Edward A. Miller v. Kerry Kelk

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 18, 2005
DocketE2003-02180-COA-R3-JV
StatusPublished

This text of Edward A. Miller v. Kerry Kelk (Edward A. Miller v. Kerry Kelk) 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
Edward A. Miller v. Kerry Kelk, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs June 24, 2005 Session

EDWARD A. MILLER v. KERRY KELK

Appeal from the Juvenile Court for Sevier County No. 95-M4-275 Dwight E. Stokes, Judge

No. E2003-02180-COA-R3-JV - FILED JULY 18, 2005

On July 10, 1997, Edward A. Miller (“Father”) was designated the primary residential parent for the parties minor child. Kerry L. Kelk (“Mother”) was not ordered to pay any child support at that time as that order was silent on the issue of child support. No order requiring Mother to pay child support was entered until May 26, 1999. In the May 1999 order, the Trial Court refused to award Father any retroactive child support back to when he was awarded custody. The Trial Court in a later order also held Father responsible for all of the health insurance premiums covering the child from November of 1999 through March of 2002. The Trial Court held each party responsible for one-half of the health insurance premiums from that date on. We conclude that the Trial Court erred in refusing to award retroactive child support to Father for the period from when he was designated the primary residential parent up until May 26, 1999. We further conclude that the Trial Court erred by refusing to hold Mother responsible for all of the child’s health insurance premiums.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Juvenile Court Affirmed in Part and Reversed in Part; Case Remanded

D. MICHAEL SWINEY , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which HERSCHEL P. FRANKS, P.J., and SHARON G. LEE, J., joined.

Wanda G. Sobieski and Diana M. Messer, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the Appellant Edward A. Miller.

James R. Hickman, Jr., Sevierville, Tennessee, for the Appellee Kerry Kelk. OPINION

Background

This appeal centers primarily around Mother’s child support arrearages which have accrued intermittently over the past several years. After the parties lived together for approximately two years, their only child, a son, was born on June 15, 1995. The parties apparently separated not long after the child was born and on September 12, 1996, Father filed a petition to establish paternity. Father also requested that he be designated the primary residential parent of the minor child. After independent psychological evaluations of the parties were completed, a full evidentiary hearing was conducted. Following the hearing, the Trial Court entered an order on July 10, 1997, which, among other things, designated Father as the primary residential parent and established Mother’s visitation schedule. For some unknown reason, the Trial Court did not order Mother to pay any child support when it designated Father the primary residential parent as that July 10, 1997 order is silent as to Mother’s child support.

On October 6, 1997, Father filed a petition to establish child support. Father’s petition was scheduled for a hearing in February of 1998 and, in the meantime, Father sought discovery related to Mother’s financial condition. Although the hearing did not take place in February, Mother’s unsupervised visitation was suspended around that time because the child had been physically abused while in Mother’s care. The Trial Court appointed Dr. Nordquist “as the Court’s own witness” and instructed the parties to undergo an evaluation for the “express … purpose of determining whether the child is in danger and whether there should be modifications to the custody and visitation arrangements….” Mother’s unsupervised visitation eventually was resumed after she completed anger management classes.

Almost two years after Father was designated the child’s primary residential parent and over 1½ years after Father filed his petition to establish child support, at a hearing on May 26, 1999, the Trial Court finally and for the first time ordered Mother to pay child support. At this time, Mother was able to provide health insurance for the child at a cost of only $19 a month. The Trial Court determined Mother’s child support obligation should be $252 per month, but allowed Mother to deduct the $19 health insurance cost, thereby bringing her total monthly obligation to $233. An order setting forth the Trial Court’s findings and holdings from the May 1999 hearing was not entered until December of that same year. The following month, Father filed a motion to alter or amend claiming, inter alia, that the provisions in the order addressing current and past child support obligations and the payment of health insurance were contrary to the evidence and a “manifest error of law or mistake of fact.” In August of 2001, the Trial Court ruled on many aspects of Father’s motion to alter or amend but specifically reserved its ruling on whether to alter or amend its order regarding the child support and insurance payments.1

1 W ith regard to Father’s claim that M other’s child support payments were set too low, an Affidavit of Indigency filed by Mother in November of 2001 shows that her monthly take-home pay from her primary job was $1,300. Although (continued...)

-2- In March of 2002, the Trial Court entered its order addressing Father’s remaining issues regarding child support payments2. By this time, Father was paying all of the health insurance costs for the parties’ child and had been doing so for over 2½ years. In the March 2002 order, the Trial Court also denied Father’s request for reimbursement for all or a portion of Dr. Nordquist’s fees incurred while conducting the evaluations of the parties and their child. The Trial Court apparently reached this conclusion because the results of Dr. Nordquist’s report ultimately were beneficial to Father and because Father had the greater ability to pay. In relevant part, this order also provided:

2. Although custody changed in 1997, no child support award or order was entered from 1997 through May 26, 1999. This Court does not now.

***

8. The total child support arrearage awarded [from June 1999 to March 2002] is … Seven Thousand Four Hundred Sixty-Two Dollars ($7,462).

9. [Father’s] request for interest on the child support arrearage is denied because there were delays in the final setting of support occasioned by both parties.

10. This Court finds that [Father] made health insurance payments for the child which were unreimbursed from [Mother] from November 1999 to present. This Court awards him nothing in reimbursement for payment of the minor child’s health insurance premiums.

11. This Court awards zero interest on the health insurance payments made by Mr. Miller for the minor child’s health insurance premiums.

12. Based upon the parties’ stipulated calculations, current child support is set in the amount of Four Hundred Seventy-Six Dollars ($476) per month to begin April 1, 2002.

1 (...continued) Mother also had a second job, Mother did not provide her income information concerning this job, stating only that it was part-time and her income from it varied.

2 This order was entered on May 21, 2002, but was entered nunc pro tunc to M arch 5, 2002. In this Opinion we will refer to this order as the March 2002 order.

-3- 13. Beginning April 1, 2002, each party shall pay one-half of the cost of the child’s health insurance coverage. For [Mother], her share will be in addition to the child support set forth above.

14. No attorney’s fees are awarded to either party.

Father timely filed an application for extraordinary appeal pursuant to Rule 10, Tenn. R. App. P. This Court denied the Rule 10 application on July 15, 2002, after concluding Father’s request was not an appropriate case for a Rule 10 appeal.

In August of 2002, Father filed a petition seeking to have Mother held in contempt of court.

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Edward A. Miller v. Kerry Kelk, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edward-a-miller-v-kerry-kelk-tennctapp-2005.