Jeremy Khristian Abney v. Kaitlynne Nichole Pace

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 31, 2021
DocketM2020-00182-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jeremy Khristian Abney v. Kaitlynne Nichole Pace (Jeremy Khristian Abney v. Kaitlynne Nichole Pace) 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
Jeremy Khristian Abney v. Kaitlynne Nichole Pace, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

08/31/2021 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE July 7, 2021 Session

JEREMY KHRISTIAN ABNEY v. KAITLYNNE NICHOLE PACE

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Rutherford County No. 17CV-102 Howard W. Wilson, Chancellor ___________________________________

No. M2020-00182-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

This appeal arises from a post-divorce proceeding. The father filed a petition to modify child support, and the mother filed a civil contempt action against the father for failure to pay child support as ordered by the court. Following trial, the trial court found that a significant variance existed from the previously ordered child support obligation and granted the father’s petition to modify child support. The trial court retroactively modified the father’s child support obligation from the date the petition was filed, resulting in three modifications while the petition had been pending. In the respective child support worksheets for the modifications, the trial court declined to include a credit to the mother for the health insurance premiums she had paid for the child, determining such expense of additional insurance coverage not to be “a reasonable necessity or requirement.” In consideration of the mother’s civil contempt complaint, the trial court found that the father had been in contempt of court due to his failure to pay child support as ordered by the court but that he had cured his contempt due to an involuntary payment from his income tax refund proceeds and the retroactive modification of his obligation and resultant overpayment of child support while the petition to modify was pending. The trial court further denied an award of attorney’s fees to either party. Discerning no error, we affirm the trial court in all respects.

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

D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ANDY D. BENNETT and W. NEAL MCBRAYER, JJ., joined.

Christina Hammond Zettersten, Brentwood, Tennessee, for the appellant, Kaitlynne Nichole Pace.

Amanda L. Conklin, Murfreesboro, Tennessee, for the appellee, Jeremy Khristian Abney. OPINION

Background

Jeremy Khristian Abney (“Father”) and Kaitlynne Nichole Pace (“Mother”) are the parents of the minor child, J.A. (“the Child”). Mother and Father were married in April 2015 and separated in April 2016. Father filed a complaint for divorce in January 2017 in the Rutherford County Chancery Court (“Trial Court”). The Trial Court heard the divorce action in July 2018 and subsequently entered an order in November 2018. In its order, the Trial Court declared the parties divorced, pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated § 36-4- 129.

The permanent parenting plan entered by the Trial Court designated Mother as the primary residential parent of the Child, with Mother receiving 216 days with the Child and Father receiving 149 days. The Trial Court found that Mother’s monthly income at the time was $2,012.83 and that Father’s monthly income was $4,672.11. In the child support calculations, Mother was given credit for another child in her home, as well as work-related childcare expenses in the amount of $693.33. As such, Father was ordered to pay child support to Mother in the amount of $1,006.00 per month. Mother also was awarded a judgment against Father of $353.79 for his portion of uncovered medical expenses for the Child that were incurred prior to trial; $3,879.00 for his child support arrearage from the three months preceding trial; and $1,000.00 for claiming the Child on his income tax return for the previous year. These judgments totaled $5,232.79, to be paid by Father in increments of $200.00 per month. The permanent parenting plan also provided that Father would maintain health insurance for the Child. There was no such order requiring Mother to provide health insurance for the Child.

Shortly thereafter, Father filed a “Petition to Review and Modify Support,” alleging that the parties’ incomes had changed and that the child support obligation should be modified pursuant to the child support guidelines. According to Father’s petition, Mother then was employed full time with the Rutherford County School System with an additional part-time job, and Father also had obtained new employment and new health insurance for the Child. In his petition, Father requested the modification of child support be retroactive to the filing of the petition.

Mother subsequently filed an answer requesting that Father’s petition be dismissed because he had “voluntarily changed jobs” to a job with lower pay and stated that willful underemployment was not grounds for modification of child support. In her answer, Mother acknowledged that she was now working for the Rutherford County School System as Father had stated in his petition. Mother also included a counter-complaint, requesting

-2- that Father be held in civil contempt of court and alleging that Father had willfully failed to pay his child support as ordered by the Trial Court. Additionally, Mother further alleged that Father had not provided proof to her of the health insurance Father was required to provide for the Child. In her counter-complaint, Mother requested that she be awarded her attorney’s fees. Father filed an answer to Mother’s counter-complaint, denying the aforementioned allegations of contempt against Father and requesting that the counter- complaint be dismissed.

The Trial Court conducted a trial on two nonconsecutive days in August and September 2019. Mother and Father testified at trial. The Trial Court entered an order in September 2019 with its findings of fact and conclusions of law. The Trial Court granted Father’s petition to modify his child support obligation. The Trial Court found that around the time the petition was filed in November 2018, Father was earning an income of $5,166.67 per month and paying $32.58 per month in health insurance premiums for the Child. At that time, Mother was working at Rutherford County Schools earning an income of $3,345.00 a month and paying, according to Mother’s calculations, $51.53 per month for health insurance premiums for the Child.1 Mother testified that she had been providing health insurance for the Child through her employer and requested a credit for the amount of the health insurance premiums she had paid for the Child’s benefit. The health insurance premium Mother paid included coverage for both the Child and Mother’s other child, which totaled $103.05 for both children.

Father testified that he had consistently provided health insurance for the Child since before the parties’ divorce but that the insurance company had changed at some point. Mother argued at trial that she was unaware Father was continuing to provide insurance for the Child because Father had not provided her with the insurance card until a couple months before the second day of trial. According to Mother, she then obtained health insurance for the Child through her employment to cover the Child and the Child’s half-sibling. Mother, however, acknowledged that Father had been providing health insurance for the Child.

Although Mother agreed that a significant variance existed by the time of trial, Mother argued that there was no fifteen-percent variance sufficient to modify child support when the petition was filed if Mother was given credit for the health insurance premiums she was paying for the Child’s benefit. The Trial Court disagreed with Mother’s argument that she should be provided credit for the health insurance premium in calculating child support, finding that expense to be not a “reasonable necessity or requirement” because 1 In Father’s brief, he uses a different gross income for Mother in the child support worksheet for the time the petition was filed.

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Jeremy Khristian Abney v. Kaitlynne Nichole Pace, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeremy-khristian-abney-v-kaitlynne-nichole-pace-tennctapp-2021.