Fatma Adel Sekik v. Nehad Abdelnabi

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 18, 2020
DocketE2019-01302-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Fatma Adel Sekik v. Nehad Abdelnabi (Fatma Adel Sekik v. Nehad Abdelnabi) 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
Fatma Adel Sekik v. Nehad Abdelnabi, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

11/18/2020 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE July 21, 2020 Session

FATMA ADEL SEKIK v. NEHAD ABDELNABI ET AL.

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Knox County No. 126002 Gregory S. McMillan, Judge ___________________________________

No. E2019-01302-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

In this divorce appeal, Husband challenges the court’s failure to grant a continuance, the child support and alimony obligation imposed, and certain provisions of the parenting plan prohibiting contact with his children and revoking the parental rights set forth in Tennessee Code Annotated section 36-6-101(a)(3)(B). This proceeding also involved allegations of a conspiracy to defraud Wife of funds resulting from a sale of marital property in Gaza during the pendency of the divorce by Husband, his brother, and his brother’s wife; those non- spousal parties challenge the court’s jurisdiction over them and over the property in Gaza, as well as the court’s valuation of that property. They also challenge the court’s rulings that they engaged in a civil conspiracy and whether the judgment imposed against them is supported by the pleadings and the evidence. Upon our review of the issues raised, we discern no reversible error in the rulings of the court and accordingly affirm it in all respects.

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

J. STEVEN STAFFORD, P.J. W.S., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ARNOLD B. GOLDIN and CARMA DENNIS MCGEE, JJ., joined.

Matthew D. Barocas, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellants, Nahed Abdulnabi and Rewa Gharbawe.

Nehad Abdelnabi, Only, Tennessee, Pro Se.

Wanda G. Sobieski, Diane M. Messer, Caitlin Elledge, Zachary T. Powers, and Laura E. Wyrick, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Fatma Adel Sekik. OPINION

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This appeal arises out of a divorce proceeding. Fatma Adel Sekik (“Wife” or “Mother”) and Nehad Abdelnabi (“Husband” or “Father”) are from the Middle East; Wife is from Cairo, Egypt, and Husband is from Palestine. The parties were married in 1996 in Egypt and moved to the United States shortly thereafter, where they resided in Knoxville, Tennessee. The parties have four children. Their third child, Hamza, was born in 2002 and has special needs. Husband is an “electronics technician” and owned an electronics business in Knoxville. He also oversaw the financial aspects of family life, including the buying and selling of real property during the marriage, such as the real property located in the Gaza Strip that is the subject of many issues raised in this appeal. Wife primarily took care of the parties’ home and four children. Wife also works part-time from home, translating Arabic conversations by phone, for which she is paid by the minute.

Their home was not entirely a happy one, as Wife and her two daughters testified about the emotional and physical abuse Husband inflicted on the family members. The breakdown of the marital relationship accelerated in February 2012, when Husband kidnapped and assaulted a man named Naser Ferwanah, with whom he believed Wife was having an affair. He was indicted for these offenses on September 18, 2012, and in 2016, he was tried, convicted, and sentenced to 17 years in the Tennessee Department of Correction for the felony offenses of aggravated kidnapping, especially aggravated kidnapping, and two counts of aggravated assault.1

Wife filed a complaint for divorce on September 7, 2012, on the basis of irreconcilable differences and Husband’s inappropriate marital conduct. She sought to be named primary residential parent of the parties’ children and sought “reasonable spousal support,” both during the pendency of the divorce and after entry of the decree. The complaint contained the automatic mandatory injunctions set forth at Tennessee Code

1 The judgments of conviction entered into the record in this divorce proceeding reflect that Husband was convicted by a jury on January 28, 2016 of the following crimes: aggravated kidnapping, a B felony, for which he was sentenced in May 2016 to twelve years in the Tennessee Department of Correction; especially aggravated kidnapping, an A felony, for which he was sentenced to seventeen years; aggravated assault, a C felony, to which he was sentenced to six years, to run concurrently with his seventeen year sentence; and another count of aggravated assault, a C felony, to which he was sentenced to six years. Husband appealed his convictions, which were affirmed by the Court of Criminal Appeals on direct appeal; that Court observed that “[t]he trial court merged the Defendant’s conviction in count one into count two and merged count four into count three and ordered that he serve the sentences concurrently, for a total effective sentence of seventeen years in the Tennessee Department of Correction (TDOC) at 100% release eligibility.” State v. Abdelnabi, No. E2017-00237-CCA-R3-CD, 2018 WL 3148003, at *1 (Tenn. Crim. App. June 26, 2018), appeal denied (Nov. 15, 2018).

-2- Annotated section 36-4-106(d).2 On September 8, a temporary parenting plan was entered, granting Husband weekend visitation every week, setting his child support obligation at $2,000 per month, and requiring him to pay the premiums of health, dental, and life insurance policies for Wife and the children, as well as “for all Hamza’s medical, dental, visual [expenses] and all Hamza’s therapy[.]”

On September 27, 2012, Wife filed a Notice of Filing of Related Order to which she attached an order of protection that had been entered by agreement of Husband and Wife in Knox County Circuit Court case number 126003. In that order, Husband agreed to not come about Wife or contact her, directly or indirectly. He also agreed to pay for the household expenses, including the mortgage, utilities, phone and internet, credit cards, health insurance, medical bills, automobile insurance, and others, as well as $2,000 per month in child support. Husband and Wife subsequently reconciled, and by an agreed Amended Order of Protection entered December 5, 2012, they were permitted to have contact. All other terms of the prior agreed order of protection pertaining to Husband’s payments of household expenses and child support remained in effect.

In September 2016, Wife moved for a default judgment due to Husband’s failure to answer the complaint for divorce. In that motion, she alleged that Husband’s “refusal to respond or cooperate with the process has left [Wife] and the parties’ four (4) children in desperate financial straits unable to make the arrangements necessary to keep their home or property.” She also alleged that Husband “has sent the largest share of the parties’ financial resources to the Gaza Strip where it is essentially beyond the reach of his wife and children for their support” and sought a default judgment “so that she can begin the process of making arrangements with the bank to possibly save the home from foreclosure for the children and herself.”

Husband responded by filing an answer as well as a Response to the motion for default judgment on October 6; in his response, Husband asserted:

The default judgment sought, in which Mr. Abdelnabi is deprived of all of his constitutional parental rights while being ordered to pay the extravagant sum of $3,200.00 per month in child support for life—unsupported by the Child Support Guidelines—and in which Plaintiff is awarded all of the marital estate and potential personal property, including unidentified, unspecified, and likely fictional property in the Gaza Strip, is unreasonable,

2 Tennessee Code Annotated section 36-4-106(d) provides that certain temporary injunctions are in effect upon the filing of a petition for divorce and service (or waiver and acceptance of service) of the petition.

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Bluebook (online)
Fatma Adel Sekik v. Nehad Abdelnabi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fatma-adel-sekik-v-nehad-abdelnabi-tennctapp-2020.