Jason Price v. Brandi Price Carter

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 31, 2018
DocketW2018-00229-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jason Price v. Brandi Price Carter (Jason Price v. Brandi Price Carter) 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
Jason Price v. Brandi Price Carter, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

10/31/2018 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON September 13, 2018 Session

JASON PRICE v. BRANDI PRICE CARTER

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Dyer County No. 09-CV-294 Tony Childress, Chancellor ___________________________________

No. W2018-00229-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

This case involves a petition to modify a parenting plan to change the primary residential parent. The father sought to be designated as the primary residential parent, citing to the children’s excessive absenteeism from school while in the mother’s care. The trial court agreed and found that, while the children were doing well in school, they could be doing better and would be less stressed without the problem of their excessive absenteeism. We reverse, finding that the mother had remedied the children’s excessive absenteeism from school prior to trial and that the prior absenteeism does not rise to the level of a material change in circumstance warranting a modification of the parenting plan so as to change the designation of the primary residential parent from mother to father.

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

ARNOLD B. GOLDIN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which J. STEVEN STAFFORD, P.J., W.S., and KENNY ARMSTRONG, J., joined.

Jason R. Creasy, Dyersburg, Tennessee, for the appellant, Brandi Price Carter.

Vanedda Prince Webb, Dyersburg, Tennessee, for the appellee, Jason Price.

OPINION

BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Brandi Carter (“Mother”) and Jason Price (“Father”) divorced in October 2009. Together, they have two minor children (“the Children”), born in May, 2007 and June, 2009. In February 2012, the Dyer County Chancery Court entered an Agreed Permanent Parenting Plan, naming Mother as the Children’s primary residential parent. Five years later, on May 25, 2017, Father filed the instant Petition to Modify the Permanent Parenting Plan, asking the trial court to name him as the Children’s primary residential parent.

In the five years between the entering of the parenting plan and Father’s petition for modification, Mother and Father both remarried. Following the divorce, Mother married Michael Kimbro, and they moved into a house near her parents in Dyer County. Together, she and Mr. Kimbro have two minor children.1 Father, in 2014, married his current wife, Jennifer Price. Mother and Mr. Kimbro divorced in the summer of 2016, after which point Mother moved in with her parents.2 Then, in October 2016, Mother married her current husband, Derek Carter, who lives in Rockwood, Tennessee, which is approximately thirty miles east of Crossville, Tennessee in Cumberland County. Mother, however, continues to live in Dyer County and, since her marriage to Mr. Carter, travels frequently to East Tennessee with the Children to be with him.

In the May 2017 petition for modification, Father raised two claims which he alleged amounted to a material change in circumstance such that it would be in the best interests of the Children that he be designated the primary residential parent. Father asserted that (1) since approximately September 2016, Mother had spent a significant amount of time in or near Crossville, Tennessee and that (2) during the Children’s 2015- 2016 and 2016-2017 school years at Fifth Consolidated Elementary School (“Fifth Consolidated”), the Children had acquired an excessive number of unexcused absences, which occurred solely during Mother’s parenting time.

As to Father’s second claim, Jamie McGowan—a records-keeper at Fifth Consolidated testified to the following: during the 2015-2016 school year, one child had 19 absences, 10 of which were unexcused, and 13 incidents of tardy, 12 of which were unexcused, and the other child had 16 absences, 9 of which were unexcused, and 9 incidents of tardy, 8 of which were unexcused, during the 2016-2017 school year, one child had 13 absences, 10 of which were unexcused, and 15 incidents of tardy, 14 of which were unexcused, and the other child had 11 absences and 15 incidents of tardy, all of which were unexcused. During the portion of the 2017-2018 school year that the Children had attended through the date of the underlying trial on December 22, 2017, one child had three unexcused absences, and one incident of tardy, which was unexcused, and the other child had three unexcused absences, and one incident of tardy, which was unexcused.

On July 28, 2017, the first day of the 2017-2018 school year, Father went to Fifth Consolidated “to see if [the Children] had checked in.” Once there, he learned that the 1 The older child was in born May, 2012, and the younger was born in May, 2014. At the time of the trial court’s February 5, 2018 order, Mother and Mr. Kimbro’s two children were ages 5 and 3. 2 Mother and Mr. Kimbro’s parenting plan is not a part of the record on appeal, but testimony in the record does reflect that Mother is the primary residential parent of their two children. -2- Children were not at school and that SailAway Learning & Academy—a homeschool located in Kingston, Tennessee—had requested records from Fifth Consolidated regarding the Children. Father claimed that Mother, during the pendency of his May 2017 petition for modification and without his permission, attempted to transfer the Children from Fifth Consolidated in Dyer County to SailAway Learning & Academy in Kingston, Tennessee. After learning of this, Father, on July 31, 2017, filed a motion seeking to hold Mother in contempt for violating the February 2012 parenting plan, which provided that Mother and Father were to jointly make educational decisions for the Children. The motion also sought to temporarily modify the existing permanent parenting plan by naming Father the primary residential parent of the Children. A few days later, on August 2, 2017, Father received Mother’s formal notice of her intent to relocate with the children to Rockwood, Tennessee.3 Father responded on August 22, 2017 by filing a Petition in Opposition to Relocation, asserting that the proposed relocation did not have a reasonable purpose, that it would pose a threat of specific and serious harm to the Children, and that Mother’s motive for relocating was vindictive with the intent to defeat Father’s parenting time. The trial court entered an Agreed Temporary Order on August 30, 2017, providing that, pending Father’s May 2017 Petition to Modify the Permanent Parenting Plan, Mother would not relocate with the Children and that they would remain enrolled at Fifth Consolidated.4 Mother and Father attended mediation on October 18, 2017, but they could not resolve the pending issues.

A hearing was scheduled for December 22, 2017, and the trial court issued its final order on February 5, 2018. In its order, the trial court concluded that Father had established a material change in circumstance that was not foreseeable and that affected the Children’s well-being in a meaningful and negative way, and that it was in the best interests of the Children that Father be designated the primary residential parent. The trial court also concluded that Mother was in criminal contempt for willfully disobeying its order regarding major educational decisions. As to the relocation issue, the trial court concluded that Father failed to establish why Mother should not be permitted to relocate and that, “if a material change in circumstances had not been established or if it was not established that it was in the children’s best interest that the primary parent designation should be changed[,] the mother would be allowed to relocate.” Mother timely appealed.

ISSUES PRESENTED

Mother raises two issues on appeal, which we repeat verbatim:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Calvin Gray Mills, Jr. v. Fulmarque, Inc.
360 S.W.3d 362 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 2012)
Cranston v. Combs
106 S.W.3d 641 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 2003)
Andrew K. Armbrister v. Melissa H. Armbrister
414 S.W.3d 685 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 2013)
Hass v. Knighton
676 S.W.2d 554 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1984)
Kendrick v. Shoemake
90 S.W.3d 566 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 2002)
Pippin v. Pippin
277 S.W.3d 398 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2008)
Caudill v. Foley
21 S.W.3d 203 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1999)
In re T.C.D.
261 S.W.3d 734 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2007)
H.A.S. v. H.D.S.
414 S.W.3d 115 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Jason Price v. Brandi Price Carter, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jason-price-v-brandi-price-carter-tennctapp-2018.