In Re: Christopher M., Jr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 4, 2010
DocketE2009-02564-COA-R3-PT
StatusPublished

This text of In Re: Christopher M., Jr. (In Re: Christopher M., Jr.) 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: Christopher M., Jr., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE May 19, 2010 Session

IN RE: CHRISTOPHER M., JR. ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Knox County No. 170829-2 Daryl R. Fansler, Chancellor

No. E2009-02564-COA-R3-PT - FILED JUNE 4, 2010

K.C. (“Grandmother”) filed a petition seeking to terminate the parental rights of C.W.M. (“Father”) to the minor children Christopher M., Jr. and Darius M. (“the Children”), and to adopt the Children. The case was tried and the parties stipulated that grounds existed to terminate Father’s parental rights under Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 36-1-113(g)(6) and (g)(7). After trial, the Trial Court entered its order terminating Father’s parental rights finding and holding, inter alia, that it was in the best interest of the Children for Father’s parental rights to be terminated. Father appeals to this Court the finding that it was in the best interest of the Children for his parental rights to be terminated. We affirm.

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

D. M ICHAEL S WINEY, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which H ERSCHEL P. F RANKS, P.J., and J OHN W. M CC LARTY, J., joined.

Robert A. Cole, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, C.W.M.

Wesley D. Stone, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellee, K.C. OPINION

Background

On November 4, 1999, Father intentionally executed M.R.C. (“Mother”) by shooting her twice in the head after she admitted to being pregnant by another man and told Father she was leaving him. Father pled guilty to second degree homicide and was sentenced to fifteen years at Violent 100%, Range 1. At the time that Father was sentenced, the Children were three years old and one year old respectively.

On November 15, 1999, the Juvenile Court for Knox County entered an order granting Grandmother, Mother’s mother, temporary legal custody of the Children. The Children have lived with Grandmother continuously since that time. In October of 2007, Grandmother filed a petition seeking to terminate Father’s parental rights to the Children, and to adopt the Children. The case was tried in November of 2009. The Trial Court entered an order allowing Father to be transported from the North East Correctional Complex where he was incarcerated at the time of trial to the Knox County Jail, and Father appeared in person at trial.

Grandmother, who testified at trial that she was born in 1961, rents a house and has lived there for nine years with the Children. Prior to Mother’s murder, Grandmother lived with her son and his wife. Grandmother needed more space when she was granted custody of the Children, and so she rented the house she lives in with the Children. Her house has three bedrooms and one bathroom.

At the time of Mother’s murder, Grandmother worked forty hours a week. Grandmother continued to work full time for several years after she was granted custody of the Children. The Children attended daycare while Grandmother was at work. In March of 2007, Grandmother was diagnosed with pancreatitis and had to stop working. She then took the Children out of daycare because she was staying at home and could care for them. Grandmother testified that she has gotten help with the Children from other family members. She testified that her sister, E.F., has helped her the most.

At the time of trial, the older child was thirteen years old and was involved in baseball. Grandmother testified that in the past he also had been involved in football and basketball. The younger child also is involved in baseball and had been involved in football and basketball in the past. Grandmother takes the Children to their athletic practices and games.

-2- The younger child has an allergy problem for which he sees a doctor. The older child has allergies and also suffers from migraines. Grandmother has been taking the older child to a neurologist for two or three years for treatment for the migraines. She took him to the neurologist approximately one week before trial to change his medication because the migraines had been worse lately. The migraines had affected the older child’s grades during the last grading period. Grandmother stated that the migraines have affected the older child’s school work: “Because when his head starts hurting him, I mean it really hurts him bad and he has to normally lay down somewhere for about thirty minutes until it eases off, and that’s at school and that, you know, affects him.”

Grandmother helps the Children with their homework. Until the last grading period before the trial, the older child was a B/C student, but he failed some courses in the last term because of the migraines. Grandmother called the school and set up a meeting with his teachers. She met with four of the older child’s five teachers, and they came up with the plan to keep Grandmother notified every two weeks via mail about how the older child is doing at school. Grandmother testified that the younger child is doing well in school and is an A/B student.

Grandmother receives social security and the Children get Family First and food stamps. Grandmother testified that she is able to meet her monthly obligations with this income and that she has money left over after paying for the monthly obligations which include rent, KUB, phone, and cable.

Grandmother testified that she has had no contact with Father since Mother’s murder. Grandmother has allowed members of Father’s family to pick the Children up at her house and take them to visit Father in prison. Father never wrote to Grandmother or to the Children after Mother’s murder. He never sent birthday cards to the Children while they have lived with Grandmother. He also has never sent any child support. Prior to the filing of the petition to terminate Father’s parental rights, the Children received some cards from Father through a member of Father’s family.

Grandmother testified that the Children know that Father shot Mother, but think it was an accident. When asked why she has not told them that Father intentionally shot and killed Mother, Grandmother testified: “I was waiting on them to get old enough so they could - - would understand it.” Grandmother testified that she has not taken any action to prevent the Children from seeing Father in prison and has done nothing to make it hard for Father to communicate with the Children. Grandmother also testified that she has not talked bad about Father to the Children.

Grandmother believes that the Children are well adjusted and thriving in the

-3- environment she has provided for them. When asked why she wanted to terminate Father’s parental rights, Grandmother stated: “Well, I have had [the Children] for ten years now and we are a family. I’ve had to be both mother and father. I love these boys to death and I always will. They’re just like my own children. They’re not like my grandchildren, they’re just like my children.”

Regina Hahn is employed at the Chapman Learning Center, where the Children previously attended daycare. The Children started at the Chapman Learning Center in March of 2000, several months after Mother’s murder, and continued to attend until Grandmother stopped working. Ms. Hahn spent time with the Children on a daily basis while they were in daycare. When asked her impression of how Grandmother was caring for the Children, Ms. Hahn stated: “Excellent. I mean they were always clean. When they first came, [Grandmother] would call me five times a day.… Well, she would drop them off crying and pick them up crying because the boys cried really bad for the first month.”

Ms. Hahn never had any concern about Grandmother’s ability to raise the Children. Ms.

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In Re: Christopher M., Jr., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-christopher-m-jr-tennctapp-2010.