Gary Curtis Whitworth v. Patricia Gayle Whitworth

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 17, 2009
DocketE2008-01521-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Gary Curtis Whitworth v. Patricia Gayle Whitworth (Gary Curtis Whitworth v. Patricia Gayle Whitworth) 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
Gary Curtis Whitworth v. Patricia Gayle Whitworth, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE June 8, 2009 Session

GARY CURTIS WHITWORTH v. PATRICIA GAYLE WHITWORTH

Direct Appeal from the General Sessions Court for Loudon County No. 7968 Hon. William H. Russell, Judge

No. E2008-01521-COA-R3-CV - FILED AUGUST 17, 2009

In this divorce action, the defendant, following the entry of the Divorce Decree, filed a Motion to Set Aside the Marital Property Settlement on the grounds that she did not agree to the same, and further was denied due process because she had no notice of a hearing resulting in the Divorce Decree. On appeal, we vacate and remand.

Tenn. R. App. P.3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the General Sessions Court Vacated and Remanded..

HERSCHEL PICKENS FRANKS, P.J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which CHARLES D. SUSANO , JR., J., and D. MICHAEL SWINEY , J., joined.

Jason C. Rose, Maryville, Tennessee, for appellant, Patricia Gayle Whitworth.

OPINION

This divorce case has a long and tortured history. Defendant, Patricia Whitworth, appeals the Judgement of the General Sessions Court and her former husband, Gary Whitworth did not file a brief to this Court.

Gary Whitworth, filed a Complaint for a divorce against defendant on May 11, 2000. There were no children of this short marriage, and the Complaint pled irreconcilable differences as grounds for divorce and asked for an equitable distribution of the parties' property and debts in the event the parties did not present a marital distribution agreement. On March 17, 2003, plaintiff filed a Motion for Default Judgment as defendant had not filed an answer to the Amended Complaint. On March 28, 2003, defendant filed an Answer to the Original and Amended Complaints admitting all allegations with the exception of abandonment. Ms. Whitworth admitted that “either or both of your parties may be awarded an absolute divorce on the cause of irreconcilable differences should your parties enter into a Marital Dissolution Agreement approved by the Court". A counterclaim for divorce was also filed by Ms. Whitworth also seeking a divorce. Plaintiff answered the counterclaim on April 8, 2003.

A hearing of an uncontested or agreed matter was scheduled for June 28, 2004. According to an order entered by the Court and a motion filed by the plaintiff, the parties appeared to take the depositions of the parties and the defendant’s son on May 24, 2004. Present was plaintiff, defendant, counsel for both parties and a court reporter. Prior to the depositions, the parties entered into negotiations to resolve the issues remaining in the divorce and after three hours of discussion, the parties apparently resolved the disputed issues. Their agreement was announced on the record by counsel for the parties and transcribed by the court reporter. The transcript is a trial exhibit, and is set forth in this Opinion. Ailor is counsel for Mr. Whitworth and Mr. Hickman is counsel for Ms. Whitworth.

MR. HICKMAN: It’s kind of a one-issue lawsuit, this house, right? Everything is else is [sic] divided?

MR. AILOR: Yeah.

MR. HICKMAN: Each pay their own debts?

MR. HICKMAN: All right. If I’ve got this right, she’s going to refinance as soon as possible, but no less that 90 days. Assuming she qualifies, she will buy him out at $30,000. He will give her a quit claim deed.

MR. AILOR: Uh-huh. If she has problems at her bank and Gary can get her a loan, is she willing to let him try and assist her with that?

MR. WHITWORTH: Well, she can - - you know, you can go do that . They know you, you can go up there and geta a loan if you need to. I think Carol Jones would be better.

MR. HICKMAN: Well, I think you ought to check both on interest.

-2- MR. AILOR: Yeah, play them off against each other. Okay.

MR. HICKMAN: The appraisal is now out of the equation.

MR. HICKMAN: You’re just going to see who can do it the quickest, the cheapest, with the best interest rate, and keep your payment the lowest.

MS. WHITWORTH: Sounds like a plan to me.

MR. AILOR: Makes sense to me.

MR. HICKMAN: Okay.

MR. AILOR; You want to draw it up, Mike?

MR. HICKMAN: I will. He probably paid a filing fee that covers the court costs when he filed. He was the plaintiff, wasn’t he?

MR. AILOR: Yeah, he was.

MR. HICKMAN: Could he absorb those?

MR. AILOR: Yeah, we’ll pay the court costs.

MR. HICKMAN: And everything else is divided, they keep everything in their possession.

There is no indication in the transcript what the specific subject matter of the “one issue” in the divorce was, or whether the parties themselves understood the agreement and agreed to it. Although disposition of real property was apparently the subject of the agreement, the real property is not identified legally or informally in the transcript. Ms. Whitworth’s “seems like a plan to me” statement indicates that she should seek financing at the lowest possible interest, but cannot be interpreted to be a consent to the overall subject of the transaction or compromise. Mr. Whitworth is not on the record as agreeing to anything.

Then counsel for the defendant prepared a Judgment of Absolute Divorce on May 26, 2004 and sent it to plaintiff’s counsel. The prepared Judgment provides that the parties had

-3- stipulated to grounds pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. 36-4-129. The judgment also addresses two pieces of real property owned by the parties. Property in Louisville, Tennessee was awarded to defendant and divested from plaintiff. Plaintiff was to execute a quit claim deed to defendant of any interest he had in that property. Defendant was to refinance the mortgage against the property and pay plaintiff the sum of $30,000.00 as his one-half equity interest in the Louisville property from the proceeds of the refinance loan.1 The prepared judgment also addresses real property located in Lenoir City, Tennessee. The property was to be awarded to plaintiff as his sole and exclusive property and defendant was to be divested of any interest she may have had in the property. If called upon, defendant was to execute a quitclaim deed to plaintiff. The prepared judgment was signed by counsel for plaintiff but not counsel for defendant.

At the June 28, 2004 hearing, according to the Order To Enforce Agreement, Counsel for defendant was present at Court on that date with the intent to announce the parties’ agreement to the Court. However, Ms. Whitworth also attended the hearing and refused to allow her counsel to sign the proposed judgment and present it to the Court. Her counsel subsequently withdrew his representation.

On September 1, 2004, plaintiff filed a Motion to Enforce the Agreement with the Court. The Motion recited the facts as set forth herein and asked the Court for an order entering the Judgment of Absolute Divorce “as agreed to by the parties”. The certificate of service with the motion indicates that Ms. Whitworth and Mr. Hickman were both mailed the motion on August 27, 2004. An order for substitution of Mr. Hickman as Ms. Whitworth’s counsel was not entered until October 5, 2004.

On September 2, 2004, the Trial Court entered an order in response to plaintiff’s Motion to enforce the agreement of the parties, entitled “Order to Enforce Agreement”, and states that the “matter came on to be heard” but does not state the date of the hearing or who was present at the hearing. The order states the defendant’s refusal to allow her counsel to sign the proposed Judgment and present it to the Court at the June 28, 2004 hearing was not proper and the Court found “that the Judgement of Absolute Divorce should be and is hereby entered as if incorporated herein verbatim Nunc Pro Tunc June 28, 2004.”

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Bluebook (online)
Gary Curtis Whitworth v. Patricia Gayle Whitworth, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gary-curtis-whitworth-v-patricia-gayle-whitworth-tennctapp-2009.