In Re: A.N.F. (d/o/b 10/24/99), a Child Under Eighteen Years of Age

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 24, 2008
DocketW2007-02122-COA-R3-PT
StatusPublished

This text of In Re: A.N.F. (d/o/b 10/24/99), a Child Under Eighteen Years of Age (In Re: A.N.F. (d/o/b 10/24/99), a Child Under Eighteen Years of Age) 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
In Re: A.N.F. (d/o/b 10/24/99), a Child Under Eighteen Years of Age, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON JUNE 18, 2008 Session

IN RE: A.N.F. (d/o/b 10/24/99), a Child Under Eighteen Years of Age

Direct Appeals from the Juvenile and General Sessions Courts for McNairy County Nos. C-765 (Juvenile) & 7525 (General Sessions) Bob Gray, General Sessions Court Judge

No. W2007-02122-COA-R3-PT - Filed September 24, 2008

This opinion involves two consolidated appeals. The first case involves post-divorce petitions to modify a parenting plan, filed by the husband and the wife, regarding custody of two children. The second case was filed by the wife and a third party, seeking to establish the third party’s parentage of one of the two children. For the following reasons, we affirm the trial court’s decision in the custody case as modified, and we affirm the trial court’s decision in the paternity case.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the General Sessions Court Affirmed as Modified; Judgment of the Juvenile Court Affirmed

ALAN E. HIGHERS, P.J.,W.S., delivered the opinion of the court, in which DAVID R. FARMER , J., and WALTER C. KURTZ, SR., J., joined.

Betty Stafford Scott, Jackson, TN, for Appellants

Kelli Barr Summers, Brentwood, TN, for Appellee OPINION

I. FACTS & PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Mr. F and Mrs. F1 were living together in 1999 when Mrs. F gave birth to a daughter, A.N.F. Mr. F and Mrs. F were not married at the time. According to Mrs. F, she was already pregnant when she met Mr. F, and Mr. F knew that A.N.F. was not his child. Nevertheless, when A.N.F. was born, Mr. F and Mrs. F brought her home from the hospital together and raised her as if Mr. F was her father. In 2000, when A.N.F. was eight months old, Mr. F and Mrs. F married. They executed a voluntary acknowledgment of paternity naming Mr. F as A.N.F.’s father. Mr. F was then listed as A.N.F.’s father on her birth certificate, and A.N.F.’s last name was changed from Mrs. F’s maiden name to Mr. F’s last name. In 2002, Mr. F and Mrs. F had a son, C.S.F.

In 2004, Mr. F filed a complaint for divorce. Among other things, he sought to be designated the primary residential parent of A.N.F. and C.S.F. Mrs. F filed an answer and counter-complaint also seeking to be named the primary residential parent. Mrs. F’s counter-complaint stated that A.N.F. “was not fathered by [Mr. F], however, the minor child does have [Mr. F]’s last name and has known no other father.”

The parties were divorced by decree in November of 2004. They could not reach an agreement regarding child custody, and the trial court entered a permanent parenting plan providing that Mr. F and Mrs. F would be designated “joint primary residential parents with equal parenting time” until A.N.F. enrolled in school. Once A.N.F. began school, Mr. F would be the primary residential parent, and the children would reside with Mrs. F every other weekend and every other Wednesday night. During summer vacation, the opposite schedule would apply, and the children would reside primarily with Mrs. F.

Shortly after the final decree, in February of 2005, Mrs. F contacted the Department of Children’s Services (“DCS”) and reported that A.N.F. told her she had been touched in her private area by Mr. F. A.N.F. was five years old at the time. A DCS case manager contacted Mr. F and told him that he was not permitted to pick his children up from Mrs. F’s visitation. DCS filed a petition that resulted in an ex parte restraining order and no contact order being entered against Mr. F. A.N.F. was examined at a local emergency room for signs of sexual abuse, but none was found. Either the trial court or DCS also required that A.N.F. receive counseling.

Mr. F filed a “Petition for the Immediate Return of the Minor Children to Petitioner’s Care and Petition to Modify Custody and Visitation.” Mr. F alleged that Mrs. F had a history of making false allegations of sexual abuse, and he contended that Mrs. F’s allegations about him abusing A.N.F. were false. He further alleged that Mrs. F was emotionally unstable, and that she was repeatedly making derogatory remarks about him in the presence of the children. Mrs. F allegedly told A.N.F. that Mr. F was not her “real” father, without consulting him, causing A.N.F. to be upset

1 To protect the anonymity of the minor children, we will refer to the parties using their initials.

-2- and confused. The parties had previously agreed they would not tell A.N.F. that Mr. F was not her father until she was at least eighteen years old. Mr. F submitted a proposed parenting plan that would reduce Mrs. F’s visitation with the children and require it to be supervised by a neutral third party. He contended that supervision was necessary because Mrs. F’s repeated attempts to interfere with his relationship with the children were adversely affecting the children. Mrs. F then filed a motion to continue the hearing on Mr. F’s petition. At some point, it appears that the trial court allowed Mr. F to have supervised visitation with A.N.F. pending further orders, and the court allowed him to resume his regular visitation with C.S.F.

On Friday, August 5, 2005, Mr. F returned C.S.F. to Mrs. F for her weekend visitation and told her that C.S.F., then three years old, had fallen and hurt his leg just before they left home. Mrs. F initially treated the injury with an ice pack, but later that evening, she took C.S.F. to the hospital, where doctors discovered that he had a fractured femur. Someone at the hospital notified Child Protective Services (“CPS”) because Mrs. F told hospital personnel that C.S.F. had been injured one to three days earlier, while he was in Mr. F’s care, and that Mr. F did not seek medical attention for C.S.F.

Mrs. F then filed a motion to modify the parenting plan seeking to be named primary residential parent for both children because of the DCS and CPS investigations of Mr. F. Mrs. F also filed a motion to suspend Mr. F’s parenting time with C.S.F. because of the aforementioned incident. Following a hearing on August 22, 2005, the trial court appointed a guardian ad litem, ordered a DCS investigation of the facts surrounding C.S.F.’s leg injury, and ordered that C.S.F. also reside with Mrs. F until the investigations were completed.

Following its investigation regarding the alleged sexual abuse of A.N.F., DCS filed a notice of dismissal of its petition because it found “[n]o factual evidence, no medical proof, nor any counseling records or reports to substantiate the original allegation of inappropriate touching or sexual abuse by the father.”

DCS completed its investigation regarding C.S.F.’s leg injury on September 21, 2005. According to the original referral report, Mrs. F had initially reported that C.S.F. was injured and unable to walk for about three days, while in Mr. F’s care, without receiving medical attention. According to a medical report, Mrs. F had reported to medical personnel that C.S.F. was injured the day before he was returned to Mrs. F. When questioned by a CPS investigator, Mrs. F did not state that C.S.F. had been injured for days, but simply said she was told by Mr. F that C.S.F. had fallen. In summary, the DCS report stated, “Investigator finds some variation in the mother’s story shows no consistency [sic].” After interviewing Mr. F and other witnesses, who explained that C.S.F. was running in the yard and fell, DCS concluded that there was “no evidence at this time to support the allegation of physical abuse,” and it recommended that the case be closed.

After the investigations were completed, on October 10, 2005, Mr. F renewed his motion to modify the permanent parenting plan to restrict Mrs. F to supervised visitation. The trial court

-3- subsequently returned custody of A.N.F. to Mr. F without restrictions, but Mrs. F retained custody of C.S.F.

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In Re: A.N.F. (d/o/b 10/24/99), a Child Under Eighteen Years of Age, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-anf-dob-102499-a-child-under-eighteen-years-of-age-tennctapp-2008.