Dorothy Ahern v. Robert Ahern

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 11, 1998
Docket02A01-9708-CV-00190
StatusPublished

This text of Dorothy Ahern v. Robert Ahern (Dorothy Ahern v. Robert Ahern) 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
Dorothy Ahern v. Robert Ahern, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE, AT JACKSON

_______________________________________________________ FILED ) September 11, 1998 DOROTHY JANE AHERN (PIEROTTI) ) Shelby County Circuit Court ) No. 134593 R.D. Cecil Crowson, Jr. Appellate C ourt Clerk Plaintiff/Appellee. ) ) VS. ) C.A. No. 02A01-9708-CV-00190 ) ROBERT FRANCES AHERN, ) ) Defendant/Appellant. ) ) ______________________________________________________________________________

From the Circuit Court of Shelby County at Memphis. Honorable D’Army Bailey, Judge

John R. Candy, Collierville, Tennessee Garland Erguden, Memphis, Tennessee Attorneys for Defendant/Appellant.

Robert A. Wampler, Memphis, Tennessee Attorney for Plaintiff/Appellee.

OPINION FILED:

AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART AND REMANDED

FARMER, J.

CRAWFORD, P.J., W.S.: (Concurs) LILLARD, J.: (Concurs) Defendant Robert Francis Ahern (the Husband) appeals the trial court’s judgment

finding the Husband guilty of multiple counts of criminal contempt for failing to pay the alimony

and child support obligations set forth in the court’s final divorce decree. We affirm in part and

reverse in part the trial court’s judgment.

I. Factual and Procedural History

The parties were divorced in June 1993. The final divorce decree, which incorporated

the provisions of the parties’ marital dissolution agreement (MDA), awarded Plaintiff/Appellee

Dorothy Jane Ahern Pierotti (the Wife) exclusive custody of the parties’ two minor children. The

Husband agreed to pay child support in the amount of $1,346.88 per month and to furnish the Wife

copies of his canceled payroll checks and payroll ledger on a quarterly basis. The Husband also

agreed to pay 88.5% of (1) the children’s private school tuition, books, and registration and (2) the

children’s “uninsured health related care costs.” Per the MDA, the final divorce decree required the

Husband to pay various amounts to the Wife as alimony in solido, including but not limited to the

following amount:

14. The husband shall pay the wife the sum of $32,500 as alimony in solido for her support and maintenance. This same shall incur interest at 8% simple annual interest compounded annually. The payments shall be at the rate of $1000 per month, principal and interest beginning on the LAST day of MARCH, 1993, and on the same date thereafter until paid. This sum shall not be deductible for tax purposes by the husband nor includible in the wife’s income for tax purposes. Interest begins on 3/9/93. This judgment shall also be against M.S.I. jointly and severally. No prepayment penalty.

M.S.I. referred to Management Systems, Incorporated. The Husband owned all of M.S.I.’s stock and

served as its president.

In November 1996, the Wife filed a petition for writ of scire facias in which she

sought to have the Husband held in contempt for his willful and intentional violations of the

foregoing support provisions of the final divorce decree. The petition alleged that the Husband had

filed a bankruptcy petition in which he sought to discharge the alimony debt to the Wife but that the

debt was determined to be nondischargeable. The Wife later amended her petition to ask that the Husband be held in both civil and criminal contempt, and she filed a notice that she was seeking to

have the Husband held in contempt pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated sections 16-1-103 and

29-9-101 through 29-9-104.

The Husband filed an answer in which he asserted that many of the described debts

to the Wife had been discharged at the conclusion of his bankruptcy action. The Wife responded by

again amending her petition, this time to ask the trial court to make a determination as to the

dischargeability of the debts pursuant to an order of the Bankruptcy Court for the Western District

of Tennessee; however, the bankruptcy court’s order does not appear in the record.

Prior to trial, the case was transferred from Division 8 to Division 5 of the Circuit

Court for the Thirtieth Judicial District. Although the Husband previously had demanded a jury trial,

he announced that he would waive his right to a jury trial if Division 5 would accept the transfer of

the case and conduct a trial on all of the issues pending in this litigation. Thereafter, the Division 5

trial judge proceeded to conduct a bench trial on the Wife’s contempt petition. Partway through the

trial, however, the trial judge, apparently sua sponte, announced that she was transferring the case

back to Division 8. The trial judge announced that:

This Court is of the opinion that post-divorce matters, especially in a situation such as this one, are more properly heard by the judge who heard the divorce, and this -- and Division 5 is transferring this back to Division 8, which is now in a posture to accommodate the parties.

The transfer followed arguments by counsel for the parties concerning the need to interpret the

provisions of the MDA in order to determine the dischargeability of the debts to the Wife.

Neither party objected to the transfer back to Division 8. When the proceedings

resumed in Division 8, however, the Husband contended that jeopardy had attached in the trial

before Division 5 and that double jeopardy principles prevented his retrial in Division 8. The trial

court rejected this argument, ruling that the Husband had waived his double jeopardy argument by

failing to raise an objection in Division 5. The Husband then renewed his demand for a jury trial,

but the trial court ruled that this right also had been waived. At trial, the Wife testified that the Husband had failed to make alimony payments as

required by paragraph 14 of the MDA. At the time of the Wife’s petition, the Husband owed the

Wife $28,271.46 in alimony. The Wife also testified that the Husband owed $13,828.12 for the

children’s private school tuition because he had not paid his share of the tuition for four consecutive

school years. Finally, the Husband failed to pay $3,758.41 for the parties’ son’s braces.

The Husband admitted that he had not paid the amounts alleged to be owed to the

Wife. The Husband claimed, however, that he was unable to pay the amounts, despite the fact that

his adjusted gross income for each of the two previous years exceeded $80,000. Since the divorce,

the Husband had remarried a woman with three children, and he and his new wife had a child

together. The Husband claimed that most of his income went toward paying child support to the

Wife and toward supporting his new family, including an $1100 mortgage payment and clothing and

groceries for his new wife and four children. Although the Husband claimed that he was unable to

pay the amounts allegedly owed, he acknowledged that in 1996 he purchased a new home valued at

approximately $165,000 and that in 1994 or 1995 he paid about $5,000 to settle a battery claim

against him. The Husband denied that any amount due for the son’s braces constituted a “health-

related care cost,” and he stated that the Wife never had requested reimbursement for this amount.

As for his alimony obligation to the Wife, the Husband attempted to testify that he

failed to pay these amounts because he believed the debt was discharged in his bankruptcy

proceeding. The trial court repeatedly sustained the Wife’s objections to this testimony, however,

ruling that such testimony was irrelevant. As an offer of proof, the Husband submitted documents

from the bankruptcy court which showed (1) that the Husband filed his bankruptcy petition in

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