In re the Marriage of: Tasha Bates v. Damon Bates

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 31, 2014
Docket49A02-1306-DR-572
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re the Marriage of: Tasha Bates v. Damon Bates (In re the Marriage of: Tasha Bates v. Damon Bates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Marriage of: Tasha Bates v. Damon Bates, (Ind. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D), this Memorandum Decision shall not be regarded as precedent or cited before any court except for the purpose of establishing the defense of res judicata, collateral estoppel, or the law of the case.

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:

YVONNE FERGUSON-WATKINS Ferguson-Watkins & Associates Mar 31 2014, 6:24 am Indianapolis, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

In re the Marriage of: ) ) TASHA BATES, ) ) Appellant-Petitioner, ) ) vs. ) No. 49A02-1306-DR-572 ) DAMON BATES, ) ) Appellee-Respondent. )

APPEAL FROM THE MARION SUPERIOR COURT The Honorable Robert R. Altice, Jr., Judge The Honorable Kimberly D. Mattingly, Magistrate Cause No. 49D05-1112-DR-45904

March 31, 2014

MEMORANDUM DECISION - NOT FOR PUBLICATION

KIRSCH, Judge Tasha Bates (“Mother”) appeals the trial court’s findings of fact and conclusions

thereon dissolving the parties’ marriage. She raises the following restated and reordered

issues:

I. Whether the trial court abused its discretion when it denied Mother’s emergency motion to continue the final hearing;

II. Whether the trial court erred when it denied Mother’s Motion to Amend and/or Supplement Trial Documents;

III. Whether the trial court’s child support order was an abuse of discretion;

IV. Whether the trial court’s unequal division of the marital estate was an abuse of discretion; and

V. Whether the trial court abused its discretion when it ordered Mother to pay a portion of Father’s attorney fees.

We affirm in part and remand in part.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY1

Mother and Father were married on April 23, 1999. They had one child together,

T.B., born in July 2000. On December 2, 2011, Mother filed her petition for legal

separation, and on January 5, 2012, Father filed his petition to convert the legal separation

to a petition for dissolution, which the trial court granted.

We note that Mother’s Appellant’s Brief does not include a Statement of Facts, as is required by 1

Indiana Appellate Rule 46(A)(6), nor does her Appellant’s Appendix include a chronological case summary as required by Ind. App. Rule 50(A)(2)(a). “The purpose of our appellate rules, especially Indiana Appellate Rule 46, is to aid and expedite review and to relieve the appellate court of the burden of searching the record and briefing the case.” Thacker v. Wentzel, 797 N.E.2d 342, 345 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003). We admonish Mother’s counsel to, in the future, comply with our appellate rules.

2 The parties never owned a marital residence together. For a number of years, they

rented residences in which to live. At some point, the parties moved into a home owned

by Mother’s mother on West 58th Street in Indianapolis, and in 2009, Mother’s mother

gifted that house to Mother individually. The parties lived together at that house until the

end of September 2011, when Father moved out.

During the course of the marriage, Father concurrently worked two separate forty-

hour-per-week jobs. Tr. at 20 (“I’ve held down two jobs for over 22 years.”). However,

sometime in 2010 or 2011, Father’s mother (“Mrs. Boyd”) became terminally ill with a

brain tumor, and he began providing daily physical care for her. In order to do so, he quit

one of his two jobs, at Aaron’s Sales and Rental, where he was earning $10.00 per hour,

driving a delivery truck and doing assembly work. In the fall of 2011, Father still was

working for I.U. Health in the Supply Chain Operation department, earning $16.25 per

hour. Sometime in October 2011, he requested and received a three-week leave of absence

from work through FMLA, in order to take care of his mother. Mrs. Boyd passed away on

October 31, 2011. Father did not receive I.U. Health’s written notice advising him on the

date to return to work, because it was sent to the 58th Street residence. I.U. terminated

Father’s employment.

For most of the marriage, Mother was also employed outside the home. From about

2000 to 2007, Mother was employed in a supervisory capacity with Indiana Mentor earning

approximately $45,000.00 per year. However, around 2007, T.B. was failing her first grade

classes, and Mother and Father were concerned about her grades. Mother quit her job at

Indiana Mentor, in order to be home more and available to T.B. Around this time frame,

3 Mother and Father completed necessary paperwork and were approved to have foster

children in their home.

In January 2012, the trial court held a preliminary hearing. Father was still

unemployed, although he testified to having applied to over fifteen places for employment.

The financial declaration imputed $290 per week in income for Father, which was

calculated based on minimum wage. Mother testified at the hearing that she was working

at Pizza Hut, fifteen hours a week, making $7.50 per hour. She also received a $60 per

diem for a two-year-old foster child in her care. Father was expected to receive an

inheritance from his mother, Mrs. Boyd, who was awarded a significant class action lawsuit

settlement before her death. Upon Mrs. Boyd’s death, the inheritance was placed in a trust,

which later would be distributed after her estate matters were completed. At the conclusion

of the preliminary hearing, the trial court ordered that it was in the best interest of the child

to grant physical custody of T.B. to Mother and that the parties share joint legal custody.

The trial court ordered each party to pay his or her own attorney fees and ordered that

Father was entitled to visitation pursuant to Indiana Parenting Time Guidelines. Id. at 52.

On February 8, 2013, several days before the final hearing, Mother moved for an

emergency continuance of the final hearing due to illness of both T.B. and the foster child,

which Mother’s counsel asserted made it not possible for Mother to attend the hearing.

The court permitted a hearing on the matter on the morning of February 11, the date the

final hearing was to begin. After receiving argument and evidence, the trial court denied

the request to continue and proceeded with the final hearing. Prior to the start of evidence,

the parties stipulated that Mother would have primary physical custody of T.B. and that the

4 parties would share joint legal custody. The parties also stipulated that Father would have

parenting time pursuant the Guidelines. Remaining at issue, then, were the matters of

division of marital property and child support.

A significant portion of the hearing was devoted to the issue of Father’s inheritance

from his mother, including portions that were distributed to T.B. At the hearing, Father

called as a witness a bank trust officer to testify as to the final distribution to Father in

December 2012, in the amount of $415,219.85, as well as several prior distributions:

including $1,125.00, which was applied to child support owed for T.B. Father also called

attorney Christi Anderson, who was the attorney that prepared Mrs. Boyd’s estate plan and

handled her estate. Anderson testified that Mrs. Boyd directed that 68% of her estate was

to go to Father, who was her only child. None was directed to be given to Mother; in fact,

Anderson testified that, although she met with Mrs. Boyd a number of times, including

sessions to review and discuss family members and whether they would inherit anything,

Anderson did not realize Father was ever married, as Mrs.

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