all uncovered expenses not otherwise covered by said insurance, including orthodontic expense . . . .

[Mother] and [Father], in order to establish consistency in the life of Son, further agree that the matters of custody, visitation and support are hereby irrevocably decided as being what the parents agree are in the best interests of their children and should not hereafter be the subject of litigation. The consent order was signed by both parties, their respective attorneys, and Chancellor Floyd Peete, Jr.

-2- Nearly seven years later, on December 2, 2005, Father filed a petition to modify the consent order, seeking custody of the parties’ then fifteen-year-old daughter. The parties’ son had turned eighteen earlier that year. Father claimed that the daughter wanted to live with him, but Mother was denying him visitation. Father described several recent arguments between Mother and the daughter regarding visitation with Father over Thanksgiving, and he said that a few days later, the daughter showed up at his house with suitcases full of her belongings. He said the police arrived thereafter and returned the daughter to Mother’s house. Father claimed that the daughter was depressed and doing poorly in school. He alleged that Mother often left the daughter at home alone and without food. He also claimed that Mother physically hit the daughter in the chest on at least one occasion, and he described various incidents involving verbal abuse of the daughter by Mother.

Mother filed an answer claiming that the second consent order had irrevocably decided the issues of custody, visitation, and support. However, on April 25, 2006, Mother filed a counter- petition seeking to have the second consent order set aside on the basis that it was void as against public policy. Mother sought an order requiring Father to pay retroactive child support for both children from the date of the second consent order in 1999.

On February 23, 2007, a third consent order was entered, granting temporary custody of the daughter to Father. A hearing was held on the issue of child support on June 19, 2007, before Chancellor Arnold Goldin. Relying on Cook v. Cook, No. M2005-02725-COA-R3-CV, 2007 WL 295238 (Tenn. Ct. App. Feb. 1, 2007), Chancellor Goldin concluded that the 1999 consent order was not void. Accordingly, he concluded that Father should pay retroactive child support only to the date of Mother’s counter-petition seeking child support on April 25, 2006. Chancellor Goldin also concluded that Mother should pay child support to Father from the date of the third consent order granting custody of the daughter to Father.

The trial court entered an order referring the matter to a divorce referee for specific calculations regarding (1) the amount of child support owed by Father from April 25, 2006, the date of Mother’s counter-petition seeking child support, to February 23, 2007, the date of the third consent order granting temporary custody to Father; (2) the amount of child support owed by Mother from February 23, 2007, when the third consent order was entered, until the daughter turned eighteen; and (3) the amount of child support Father would have owed from the date of the second consent order, February 23, 1999, to the date of the third consent order, February 23, 2007. An order was subsequently entered providing that Father owed $6,238 from the date of Mother’s counter- petition seeking support until Father obtained temporary custody of the daughter; Mother owed $1,007 per month after Father obtained custody; and Father would have owed $85,406 in child support from the date of the second consent order in 1999 until Father obtained custody of the daughter in 2007.1

1 The calculations used to produce this figure are not in the record before us, and the parties do not mention whether any deviation was applied to the presumptive amount.

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Bluebook (online)
Donna Michele Locastro Corbin v. Richard Todd Corbin, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donna-michele-locastro-corbin-v-richard-todd-corbin-tennctapp-2009.