Evelyn Burnine v. Victor Michael Dauterive

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 27, 2011
DocketW2010-02611-COA-R3-JV
StatusPublished

This text of Evelyn Burnine v. Victor Michael Dauterive (Evelyn Burnine v. Victor Michael Dauterive) 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
Evelyn Burnine v. Victor Michael Dauterive, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON ASSIGNED ON BRIEFS JUNE 24, 2011

EVELYN BURNINE v. VICTOR MICHAEL DAUTERIVE

Direct Appeal from the Juvenile Court for Gibson County No. 9797 Robert W. Newell, Judge

No. W2010-02611-COA-R3-JV - Filed July 27, 2011

This appeal involves an award of retroactive child support. When the child was an infant, the mother lied and told the father that the child had died. Subsequently, custody of the child was transferred back and forth numerous times between the mother and the maternal grandmother. The father’s paternity was established when the child was thirteen, and after establishing a relationship with the child, the father sought to be named primary residential parent. The grandmother then petitioned for retroactive child support. Father was named primary residential parent, but the juvenile court ordered the father to pay approximately $40,000 in retroactive child support to the grandmother, finding a certain statute that provides for deviations in retroactive child support to be inapplicable to this situation. We reverse the court’s decision and vacate its award of retroactive child support, and remand for further proceedings.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Juvenile Court Reversed, Vacated and Remanded

A LAN E. H IGHERS, P.J., W.S., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D AVID R. F ARMER, J., and H OLLY M. K IRBY, J., joined.

G. Michael Casey, Jackson, Tennessee, for the appellant, Victor Michael Dauterive

Evelyn Burnie, Medina, Tennessee, pro se OPINION

I. F ACTS & P ROCEDURAL H ISTORY

Victor Michael Dauterive (“Father”) and Teresa Burnine (“Mother”) had a brief relationship in late 1992, after which Mother discovered that she was pregnant. Mother resided in Jackson, Tennessee, and Father was a resident of New Iberia, Louisiana, but he traveled frequently because he apparently worked on a riverboat.1 At some point, Mother informed Father that she was pregnant with his child, and she notified him around the time of the child’s birth in May of 1993.

When the child (“Daughter”) was approximately two to three weeks old, Father came to Jackson to see her on his way to Chicago for work. Shortly thereafter, Mother became angry with Father and told him that he was not Daughter’s father. Mother subsequently called Father crying and told him that Daughter had died of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (“SIDS”). Daughter was in fact alive and well, but Mother and Father did not speak again after she falsely informed him that Daughter died.

When Daughter was eighteen months old, Mother and Daughter moved to Georgia to live with another man. When Daughter was three years old, she was adjudicated deprived by a Georgia court and placed in the custody of the Department of Family and Children Services in Georgia. Mother’s mother, Evelyn Burnine (“Grandmother”), then took custody of Daughter and brought her back to Tennessee. Approximately six months later, a consent order was entered which returned custody to Mother after she completed a residential drug and alcohol abuse program. One year later, in 1998, Grandmother was named guardian of Daughter by a Tennessee court. Grandmother petitioned for guardianship to be returned to Mother in 2001, but in September of 2002, Mother was arrested due to drug possession, and Grandmother was again granted custody of Daughter after she and Mother filed a joint petition requesting such.

Around 2004, Daughter expressed a desire to meet Father, so Grandmother went to the local child support services agency in order to obtain help in locating him. However, it took a long time for the agency to locate Father because Grandmother only told them Father’s name and that he lived in Louisiana. In April 2005, the child support agency sent a “Child Support Enforcement Transmittal . . . Initial Request” to the State of Louisiana’s child support enforcement services agency pursuant to the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act, requesting that the State of Louisiana establish paternity and child support and order the

1 Although Father’s precise occupation is not clear from the record, he testified about being offshore for extended periods of time and traveling around the country for his job.

-2- payment of retroactive child support for the periods of time when Grandmother had custody of Daughter between 1998 and 2001, and since the date of the September 2002 custody order.

On February 2, 2007, a Louisiana court entered a Judgment of Paternity decreeing that Father was the biological father of Daughter, who was then thirteen years old. Following a hearing in the Louisiana court, a hearing officer entered findings and recommendations which suggested that Father be ordered to pay child support in the amount of $450 per month effective February 1, 2007. The hearing officer’s findings did not mention the term “retroactive child support,” and it is not clear from the record whether the issue was considered. The officer’s findings simply state, “Defendant advises that the mother of the child told him early on that child was not his child.” When no objection to the hearing officer’s recommendation was filed, it was adopted as an order of the Louisiana court.

After Father’s paternity was established, he began visiting Daughter in Tennessee on a regular basis, and he eventually bought a house in Tennessee after Daughter asked him to come to Tennessee and raise her. In October 2009, when Daughter was sixteen, Father filed a petition in the juvenile court of Gibson County, Tennessee, seeking to be named Daughter’s primary residential parent. In February 2010, Grandmother filed a petition requesting that Father be ordered to pay retroactive child support to her for periods preceding the Louisiana court’s 2007 order setting Father’s child support obligation. In June 2010, Father was awarded custody of Daughter.

On June 29, 2010, the court heard testimony regarding Grandmother’s petition for retroactive child support. Father testified that Mother informed him of Daughter’s birth in May 1993 and that he visited Daughter when she was two to three weeks old. He testified that Mother later told him that he was not Daughter’s father, and that subsequently, Mother called him crying and said that Daughter had died of SIDS. Father testified that he did not come to Tennessee to investigate Daughter’s death, and that Mother had told him that she had moved away. Father testified that he simply did not think that he had a daughter during the years that followed his last conversation with Mother.

Mother similarly testified that she informed Father that she was pregnant with his child and notified him that Daughter was born. She explained that she did not have Father’s name placed on the child’s birth certificate because she was afraid that Father might try to take Daughter away from her. She said that Father had never threatened to take Daughter, but that she was paranoid because of problems she had experienced with her mother and ex- husband trying to take custody of her other daughter. Mother testified about Father visiting Daughter when she was two to three weeks old, and she remembered him looking at the child and stating, “That’s my baby.” She said that Father also told her during his visit that he would help Mother to raise Daughter and that “he wouldn’t be able to have a baby and not

-3- have anything to do with her.” She testified that Father mailed her a check shortly after his visit.

Mother further testified that soon after Father left, when Daughter was about four weeks old, Daughter stopped breathing and had to be taken to the hospital. Mother said she informed Father when Daughter was back at home and doing well.

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Bluebook (online)
Evelyn Burnine v. Victor Michael Dauterive, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evelyn-burnine-v-victor-michael-dauterive-tennctapp-2011.