In the Matter of: Jonathan S. C-B

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 31, 2012
DocketM2010-02536-COA-R3-JV
StatusPublished

This text of In the Matter of: Jonathan S. C-B (In the Matter of: Jonathan S. C-B) 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 the Matter of: Jonathan S. C-B, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE November 16, 2011 Session

IN THE MATTER OF: JONATHAN S. C-B

Appeal from the Juvenile Court for Davidson County No. 2008001471 Betty K. Adams Green, Judge

No. M2010-02536-COA-R3-JV - Filed July 31, 2012

The mother of a five year old boy alleged that the boy’s father had sexually abused him, and she petitioned the juvenile court to have the father’s visitation privileges revoked. After a long course of proceedings that included an investigation by the Department of Children’s Services, testimony by a number of mental health professionals, and a report by the guardian ad litem, the court concluded that the Mother’s allegations were unfounded, that her hostility against the father was having a detrimental effect on the child, and that it was in the child’s best interest that the father be named as the child’s primary residential parent in place of the mother. The mother raises numerous procedural issues on appeal, and she also contends that her allegations of abuse against the father were true, or at the very least that she had a good faith belief in their truth. Having carefully considered the mother’s allegations and her arguments, we affirm the trial court.

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

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

Connie Reguli, Brentwood, Tennessee, for the appellant, Ok Yung Chung.

Jacqueline Belle Dixon, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Stephen Paul Bruehl.

Jessica Hooper, Nashville, Tennessee, for minor child, Jonathan S. C-B. OPINION

I. A P ARENTING O RDER

The child at the center of this case, Jonathan S. C-B, was born on October 20, 2004. The child’s father, Dr. Stephen Bruehl, and his mother, Dr. Ok Yung Chung, were living together at the time of his birth, but were unmarried. Both parents are medical professionals. Mother is an anesthesiologist and Father is a clinical psychologist. The parents separated in March of 2008, and Mother filed a petition in the Juvenile Court of Davidson County to be named as the child’s primary residential parent. Father filed an answer and counter-petition, asking the court to grant him joint or full custody of the child.

The initial custody proceedings were highly contentious. They included the filing of numerous motions, seven separate days of hearings over a course of four months, and a psychological evaluation of both parents. On October 6, 2009, the trial court filed an order that included detailed findings of fact. Among other things, the court noted that the relationship between the parents has been tumultuous from the beginning; that Jonathan suffers from asthma, but that the parents disagree as to its seriousness, cause and treatment; and that Father has a long history of substance abuse, but that he appears to have remained clean and sober since the episode that led to the parties’ separation in March of 2008.

The court named Mother as the child’s primary residential parent, with sole decision- making authority. The court also ordered that Father’s parenting time be supervised, that he abstain from prescription drugs and alcohol, and that he continue to follow an aftercare program to maintain sobriety. The court declared that Father could petition the court for a modification of the visitation schedule, “[a]fter two years of sobriety and compliance with the aftercare plan.” Father’s brother was designated to supervise his parenting time. Father and his brother were ordered to meet with the child’s asthma doctor for instruction on preventing and treating attacks.

Mother was ordered to inform Father of all the child’s doctor visits, and she was “encouraged to select a psychologist to assist the child in establishing a positive and nurturing relationship with both parents.” Both parents were warned not to make disparaging remarks about the other parent.

Father filed a motion to modify the court’s order shortly thereafter. The trial court conducted a hearing on his motion and entered an order on November 25, 2009, permitting Father to have phone visitation with the child two evenings a week, enlarging the list of individuals authorized to supervise Father’s visitation to include other family members, and setting out a detailed set of procedures for exchange of the child at the Belle Meade police

-2- station before and after each visitation. Later proceedings included testimony about the conduct of the parties during the exchanges at the police station, including one incident when the child refused to go for visitation with Father

II. A LLEGATIONS OF A BUSE

The court’s orders did not improve the relationship between the parties. On January 25, 2010, Father filed a petition against Mother “for Criminal and/or Civil Contempt and Other Relief.” The Petition included the claim that there had been a substantial and material change of circumstances since the court’s October and November orders and a request that the court modify and increase Father’s parenting time. Among other things, Father alleged that Mother had not allowed him to exercise telephone visitation, that she or someone authorized by her had made disparaging remarks about Father in the presence of the child, and that she had violated the spirit of the October order by failing to engage a child psychologist.1

Father also reported that he had been contacted by an investigator from the Department of Children’s Services (DCS) about an anonymous complaint to the department. The allegations were that Father had used drugs and that he had physically abused Jonathan during parenting time. Father declared that those allegations were all false, and he noted that DCS had not attempted to place any limitations or restrictions on his parenting time “as a result of these baseless allegations.” He also asserted that whoever made those allegations must have been someone very familiar with the parties’ situation.

Father asked the court to find Mother in contempt, to award him additional parenting time, and to lift the supervision requirement from his parenting time because he had successfully maintained absolute sobriety for almost two years. Father later amended his petition to add an allegation that Mother had taken the child for doctor visits without notifying him, in violation of the court’s orders, including several sessions with a psychiatrist.

On February 18, 2010, Mother filed an Emergency Petition to Suspend Visitation and for an Immediate Restraining Order. She alleged that DCS was investigating a complaint of child abuse against Father “as reported to DCS by the child’s treating physician, Dr. Louise Strang.” Attached to the Petition was the affidavit of Dr. Strang, a child psychologist who

1 Mother’s subsequent petition showed that she had in fact engaged a child psychologist, but the psychologist had never attempted to contact Father.

-3- declared that she had been treating Jonathan as her patient since February 2009.2

Dr. Strang’s affidavit stated that the child had recently disclosed to her incidents of sexual abuse perpetrated on him by Father. We do not believe it necessary to repeat the details of the alleged abuse in this opinion, but we note that if they were true, they would be serious enough to support criminal charges against the abuser. Dr. Strang stated that the child demonstrated behavioral symptoms consistent with such abuse, and she concluded that Father’s visitation should be stopped immediately in order to preserve Jonathan’s mental health.

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