Jennifer Jeffrey Stancil v. Paul Edwin Stancil

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 13, 2012
DocketE2011-00099-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jennifer Jeffrey Stancil v. Paul Edwin Stancil (Jennifer Jeffrey Stancil v. Paul Edwin Stancil) 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
Jennifer Jeffrey Stancil v. Paul Edwin Stancil, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE November 9, 2011 Session

JENNIFER JEFFREY STANCIL v. PAUL EDWIN STANCIL

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Hamilton County No. 09D1245 W. Neil Thomas, III, Judge

No. E2011-00099-COA-R3-CV-FILED-JANUARY 13, 2012

Jennifer Jeffrey Stancil (“Wife”) filed for divorce against her husband, Paul Edwin Stancil (“Husband”), in the Circuit Court for Hamilton County (“the Trial Court”). In the course of the divorce, Wife filed a motion for temporary alimony. Husband, in his response to Wife’s motion, alleged that an antenuptial agreement precluded Wife from receiving any alimony. Wife asserted that the antenuptial agreement was invalid. After a trial, the Trial Court held that the antenuptial agreement was enforceable. Wife appeals. We hold that, as Wife was misled into signing the antenuptial agreement and adequate disclosure was not made, the antenuptial agreement is invalid. We reverse.

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

D. M ICHAEL S WINEY, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which J OHN W. M CC LARTY, J., joined. C HARLES D . S USANO, J R., J. filed a separate opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part.

Michael R. Campbell and Lauren M. Rutherford, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the appellant, Jennifer Jeffrey Stancil.

Robert W. Sauser, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the appellee, Paul Edwin Stancil. OPINION

Background

Wife filed for divorce against Husband in June 2009. Husband filed an answer and counterclaim in response. Wife also filed a motion for temporary alimony. Husband responded, arguing that Wife had waived any claim to alimony in an antenuptial agreement. In September 2009, the Trial Court granted Husband’s motion to bifurcate the issue of the antenuptial agreement. Trial on the validity of the antenuptial agreement was held in June 2010.

Four witnesses testified. First to testify was Wife. Wife testified that she attended high school only through the tenth grade and did not graduate from high school. Wife had neither a high school diploma nor a GED. Wife received no formal education beyond the tenth grade. Wife met Husband in January 2001. Wife subsequently moved in with Husband. Wife stated that she essentially possessed only her clothes and some furniture at that time. Husband worked at an insurance company. Wife affirmed that Husband “called the shots” in the seven month period leading up to the signing of the antenuptial agreement.

Wife testified that Husband asked her to marry him in August 2001. On New Year’s Eve, 2001, Husband told her that they needed to execute a contract so that Wife would not “be on his property.” According to Wife, Husband told her that this was due to Wife’s poor credit history and the prospect that her poor credit history could hinder his ability to obtain a loan. Wife testified that Husband told her that the document was “like a prenup” but in reality its only purpose was related to the loan. According to Wife, Husband said that he would not list one of his properties, St. Elmo, in the agreement, and, that this would have the effect of invalidating the agreement.

Wife insisted that her personal counselor, Doctor Charles M. Nies (“Dr. Nies”), hear what Husband was proposing. A meeting took place involving Wife, Husband, and Dr. Nies. Wife testified that she wanted Dr. Nies to be a witness to what Husband was telling her. Wife stated:

We explained about that we were getting a contract signed. And Paul had told him [Dr. Nies] everything that he told me about that it’s not going to hold water and that he was going to leave off one of his properties so that it wouldn’t be - - it wouldn’t be considered a pre - - it wouldn’t be a legal thing because he would hold off one of his properties.

The next day, Husband and Wife went to see attorney Brent James (“James”)

-2- to sign the agreement. Wife testified that Husband told her not to tell James what they were doing or else James would not go along with it. Wife stated that she was alarmed by this statement. When Wife looked at the agreement, she scanned the document for Husband’s property located at St. Elmo. Wife wanted to confirm that St. Elmo was not listed in the agreement as Husband had told her he would do. However, “St. Elmo”, as it happens, apparently represented an area of Chattanooga and not a street address as Wife believed. Wife stated on cross-examination regarding how she knew St. Elmo was not listed in the agreement: “After all these years and now with the legal counsel and trying to figure it out, I’m assuming that the 22 Twelfth Avenue or whatever is in St. Elmo. I thought St. Elmo was an address, a street; and that’s what I looked for.” Wife testified that she would not have signed the agreement had she known that Husband intended for it to be enforceable. The antenuptial agreement was signed by Wife and Husband on January 4, 2002.

Husband testified next. Husband stated that he had an ownership interest in an insurance company. Husband denied ever telling either Wife or Dr. Nies that he intended to leave something out of the antenuptial agreement so that it would be invalid. Husband stated that his purpose in securing the antenuptial agreement was to protect the interests of his children from an earlier relationship and to protect his business. Husband testified that Wife asked him to tear up the antenuptial agreement many times.

Dr. Nies testified next. Dr. Nies stated that he had a PhD in psychology and was a practicing clinical psychologist with forty years of experience. His meeting with Wife and Husband lasted between 45 and 60 minutes. Dr. Nies stated that Husband said the reason for the agreement was to protect his credit score and make it easier to secure a loan. Dr. Nies testified that Husband said he had intentionally left out property in order to make the agreement invalid. Dr. Nies’s notes from the meeting were entered into the record. Dr. Nies’s notes included, among other things, a reference to a “credit score.” Dr. Nies acknowledged that his notes did not contain any reference to Husband stating that he would leave property out of the antenuptial agreement to render it invalid.

James testified. James, the attorney who prepared the agreement, stated that Wife and Husband had visited him together about the antenuptial agreement two to three times. James’s notes from the time contain a reference to St. Elmo. James testified that Wife had opportunities to ask him questions about the agreement. James acknowledged that he had received a letter from Husband’s then counsel warning him that, should the antenuptial agreement be deemed invalid, Husband would seek from James any money owed by Husband to Wife. On rebuttal, Wife testified that she had no contact with James before January 4, 2002, the date the antenuptial agreement was signed.

In July 2010, the Trial Court entered its order stating, inter alia, that adequate

-3- disclosure was made and that the antenuptial agreement was valid. The Trial Court stated in its order that the St. Elmo property was disclosed, and, that even if full disclosure was not forthcoming, Wife primarily was interested in marrying Husband. In December 2010, the Trial Court entered an order stating that its July 2010 order, along with other orders denying the parties’ respective motions to alter or amend, was a final, appealable judgment pursuant to Rule 54.02 of the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure. Wife appeals.

Discussion

Though not stated exactly as such, Wife raises one issue on appeal: whether the Trial Court erred in holding that the antenuptial agreement between Wife and Husband was valid and enforceable.

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Bluebook (online)
Jennifer Jeffrey Stancil v. Paul Edwin Stancil, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jennifer-jeffrey-stancil-v-paul-edwin-stancil-tennctapp-2012.