James Curtis Pierce v. Hollie Marie Pierce (Marszalek)

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 19, 2018
DocketW2017-02447-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of James Curtis Pierce v. Hollie Marie Pierce (Marszalek) (James Curtis Pierce v. Hollie Marie Pierce (Marszalek)) 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
James Curtis Pierce v. Hollie Marie Pierce (Marszalek), (Tenn. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

11/19/2018 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON September 11, 2018 Session

JAMES CURTIS PIERCE v. HOLLIE MARIE PIERCE (MARSZALEK)

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Shelby County No. CT-004398-11 Robert S. Weiss, Judge

No. W2017-02447-COA-R3-CV

In this post-divorce matter, the trial court determined that the father’s child support obligation should be increased due to the father’s significant increase in income subsequent to the parties’ divorce. In calculating the father’s new child support obligation amount, however, the trial court included the children’s private school expenses, which the father had previously agreed to bear, as a “work-related childcare” expense for the father on the respective child support worksheet, thereby reducing the father’s child support obligation. The mother has appealed. We vacate the trial court’s modifications to the parties’ permanent parenting plan and its calculation of child support, including its inclusion of private school tuition and health insurance premiums paid by a stepparent on the child support worksheet. We remand the child support issue to the trial court for recalculation of the father’s child support obligation consistent with this opinion. We also vacate the trial court’s partial award of attorney’s fees to the mother and remand that issue to the trial court for determination of a reasonable award of all attorney’s fees incurred by the mother concerning her petition to increase the father’s child support obligation. We affirm the trial court’s judgment in all other respects. In addition, we grant the mother’s request for attorney’s fees incurred on appeal.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed in Part, Vacated in Part; Case Remanded

THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which J. STEVEN STAFFORD, P.J., W.S., and BRANDON O. GIBSON, J., joined.

Stevan L. Black, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant, Hollie Marie Pierce Marszalek.

Rachael E. Putnam, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellee, James Curtis Pierce. OPINION

I. Factual and Procedural Background

In this child support modification action, the plaintiff, James Curtis Pierce (“Father”) and the defendant, Hollie Marie Pierce (“Mother”), were parties in divorce proceedings in 2011 in the Shelby County Circuit Court (“trial court”). The three children born during the marriage were ages nine, five, and three years, respectively, at the time of the divorce decree’s entry on January 11, 2012.

In connection with the divorce, the parties entered into an agreed Permanent Parenting Plan (“PPP”), which specified that Mother would be the primary residential parent and that the children would spend 182.5 days of annual co-parenting time with each parent. The PPP also stated that if “Father elects to continue to pay private school tuition for the children to attend Briarcrest for the 2012-2013 school year and thereafter, he shall bear sole financial responsibility for the tuition, uniforms, and other Briarcrest- required expenses for all three (3) children. The parties shall equally divide any tutoring costs for the children.” All major decision-making responsibility was designated as “joint,” with the qualifying statement that “Father may solely determine whether the children will continue to attend Briarcrest at his cost.”

According to the PPP, based on Father’s listed gross monthly income of $6,667.00 and Mother’s listed gross monthly income of $5,000.00, Father was ordered to pay to Mother $325.00 per month in child support. Mother was designated as the responsible party for maintaining health insurance for the children. On the child support worksheet, Mother’s column reflected an expense in the amount of $112.00 as the children’s portion of the monthly health insurance premium.

On March 28, 2013, the trial court entered an agreed amendment to the PPP. Although such amendment provided for an alteration of the day-to-day parenting schedule, the overall allotment of days per year for the children to spend with each parent remained unchanged. The amended PPP contained the same provisions concerning the parties’ joint decision-making authority regarding educational decisions with the same caveat regarding Father’s authority to determine whether to further the children’s education at Briarcrest at his cost.

On April 5, 2017, Mother filed a petition seeking to modify Father’s child support obligation. Mother asserted that when she had recently received a copy of Father’s W-2 statement for 2016, she had learned that his gross annual income had increased to $269,623.00. According to Mother, this resulted in Father’s monthly gross income having risen from $6,667.00 to $22,468.00 since the parties’ divorce. Mother also 2 averred that the parties’ eldest child, then age fourteen, had expressed the desire to live primarily with Mother, such that this child was only spending every other weekend with Father. As a result, Mother alleged that Father’s co-parenting time with the eldest child averaged seventy-eight days annually. Mother further stated that the cost of the children’s combined health insurance premium had increased to $158.00 per month.

Mother argued that she had incorporated the above-referenced changes into a new child support worksheet, demonstrating that a significant variance existed between what should be Father’s current child support obligation and his previous child support obligation. Mother thus sought an increase in the amount of child support to be paid by Father as well as an award of her attorney’s fees incurred. In support, Mother attached a new child support worksheet, reflecting that Father’s child support obligation following his increase in income purportedly should be $2,049.00 per month.

On August 29, 2017, Father filed a petition seeking to modify the parties’ amended PPP. Father asserted that a substantial and material change in circumstance had occurred in that (1) the children had been attending Briarcrest for a number of years, (2) disruption of their attendance at Briarcrest would detrimentally affect the children’s best interest, and (3) it would be “infeasible for Father to continue to be the only parent liable for the costs of said tuition in the event his child support obligation to Mother is raised and [the trial court] does not take into consideration and provide Father a downward deviation for the payment of such tuition and/or modify the Parenting Plan to require Mother to contribute to said costs.” Father accordingly sought to modify the PPP to require Mother to be equally obligated to pay the private school tuition and/or to designate a downward deviation in his child support obligation. Father also sought an award of his attorney’s fees.

Mother filed a response, stating that she had moved to Collierville following the parties’ divorce “so that the parties’ children would have the option to attend excellent public schools in the event that Father elected not to continue to pay all of the tuition at Briarcrest.” Mother expressed a desire for the children to attend public schools, noting that she had been forced to reduce her work hours with her employer because she was required to provide all transportation to and from Briarcrest, resulting in a decrease in her income. Father likewise filed a response to Mother’s petition to increase child support, claiming that he earned a base salary of only $93,000.00 per year and that his income would fluctuate from year to year.

The trial court conducted a hearing on the respective petitions on September 14, 2017, and considered testimony solely from the parties. The court subsequently entered a written order on November 17, 2017.

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Bluebook (online)
James Curtis Pierce v. Hollie Marie Pierce (Marszalek), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-curtis-pierce-v-hollie-marie-pierce-marszalek-tennctapp-2018.