Hunt v. Hunt

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 27, 2000
DocketM1997-00221-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Hunt v. Hunt (Hunt v. Hunt) 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
Hunt v. Hunt, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE July 1998 Session

TOMMY LOUIS HUNT v. LOIS J. HUNT

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Sumner County No. 96D-500 Thomas E. Gray, Chancellor

No. M1997-00221-COA-R3-CV - Filed July 27, 2000

This appeal involves the financial aspects of a divorce that ended a seventeen-year marriage. Both parties sought a divorce, and following a bench trial, the Chancery Court for Sumner County granted the wife a divorce based on the husband’s inappropriate marital conduct. The trial court awarded the wife most of the marital estate, apart from the parties’ pensions. The court also directed the husband to pay most of the marital debt and a portion of the wife’s legal expenses. While the trial court did not require the husband to pay long-term alimony, it required him to pay $4,200 in alimony in solido. The wife asserts on this appeal that the trial court should have awarded her a greater portion of the marital estate and permanent spousal support. We have determined that the trial court’s distribution of the marital estate is essentially equitable. However, in light of the length of the marriage and the disparity in income, we have determined that, in addition to the alimony in solido, the husband should pay the wife $120 per month beginning after his last alimony in solido payment through January 2007.

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

WILLIAM C. KOCH , Jr., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which HENRY F. TODD , P.J., M.S., and WILLIAM B. CAIN , J., joined.

David H. Hornik, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Lois J. Hunt.

James M. Hunter, Jr., Gallatin, Tennessee, for the appellee, Tommy Louis Hunt.

OPINION

Tommy L. Hunt and Lois J. Hunt were married in August 1980. Mr. Hunt was then thirty- seven years old. He had been married twice before and had three sons from his previous marriages. Ms. Hunt was thirty-eight years old and had been married once before. She had a mentally disabled daughter who continued to live with her during and after the marriage. The parties had no children together. Mr. Hunt was employed at DuPont; while Ms. Hunt was employed at Oscar Mayer Foods Corporation. Following the marriage, Mr. Hunt moved into a house on Robin Hood Circle in Hendersonville that Ms. Hunt had purchased in 1977. The record, such as it is, provides little information regarding the parties or their marriage between 1980 and their separation in September 1996.1 Apparently, Ms. Hunt’s daughter continued to live with the parties. Mr. Hunt continued working for DuPont, but Ms. Hunt’s job at Oscar Mayer ended in 1992 when the plant closed. However, in 1993 Ms. Hunt received $11,371 as a lump sum settlement of a workers’ compensation claim against Oscar Mayer and also began receiving approximately $750 per month in Social Security disability benefits. The record does not disclose the nature of the disability or its effect on her employability. 2

The record provides an indistinct picture of the deterioration of the parties’ relationship.3 Ms. Hunt asserted that Mr. Hunt began losing interest in her in the early 1990's and insinuated that he was having some sort of inappropriate relationship with another woman. For his part, Mr. Hunt complained of Ms. Hunt’s slovenly housekeeping, her hoarding of useless objects, and her propensity for making impulse purchases. Mr. Hunt eventually left the marital home in September 1996 and filed for divorce in the Chancery Court for Sumner County three months later. Ms. Hunt counterclaimed for divorce.

The trial court heard the evidence on May 14, 1997, and filed its memorandum and final decree on May 21, 1997. The court first identified and awarded the parties their separate property.4 Then the court divided the parties’ marital estate, valued at approximately $200,500 excluding the portions of their pensions earned during the marriage, by awarding Ms. Hunt property valued at $123,700 (60%) and Mr. Hunt property valued at $81,800 (40%). Turning to the parties’ debts of $67,500, the trial court required Mr. Hunt to assume $49,500 (73%) of the debts and required Ms.

1 The record contains a statement of the evidence and a copy of the trial court’s notes in lieu of a verbatim transcript of the divorce hearing. When the parties could not agree on a statement of the evidence, the trial court was forced to prepare one itself. Despite the trial court’s best efforts, this record again demonstrates that, as a practical matter, statem ents of the e vidence are poo r substitutes fo r verbatim transcripts.

2 The only evidence in the record concerning Ms. Hunt’s ability to work is that she does “what is n ecessary.”

3 The absence of an adequate record does not have much direct impact on this point because Mr. Hunt is not contesting the trial court’s decision to award Ms. Hunt a divorce on the grounds of inappropri a te m arital condu ct. However, the lack of evidence regardin g the partie s’ condu ct during the marr iage has m ade it virtually impossible for this court to consider or apply the “fault” ground, Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-5-101(d)(1)(K) (Supp. 1999), with reference to Ms. H unt’s dem and for sp ousal sup port. 4 In addition to their personal belongings, jewelry, and clothing, the trial court treated the 47% of M r. Hunt’s DuPont pension that was ea rned be fore the m arriage as se parate property. The court likewise treated 25% of Ms. Hu nt’s Oscar Maye r pension as her sepa rate property , as well as the pre-ma rital apprec iation in the value of her home, and the funds rem aining fro m her w orkers’ co mpen sation settlem ent and th e lump sum So cial Security disability pa ymen t.

-2- Hunt to assume $18,000 (27%).5 The net effect of the court’s distribution of the marital property and debts was that Ms. Hunt received 77% of the net marital estate, while Mr. Hunt received 23%. Specifically addressing the spousal support question, the trial court observed that it had awarded the “greater part” of the marital estate to Ms. Hunt and had onerated Mr. Hunt with the greater part of the marital debt in order to enable Ms. Hunt to maintain the lifestyle to which she had become accustomed. Accordingly, the court declined to award Ms. Hunt additional spousal support6 but did award her $2,000 to defray part of her legal expenses.7

Ms. Hunt filed a Tenn. R. Civ. P. 59 motion complaining that the trial court should have awarded her “a reasonable amount of permanent alimony and periodic monthly support” and that Mr. Hunt should be required to provide her with health insurance at his expense for three years. Mr. Hunt responded by arguing that the decree would enable Ms. Hunt to “continue a normal standard of living.” He also informed the court that Ms. Hunt had received the parties’ federal income tax refund and requested the court to divide the refund equally between them. The trial court conducted a hearing on July 7, 1997 and filed an order on July 10, 1997. On this occasion, the trial court directed Mr. Hunt to pay Ms. Hunt $4,200 in alimony in solido8 and directed Ms. Hunt to use this money to retire the second mortgage on her house. The trial court also distributed the parties’ $4,374 income tax refund by directing the parties to use $3,054 to repay their indebtedness to the Internal Revenue Service, to use $746 to pay the June and July 1997 mortgage payments on Ms. Hunt’s house, and to pay the remaining $574 to Mr. Hunt.

I. THE DIVISION OF THE MARITAL PROPERTY

Despite the fact that she received 77% of the parties’ net marital estate excluding the parties’ pensions, Ms. Hunt contends that the division of the marital property should have been even more

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