Frederick Zahn v. Margaret Zahn Logan

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 2, 2015
DocketM2014-00441-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Frederick Zahn v. Margaret Zahn Logan (Frederick Zahn v. Margaret Zahn Logan) 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
Frederick Zahn v. Margaret Zahn Logan, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE November 19, 2014 Session

FREDERICK ZAHN v. MARGARET ZAHN LOGAN

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Williamson County No. 33441 James G. Martin, III, Judge

No. M2014-00441-COA-R3-CV - Filed February 2, 2015

In this post-divorce action, Father filed a petition to modify the permanent parenting plan to make him the primary residential parent. The trial court found a material change of circumstance but concluded that it was not in the child’s best interest to change the primary residential parent. We find no error in the trial court’s decision and affirm.

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

A NDY D. B ENNETT, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which F RANK G. C LEMENT, P.J., M.S., and W. N EAL M CB RAYER, J., joined.

Donald Capparella and Tyler Yarbro, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Frederick Zahn.

Robert J. Turner and J. Ryan Johnson, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Margaret Zahn Logan.

OPINION

F ACTUAL AND P ROCEDURAL B ACKGROUND

Frederick Zahn (“Father”) and Margaret Zahn (“Mother”) were divorced pursuant to a final decree entered on July 24, 2007, in Williamson County Chancery Court. The decree incorporated a marital dissolution agreement (“MDA”), and a permanent parenting plan (“PPP”) concerning their only child, Quinn Logan Zahn. Under the terms of this agreed PPP, Mother was designated the primary residential parent, with 265 days of parenting time; Father had 100 days of parenting time. Father had parenting time every other weekend and every Tuesday evening as well as summer and holiday time. Father’s child support obligation was $1,284.00 per month. In December 2008, the parties entered into an agreed order modifying Father’s child support obligation to $1,659.00 per month and addressing some communication issues.

On November 14, 2012, Father filed a petition to modify the PPP and for civil contempt alleging that there had been a material change in circumstances since the entry of the PPP for the following reasons:

(1) The child began attending first grade on August 1, 2012, and Mother allowed the child to “miss an unreasonable amount of school.” Father stated that, according to school records, the child had missed ten days of school from September through November 2012. Father alleged that one of these absences was a result of Mother oversleeping and then refusing to take the child to school. At a parent-teacher conference, Father was told that, due to the number of days missed by the child, he would be required to have a doctor’s excuse for any further absences. Mother told the teacher/principal that the child was sick on the days of the absences, but Father was not aware of the child being sick.

When Father questioned the child about one absence, “the child became upset and said his mother was sick.” Although the school records showed that the child was absent on Halloween, Father remembered asking the child how school had been that day and the child answering that it was “good.” Father asked the child why he had given this response when he had not attended school that day, and the child started to cry. The child told Father that “he lied because his mother told him to lie about missing school.”

(2) Mother “has had irrational and unreasonable behavior.” Father listed numerous examples of Mother’s alleged irrational and unreasonable behavior—“inappropriate angry outbursts” (screaming at Father after he informed her that his flight would be delayed); physically assaulting Father on August 1, 2012, after taekwondo class (Father was helping the child with his seat belt, and Mother repeatedly slammed the car door on Father’s leg); calling Father at 4:00 a.m. and ranting about the divorce; failing to require the child to wear his glasses; texting Father that she told the child that Father did not pay child support and that the child could read the PPP for himself; leaving a message threatening to slash Father’s tires; referring to Father’s second wife as a “slut” at a cub scout meeting at which the child was present; arriving with child five minutes after start of child’s soccer game without child having socks or cleats on, becoming angry and blaming the child for their lateness, and accusing Father of failing to pay child support in front of the child; calling during a trip to Washington, D.C. to ask Father for more money and threatening that the child would be stranded on the side of the road if Father did not deposit the money; when the child asked why both parents weren’t going on a cub scout camping trip, saying, “because your dad is

2 a bastard”; and making derogatory and inappropriate comments while the parents took the child trick-or-treating together, in addition to kicking Father in the back of the leg several times.

(3) Mother “is not able to meet the basic needs of the child,” and “he is frequently dirty and has a foul smell.” As examples, Father asserts that, when he met Mother and the child at the veterinarian’s office on August 8, 2012, the child’s shirt “had a strong smell of cat urine.” He immediately bought a new shirt for the child. When Father dropped the child at Mother’s house on August 21, 2012, Mother “opened the door and garbage spilled out of the house because of the level of filth.” He noticed that “the house smelled of cat urine and feces from outside the door.” On August 31, 2012, the child told Father that he did not have matching socks to wear to school because Mother was not washing them. Father bought the child some socks. On October 14, 2012, when he dropped the child at Mother’s house, Father again noticed a strong smell of animal urine and feces. When he picked the child up from school on October 27, 2012, Father noticed that the child’s clothes were dirty and that the child was not wearing underwear. The child said that there were no underwear in his drawer. The parents got into a loud disagreement on Halloween when Father discovered that the child was not wearing underwear under his costume.

Father further alleged that Mother willfully violated the provision of the PPP entitling both parents to the right to be “free of unwarranted derogatory remarks made about the other parent or his or her family by the other parent to the child or in the presence of the child.” Father asserted that Mother had violated this provision by (a) telling the child that Father did not pay child support and mentioning to the child that he could read the PPP for himself; (b) referring to Father’s second wife as a slut in the child’s presence; (c) accusing Father of not paying child support in front of the child; and (d) telling the child that he could not be around Father’s co-workers because they were “sluts, homewreckers and a bad influence,” and saying, in front of the child, that Father had abandoned the child and that Father “f---ed another girl in high school.”

Father requested that he be named the primary residential parent, that his child support obligation be modified, and that Mother be found in willful civil contempt. In the proposed parenting plan submitted by Father, he requested that Mother have 80 days of parenting time and that he have 285 days of parenting time.

Mother answered the petition, denying most of Father’s allegations. She stated that the child had been sick with recurrent abdominal pain, which caused him to miss school. She further alleged that Father made insulting remarks to her.

On March 13, 2013, the court entered an agreed restraining order providing that the

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Bluebook (online)
Frederick Zahn v. Margaret Zahn Logan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frederick-zahn-v-margaret-zahn-logan-tennctapp-2015.