In Re: Kaiden T.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 15, 2014
DocketM2014-00423-COA-R3-PT
StatusPublished

This text of In Re: Kaiden T. (In Re: Kaiden T.) 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: Kaiden T., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs September 2, 2014

IN RE KAIDEN T.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Overton County No. 13-CV-4 Ronald Thurman, Chancellor

No. M2014-00423-COA-R3-PT - Filed December 15, 2014

Mother appeals the termination of her parental rights contending the evidence was insufficient to prove any ground or that it was in the child’s best interest to terminate her parental rights. The trial court found that the petitioners, the father and step-mother, proved two grounds of abandonment, failure to support and failure to visit the child, pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-1-102(1)(A)(i), and that termination of Mother’s rights was in the best interest of the child, pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 36-1-113(c)(2) and (i). We have determined the evidence is sufficient to prove both grounds of abandonment; therefore, we affirm the trial court’s findings on both of these issues. However, we must remand the issue of the child’s best interest, due to the lack of specific findings of fact as mandated by Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-1-113(k). Therefore, we reverse and remand with instructions for the trial court to provide specific findings of fact concerning whether termination of Mother’s parental rights is in the best interest of the child and to enter judgment consistent with its findings.

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

F RANK G. C LEMENT, J R., P.J., M.S., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which A NDY D. B ENNETT and R ICHARD H. D INKINS, JJ., joined.

Andrea McLerran Ayers, Livingston, Tennessee, for the appellant, Nicole W.1

Michael Savage, Livingston, Tennessee, for the appellees, Brandon and Valerie T.

1 This court has a policy of protecting the identity of children in parental termination cases by initializing the last names of the parties. OPINION

Brandon T. (“Father”) and Nicole W. (“Mother”) are the biological parents of one child, Kaiden T., born in November 2005. Following the child’s birth, Mother had primary custody and Father had visitation every other weekend and Thursdays on his off weeks. When the child was a year old, Mother and Father agreed to joint custody, alternating weekly visitation, which arrangement remained in effect until March 2010, when Mother was arrested for selling drugs. Soon thereafter, the parents entered an agreed order whereby Father was granted custody and Mother’s contact with the child was restricted to supervised visitation, to be coordinated by the parents; she was also allowed visitation at the child’s sporting events and two weekly telephone calls at 7:00 p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Because Mother was unemployed, the issue of child support was reserved for further hearing.2

Since March 2010, the child has resided with Father and Valerie T. (“Step-mother”), who have been married for eight years, in Livingston, Tennessee. Mother has resided with her fiancé, Ricky Jones, at his home in Pleasant Shade, Tennessee, since 2012.

On January 30, 2013, Father and Step-mother filed the instant petition to terminate Mother’s parental rights and for step-parent adoption, based on abandonment for willful failure to visit and for willful failure to support.3 Petitioners alleged that Mother had either failed to visit the child altogether or engaged in only token visitation and that Mother had never paid child support. They further asserted that it was in the child’s best interest to terminate Mother’s parental rights and to allow Step-mother to adopt the child “and legally become said minor child’s mother with all the duties and responsibilities attached to said relationship.” The trial court appointed counsel to represent Mother and a Guardian Ad Litem to represent the interest of the child.

A one-day trial was conducted on January 27, 2014, with Mother, Father, and Step- mother testifying. Also testifying, was a friend of Mother’s and the child’s teachers and karate instructor. The testimony regarding Mother’s relationship with the child and her visitation with the child pursuant to the 2010 order revealed that she was entitled to visit the

2 At a later date, not identified in this record, but prior to June 2013, Mother was ordered to pay child support to Father; the amount and other details are not provided. 3 As we noted in In re Adoption of Z.J.D., No. M2012-01596-COA-R3-PT, 2013 WL 870654 (Tenn. Ct. App. Mar.7, 2013), a parent has no standing to petition for the termination of the other parent’s parental rights but is a necessary party to the petition for adoption by a step-parent. Id. at *1, n.1 (citing Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-1-113(b); Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-1-115(c); Osborn v. Marr, 127 S.W.3d 737, 739-40 (Tenn. 2004)).

-2- child at the child’s sporting events and other supervised visitation that could be arranged at the convenience of the parents; however, Mother attended less than ten sporting events since 2010, even though the child consistently attended karate lessons on Tuesday afternoons at the same time and location. Father testified that Mother missed “hundreds” of the child’s sporting events, and the last time she attended a karate lesson, pre-petition, was in early 2011. Mother’s last “scheduled” visitation was Christmas 2010. Father and Step-mother testified that they arranged for Christmas visitation in December 2011 at a local McDonald’s but Mother failed to attend. Mother, for her part, testified that she does not remember scheduling visitation with the child in December 2011.

Mother testified that every time she told Father or Step-mother that she planned to visit the child at karate, they would not be there. Step-mother testified that there had indeed been times when the child missed his karate class and she did not notify Mother, but Step- mother denied that she had ever intentionally discouraged a relationship between Mother and the child. Mother described two specific requests for visitation with the child, which never transpired. One was in September 2011 when her mother came to visit and arranged for breakfast with the child, but Father and Step-mother canceled at the last minute. The second was a request in November 2013, when her father was coming to visit. Mother claimed she texted Step-mother a request, but did not receive a response. Notably, however, neither of these requests were during the four months preceding the petition, and Mother provided no other instances of being denied visitation requests either during or before the relevant four- month period.

The 2010 custody order also allowed two telephone calls per week with her child on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 7:00 p.m., and Mother was to initiate the calls. Mother testified that she called her son regularly, and also set her phone alarm to remind her to call. Mother testified that she initiated “several calls” during the four months preceding the petition, but that the majority of the time, her calls would go unanswered and unreturned. Step-mother and Father both testified that, in the beginning, they were cooperative with the telephone call schedule, but that Mother’s calls to the child were sporadic at best.

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Bluebook (online)
In Re: Kaiden T., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kaiden-t-tennctapp-2014.