Javius v. Javius

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 11, 2001
DocketM2000-00314-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Javius v. Javius (Javius v. Javius) 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
Javius v. Javius, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE November 7, 2000 Session

EDWIN L. JAVIUS v. VICTORIA JAVIUS

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Williamson County No. 24613 Jeffrey S. Bivins, Judge

No. M2000-00314-COA-R3-CV - Filed January 11, 2001

After a stormy and sometimes violent marriage, the trial court awarded a divorce to the wife, divided the marital property, and ordered the husband to pay alimony. The husband claims on appeal that the wife’s fault should have resulted in the divorce being granted to both parties; that the property was divided in an inequitable manner; and that the trial court should have ordered rehabilitative alimony rather than alimony in futuro. We affirm the grant of divorce to the wife and the property division, but modify the alimony award.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed in Part; Modified in Part; and Remanded

BEN H. CANTRELL , P.J., M.S., delivered the opinion of the court, in which WILLIAM C. KOCH , JR. and WILLIAM B. CAIN , JJ., joined.

Michael Louis Heyman, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Edwin L. Javius.

Patricia A. McDade, Franklin, Tennessee, for the appellee, Victoria Javius.

OPINION

I. A MARRIAGE AND A DIVORCE

Edwin Javius began a relationship with Victoria Parker in 1975. The couple produced three children, and married in 1981. They lived in Detroit, where Mr. Javius worked in a General Motors auto plant. In 1989, he took a job with Saturn, and the parties moved to Tennessee.

Mr. Javius was hard-working, and was always a good provider for his family, but the evidence showed that he was also physically abusive to his wife. While Mr. Javius denies some of the incidents testified to by his wife, he admitted that he broke her jaw when the couple was still living in Detroit, and the proof shows that he was twice convicted of assaulting her in Tennessee. The second conviction resulted from an incident that occurred on February 22, 1997. Mr. Javius allegedly swung at his wife with a bottle. The police were called, and they took him to jail. Perhaps because they were familiar with the injuries that Victoria Javius suffered from a 1996 assault, the police suggested that she leave the marital home for her own safety. She went to a shelter for a while, spent a few nights in her car, and eventually moved in with the couple’s grown son.

When Edwin Javius was released from jail, he discovered that his wife was gone. On April 2, 1997, he filed a Complaint for Divorce on the ground of irreconcilable differences. He attempted to serve Ms. Javius with the divorce papers at her “last known address” (the marital home) by registered mail. Of course service was unsuccessful. Attempts to serve her by mail in care of her brother in California, and her father and her sister in Arizona, were also unsuccessful.

Mr. Javius then moved the court to order service by publication, which was granted. After four consecutive weeks of publication notice, he moved the court for a default judgment, which was granted after a hearing. A Final Decree of Divorce, entered on August 15, 1997, awarded custody of the parties’ last minor child to the wife, but contained no provision for child support. The parties were each awarded the property currently in their possession or in their name only, including all the retirement benefits that were solely in Mr. Javius’ name (Victoria Javius had no retirement benefits). The court also awarded sole title to the marital residence to Mr. Javius, and authorized him to sell it so he could pay off marital debt. He refinanced the mortgage on December 18, 1997, and later sold the home.

On August 12, 1998, Victoria Javius filed a Rule 60 Motion to Set Aside the Decree of Divorce. She claimed that she had no knowledge of the proceedings until they were concluded, and that her husband could have learned where she was by talking to her children, but that he never made the attempt. The affidavits of her brother, father and sister indicated that the letters Mr. Javius sent to them were all returned unclaimed because they were all addressed incorrectly.

On November 18, 1998, the trial court set aside the final decree, and gave the parties permission to enter an order of divorce by agreement, nunc pro tunc relating back to the date of the final decree, with all issues of property division and alimony reserved for further hearing. Ms. Javius apparently prepared such an order, but it was never filed with the trial court.

The final hearing of this case was conducted by the trial court on October 12, 1999. The parties were the only witnesses to testify. Following the hearing, the court granted Victoria Javius an absolute divorce on the grounds of inappropriate marital conduct and cruel and inhuman treatment. The decree stated that “the parties shall be divorced as of October 12, 1999,” and divided the marital property on terms significantly different from those obtained by Mr. Javius in the default judgment. Victoria Javius was awarded one-half of the proceeds from the refinancing and sale of the marital home, one half of her husband’s Saturn retirement plan, and one-half of that portion of his General Motors retirement plan which was earned after the parties’ marriage. The court also

-2- awarded Ms. Javius $700 per month as alimony in futuro, and her attorney fees of $4,275. Mr. Javius subsequently filed a Motion for a New Trial, which was denied. This appeal followed.

II. THE QUESTION OF FAULT

Mr. Javius claims that the trial court erred in awarding the divorce to his wife, because her conduct towards him also amounted to cruel and inhuman treatment. He testified that while he worked long and hard hours, his wife dissipated the marital assets, verbally abused him, sided with their children against him, and wrote bad checks that he had to pay off in order to keep her out of jail. He also claimed that the incident which resulted in his 1996 assault conviction began when she hit him with a Coke bottle. Her testimony confirmed that on that occasion, she did strike the first blow.

An award of divorce to one spouse does not amount to a finding that the other was blameless. It indicates, rather, a determination by the trial court that the fault of one party outweighs that of the other. We have carefully read the transcript of evidence in the present case, and it appears to us that even if we resolve all conflicts in testimony in the husband’s favor, the recurrent physical abuse inflicted by Mr. Javius on his wife outweighs all of the faults on her part that he alleged.

Edwin Javius worked hard at his job, and took all the overtime he could. He left all household matters to his wife, including raising the children and paying all the bills, and he blamed her for anything that went wrong. For example, he blamed her entirely for the fact that none of the children finished high school, despite his own lack of involvement in their studies or with the problems they were encountering at Fairview High School. His method of dealing with the failure of family members to meet his expectations was by verbal or physical abuse. He admitted to breaking his wife’s jaw when the couple lived in Detroit, but denied that he threw her down a flight of stairs while they were living in Fairview.

In February of 1996, the parties were arguing in their bedroom, and Mrs. Javius became afraid that her husband was about to start beating her. She attempted to leave the room, but he blocked her way, so she hit him with a coke bottle. He responded by taking the bottle from her and hitting her with it so hard that it lacerated her scalp all the way to the skull. According to her testimony, he then beat her with a board, and dragged her by her braided hair, while threatening to kill her.

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