Eatherly v. Eatherly

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 29, 1999
Docket01A01-9806-CV-00314
StatusPublished

This text of Eatherly v. Eatherly (Eatherly v. Eatherly) 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
Eatherly v. Eatherly, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE FILED July 29, 1999

KAREN JEAN (EATHERLY) SMITHSON, ) Cecil Crowson, Jr. ) Appellate Court Clerk Plaintiff/Appellee, ) Wilson Circuit ) No. 1074 VS. ) ) Appeal No. DAVID RAY EATHERLY, ) 01A01-9806-CV-00314 ) Defendant/Appellant. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR WILSON COUNTY AT LEBANON, TENNESSEE

THE HONORABLE BOBBY CAPERS, JUDGE

For Plaintiff/Appellee: For Defendant/Appellant:

Calvin P. Turner Hugh Green Lebanon, Tennessee Lebanon, Tennessee

VACATED AND REMANDED

WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., JUDGE OPINION

This appeal involves a custody dispute that continued without final resolution for four years over a seven-year-old child. The Circuit Court for Wilson County did not finally adjudicate the child’s custody when it divorced the parties in 1994. During the next four years, the trial court entered a series of temporary custody orders embodying different joint custody arrangements notwithstanding both parents’ repeated requests for sole custody. Finally, in 1998, the trial court determined that the child should reside primarily with the mother because the father and his second wife were expecting a child. The father asserts on this appeal that the trial court should have awarded him custody because he is comparatively more fit to be the child’s custodian. We have determined that the trial court failed to employ proper procedures or criteria in making its custody decision. Therefore, we vacate the order awarding primary physical custody to the mother and remand the case to the trial court for further proceedings.

I.

David Ray Eatherly and Karen Jean (Eatherly) Smithson were married in November 1989. After their wedding, they moved from Knox County to Lebanon where Mr. Eatherly worked for a construction company, and Ms. Smithson worked for a bank. Their only child, Kelsy Westyn Eatherly, was born on July 12, 1992. The parties separated six months later.

Ms. Smithson sought sole custody of parties’ daughter when she filed suit for divorce in January 1993 in the Circuit Court for Wilson County. Mr. Eatherly responded by denying that Ms. Smithson had grounds for divorce and by asserting that he was entitled to the divorce and to sole custody of the parties’ daughter. In March 1993, the trial court entered an order granting custody pendente lite to Ms. Smithson and giving limited visitation to Mr. Eatherly. For the next four months, the parties actually had custody of their daughter for roughly equal amounts of time.

The custody dispute rekindled in July 1993 because of Ms. Smithson’s plans to take the child on a visit to Knoxville. Mr. Eatherly believed that the child’s respiratory problems were severe enough to keep her at home. When Ms. Smithson

-2- did not agree, Mr. Eatherly filed a petition seeking temporary custody of the child. He asserted that Ms. Smithson was suffering from depression and that she had failed to obtain adequate medical care for the child. The trial court immediately conducted an informal hearing and, after talking with the child’s pediatrician by telephone, directed Ms. Smithson not to take the child to Knoxville until the child’s health improved. The trial court also modified the temporary custody arrangement to provide that Mr. Eatherly would have custody of the child each week day and that Ms. Smithson would have custody at night. The court also ordered both parents to undergo psychological examinations prior to the trial of the divorce.

The proof regarding custody presented at the December 6, 1993 trial was not to the trial court’s liking because Ms. Smithson had not undergone the previously ordered psychological examination. Accordingly, the trial court did not finally resolve the custody question when it entered its “final” divorce decree on January 10, 1994. The trial court declared the parties divorced and directed Ms. Smithson to have a psychological examination by the same persons who had already examined Mr. Eatherly. As a temporary matter, the trial court established a joint custody arrangement wherein Mr. Eatherly had physical custody from Monday morning until Friday afternoon, and Ms. Smithson had physical custody from Friday afternoon until Monday morning.

On June 28, 1994, the trial court entered a “final” custody order based on a March 7, 1994 hearing. The court awarded the parties joint custody of their daughter even though neither party had requested joint custody. It also found that Mr. Eatherly should be the primary custodian of the child. Ms. Smithson received visitation with the child for three weekends each month and every other Wednesday night. For reasons not readily apparent in the record, the trial court did not require Ms. Smithson to pay child support to Mr. Eatherly.

Ms. Smithson filed a petition to modify the custody decree on February 7, 1995. She asserted in the petition that giving her custody was in the child’s best interests because she had recently purchased a house where she and the child could live and because the current arrangement had “denied the child the opportunity to

-3- develop a normal mother and daughter relationship.” Mr. Eatherly responded to the petition by denying that any material change in circumstances had occurred and asserting that granting him sole custody would be in the child’s best interests. The trial court conducted a hearing in June 1995, and on July 31, 1995 entered an order finding that there had been no material change in the child’s circumstances but reserving the custody issue “pending further proof.”

The trial court conducted another custody hearing on July 2, 1996, and on July 23, 1996 entered another custody order finding that it was in the child’s interest to continue the joint custody arrangement. The court also determined that the amount of time the child spent with each parent should be modified because Ms. Smithson was no longer working full-time. Accordingly, the trial court modified the custody schedule to provide that the child would reside with Ms. Smithson from Sunday through Thursday each week and with Mr. Eatherly during the remainder of the week. The July 23, 1996 order also recited that “[a]ll other provisions of the previous orders of the court shall remain in force, pending further orders of this court.” Accordingly, the decree did not represent the final custody determination. Instead, the court made clear its intent to continue monitoring the parties and the existing custody arrangement.

Mr. Eatherly remarried sometime after the entry of the July 23, 1996 custody order. On August 5, 1997, two and one-half years after Ms. Smithson filed her petition to modify custody and more than one year after the trial court issued its last order in the matter, the court held another hearing for the purpose of making a final custody determination. At the conclusion of the hearing, the court found that both parents were equally qualified custodians and that the child should remain in joint custody. However, the trial court decided to award primary physical custody to Ms. Smithson because of the fact that [Mr. Eatherly’s] wife is pregnant and expecting a child. It’s going to take some adjustment in their home and I don’t know how that’s going to work. I don’t anticipate any problems but you bring a small child into the home there’s going to have to be some adjustments made.

Accordingly, the trial court determined that Ms. Smithson would have primary physical custody of the child and that Mr. Eatherly would have the child for visitation

-4- every weekend except for the third weekend of each month, six weeks during the summer, and on alternate holidays. The trial court also directed Mr. Eatherly to begin paying Ms. Smithson $500 per month in child support. An order embodying these findings and conclusions was entered six months later on February 6, 1998.

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Bluebook (online)
Eatherly v. Eatherly, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eatherly-v-eatherly-tennctapp-1999.