In Re Adoption of John A. Kleshinski and Kevin na KleKleshinski, Chirleshinski and John E. Kleshinski v. Julia Elizabeth Kleshinski - Concurring

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 4, 2005
DocketM2004-00986-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of In Re Adoption of John A. Kleshinski and Kevin na KleKleshinski, Chirleshinski and John E. Kleshinski v. Julia Elizabeth Kleshinski - Concurring (In Re Adoption of John A. Kleshinski and Kevin na KleKleshinski, Chirleshinski and John E. Kleshinski v. Julia Elizabeth Kleshinski - Concurring) 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.

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In Re Adoption of John A. Kleshinski and Kevin na KleKleshinski, Chirleshinski and John E. Kleshinski v. Julia Elizabeth Kleshinski - Concurring, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs November 2, 2004

IN RE ADOPTION OF JOHN ALLEN KLESHINSKI AND KEVIN RAY KLESHINSKI

CHIRLENA JEAN KLESHINSKI AND JOHN EDWARD KLESHINSKI v. JULIA ELIZABETH KLESHINSKI

An Appeal from the Chancery Court for Lincoln County No. A-186 J. B. Cox, Chancellor

No. M2004-00986-COA-R3-CV - Filed May 4, 2005

This is a termination of parental rights case. The mother and father were married, and two sons were born during the marriage. The father physically abused the mother during the marriage. In 1996, the parties divorced. Later in 1996, a consent order was entered giving the father custody of the children. The order did not require the mother to pay child support. Both parties remarried, and the mother moved to Alabama. The mother exercised visitation with the children until the early part of 1999. Around that time, the mother stopped visiting the children entirely. The father claimed that he did not know why the mother stopped visiting, and the mother said that the father and his new wife threatened her with physical harm if she attempted to see her sons. About four and a half years after the mother’s last attempt to visit with the children, the father and his new wife filed this petition to terminate the mother’s parental rights and to permit the father’s new wife to adopt the children. The father and his new wife asserted that the mother had abandoned the children by willfully failing to support or visit them. The trial court terminated the mother’s parental rights but declined to permit the adoption at that time. The mother now appeals. We reverse the finding of the willful failure to support and affirm the finding of willful failure to visit. However, we vacate the termination of parental rights on the basis that the trial court failed to make specific written findings regarding the best interest of the children, and remand for further proceedings on this issue.

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

HOLLY M. KIRBY , J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which DAVID R. FARMER , J., joined. ALAN E. HIGHERS, J., filed a separate concurring opinion.

Susan E. McCown, Fayetteville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Julia Elizabeth Kleshinski. N. Andy Myrick, Jr., Fayetteville, Tennessee, for the appellees, Chirlena Jean Kleshinski and John Edward Kleshinski.

OPINION

This case involves the unsettling aftermath of an abusive marriage. Petitioner/Appellee John Edward Kleshinski (“Father”) and Respondent/Appellant Julia Elizabeth (Kleshinski) Posey (“Mother”) were married in 1989 and are the natural parents of the minor children involved in this action, John Allen Kleshinski (born October 9, 1990) and Kevin Ray Kleshinski (born October 8, 1994). They lived primarily in Fayetteville, Lincoln County, Tennessee. Mother has a ninth-grade education and had worked in minimum wage jobs, mostly at factories. Father works for a blasting company, regularly working significant overtime and making a substantial income. Father was physically abusive towards Mother during the approximately seven-year marriage. Mother finally left the marital home, and the parties divorced on March 11, 1996. In the final decree, by consent, Father was awarded custody of John, and Mother was awarded custody of Kevin.

Mother was unemployed when she left the marital home, and initially had difficulty finding a job. She lived in a variety of places, first with a friend, for a short while in a motel, for several months in a trailer with a boyfriend, and then with a cousin. As a result, in December 1996, Mother signed a consent order giving Father custody of Kevin as well as John. Kevin and John were approximately two and five years old, respectively, at the time. Under the order, Mother was given reasonable visitation to be established by Father in his discretion. The consent order did not require Mother to pay child support.

Father remarried in November 1996 to Chirlena Jean Kleshinski (“Stepmother”). They continued to reside in Fayetteville, Lincoln County, Tennessee, with Stepmother’s son from a prior marriage. Some of Mother’s relatives, including her sister, continued to live in the same area.

At some point during this time, Mother moved to Alabama. For a couple of years, she exercised regular visitation with both children. This ended on approximately New Year’s Eve 1998, for reasons that the parties dispute. She had no visitation with them after that time.

Mother married Myron Posey (“Mr. Posey”) in April 1999, and for at least the next four years, she and her new husband continued to live at the same address in Alabama. Mr. Posey had been employed at a meat market prior to their marriage, but after several surgeries on his legs was unable to continue working. Mother had regular communication with her sister, Sheila Nix (“Nix”). Nix lived in the same area as Father and Stepmother and was in contact with them as well. Father’s mother, Ann Jones (“Grandmother”), also remained in contact with Mother.

On February 18, 2003, Father and Stepmother filed a petition to terminate Mother’s parental rights as to both children, and to permit Stepmother to adopt them. As grounds for termination, the petition alleged that Mother had “willfully failed to visit, support, or make reasonable payments toward the support of [the children] for a period of 4 months preceding the filing of this petition

-2- and/or engaged in conduct that exhibited a wanton disregard for the welfare of the children.” The petition also alleged that termination of Mother’s rights was in the best interest of the children.

The petition for adoption alleged that Father had attempted to determine Mother’s whereabouts and “drove to Alabama to search for [Mother] at her last known address, but was unable to locate her.” Based on the claim by Father and Stepmother that their efforts to locate Mother were unsuccessful, the petitioner sought to serve process on Mother by publication in the Elk Valley Times in Lincoln County, Tennessee.

A friend of Nix’s apparently saw the publication in the Elk Valley Times and told Nix, who in turn notified Mother. After learning of the petition to terminate her parental rights, on March 17, 2003, Mother sent a letter pro se to the Court Clerk, objecting to the termination of her parental rights and asserting that she had been unable to visit the children because Father and Stepmother refused to allow such contact and threatened her with bodily harm when she attempted to see the children. Mother filed an affidavit of indigency and counsel was appointed to represent her. The trial was set for July 8, 2003.

In the ensuing trial, the trial judge heard testimony from several witnesses. The witnesses offered widely divergent views of the marriage between Mother and Father, and the circumstances under which Mother came to lose all contact with her sons.

As the petitioners, Father and Stepmother presented their proof. Father testified first, giving sparse background on his marriage to Mother and their 1996 divorce. He noted that, initially, they agreed that he would have custody of their older son, John, and that Mother would have custody of Kevin, but several months later, Mother agreed to allow Father to have primary custody of both children. Father said that, after he obtained custody of both boys, Mother visited them only “[a] couple of times.” He claimed that he offered to let Mother stay in his and Stepmother’s home and visit the children there, but that she did not take advantage of that offer. He then testified as to an occasion on which Mother had the children, but they were discovered in the middle of the night in the care of two teenagers who had been drinking and passed out.

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