Janice Hartline v. Robert Stephen Hartline

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 13, 2014
DocketE2012-02593-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Janice Hartline v. Robert Stephen Hartline (Janice Hartline v. Robert Stephen Hartline) 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
Janice Hartline v. Robert Stephen Hartline, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE September 16, 2013 Session

JANICE HARTLINE v. ROBERT STEPHEN HARTLINE

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Bradley County No. 2011-CV-137 Jerri S. Bryant, Chancellor

No. E2012-02593-COA-R3-CV-FILED-JANUARY 13, 2014

In this domestic relations action, the trial court granted Wife a divorce on fault-based grounds against Husband and awarded her alimony in futuro in the amount of $3,800.00 monthly, health insurance costs, and attorney’s fees. Husband appeals the trial court’s awards of alimony and attorney’s fees, as well as the court’s valuation of his dental practice and division of marital assets. Wife raises a threshold issue of whether the trial court erred by granting a Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure 60.02 motion after the time had elapsed to file a notice of appeal. We affirm the grant of the Rule 60.02 motion. We reverse the valuation of the husband’s dental practice. We remand to the trial court for revaluation of the dental practice without consideration of professional goodwill, adjustment of the equitable division of marital assets based on revaluation of the dental practice, and clarification of the amount of attorney’s fees awarded to Wife in the trial court. We affirm the judgment in all other respects.

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

T HOMAS R. F RIERSON, II, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which C HARLES D. S USANO, J R., P.J., and D. M ICHAEL S WINEY, J., joined.

Philip M. Jacobs, Cleveland, Tennessee, for the appellant, Robert Stephen Hartline.

Jillyn M. O’Shaughnessy, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the appellee, Janice Hartline. OPINION

I. Factual and Procedural Background

The parties were married on December 31, 1986. They had been married twenty-five years upon entry of the final judgment, at which time Husband was sixty-three years old and Wife was fifty-one. Both had been married previously, and each brought one minor child into the marriage. Wife’s son from her first marriage, John Hogan, was five years of age when the parties married. Husband’s son from his first marriage, Steve Hartline, Jr., was also a minor at the time of the parties’ marriage and lived primarily with his biological mother. He contemporaneously spent co-parenting time with the parties. During this marriage was born one son, Jake Hartline, who was nineteen and enrolled in college at the time of trial.

Husband is a dentist who had operated a solo practice for more than thirty years in Cleveland, Tennessee. The parties met in 1982 when Wife began working for Husband as a dental assistant. Following their marriage in 1986, Wife continued to work for Husband as a dental assistant and office manager. As she testified, she stayed home for a few weeks when Jake was born in September 1992 but returned to work sooner than she desired because Husband’s substitute assistant had left the practice. Wife continued to work in Husband’s practice through approximately 2002.

Both parties identified a change in their marriage during the years of 1992 to 1993 when Jake was born. At that time, they also built a new dental office on real property purchased for the practice. They devoted long hours in establishing the practice at this new location. Wife alleged that Husband began to curse and belittle her at home and the office, and that Husband physically abused her from 1999 to 2002. She admitted that when Husband cursed at her, she would sometimes use profanity in response.

Testimony from Wife’s son, John Hogan, and Wife’s sister, Gale Underwood, corroborated that Wife was sometimes physically bruised and became depressed and despondent during the years of 1999 through 2002. Wife’s other sister, Mary Christy Lipscomb, testified that she frequently witnessed deep purple contusions and fading yellow bruises with swelling on Wife’s face, arms, and legs during this time frame. Ms. Lipscomb stated that before Jake was born, Wife was witty, funny, and full of life and energy. She added, however, that once the abuse began, Wife became very introverted and “somewhat of a hermit.” Both Ms. Lipscomb and Ms. Underwood were employed by Husband at the dental practice, Ms. Lipscomb part-time from 1993 through 1996, and Ms. Underwood full- time from 1986 through 2003.

-2- Husband admitted to bruising Wife’s face at the dental office in an incident occurring on or about Memorial Day 1999. Ms. Underwood testified regarding this event that Wife had inhaled nitrous oxide (“nitrous”) at the dental office and that Husband left her alone. Ms. Underwood became concerned, calling Wife’s parents. According to Ms. Underwood, Husband returned about the time Wife’s parents arrived, and he disconnected the nitrous. Husband testified that he became frustrated with Wife when he was trying to remove her from the nitrous and that he bruised her by taking her cheeks in his hands and shaking her. Immediately after this incident, Ms. Underwood remembered Wife appearing where Ms. Underwood and her parents were and saying to Husband, “You hurt me, you hurt me, I’m leaving.” According to Ms. Underwood, Wife departed and was located by her family days later at a hotel. There they found her face to be “very swollen and bruised.” Ms. Underwood stated that Wife did not work in the office much following this incident.

Wife also alleged that Husband was involved in an inappropriate relationship with an employee, S.W., whom he hired as a dental assistant in 1996. Wife stopped working at the dental practice in 2002 because she felt excluded by an environment in which Husband cursed her in front of other employees and behaved flirtatiously with S.W. Wife described an incident in which she observed S.W. putting on one of Husband’s scrub tops while leaving an examination room where S.W. had been alone with Husband. Ms. Underwood testified that she observed the flirtatious relationship between Husband and S.W. According to Ms. Underwood, Husband treated S.W. differently than he did other employees and often whispered, giggled, and talked with her in private.

Ms. Lipscomb also described Husband’s behavior toward S.W. at the dental office as inappropriate. She stated that he called S.W. “baby doll” and similar names while treating Wife progressively worse, shouting at Wife and demeaning her, sometimes in the presence of patients. Ms. Lipscomb described entering a back room at the dental office on one occasion to retrieve certain files and finding Husband and S.W. standing face to face, very close, and giggling. She also testified that during one day near Christmas 1995, she observed Husband suggesting a “nitrous party” at the office and indicating he would place one mask on Wife and another on S.W.

Husband denied having an inappropriate relationship with any of his staff members. He also denied permitting “nitrous parties” or using nitrous oxide for recreational purposes. He admitted to engaging in sexual relations with prostitutes on two occasions. He testified during deposition that he had kissed women other than Wife during the marriage; at trial, he denied having kissed any women other than Wife and the two prostitutes during the marriage. He admitted also to corresponding with women through online chat rooms, sending and receiving messages of a sexual nature. Evidence of such correspondence was presented during trial.

-3- Conversely, Husband alleged that the parties’ relationship began to deteriorate in 1996 when Wife developed an inappropriate relationship with a man, G.C., who had been a patient of the practice. G.C. testified that he and Wife engaged in an extramarital affair for approximately ten years and traveled to Gatlinburg on one overnight trip together. Wife admitted to a close friendship with G.C.

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Janice Hartline v. Robert Stephen Hartline, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/janice-hartline-v-robert-stephen-hartline-tennctapp-2014.