Jeremy Miller v. Jessica Miller (Tolbe)

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 29, 2011
DocketM2010-00592-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jeremy Miller v. Jessica Miller (Tolbe) (Jeremy Miller v. Jessica Miller (Tolbe)) 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 Miller v. Jessica Miller (Tolbe), (Tenn. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE February 17, 2011 Session

JEREMY MILLER v. JESSICA MILLER (TOLBE)

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Montgomery County No. MC CC CV FN 09-0164 Michael R. Jones, Judge

No. M2010-00592-COA-R3-CV - FILED JULY 29, 2011

A Colorado court granted a divorce to married parents who were both active-duty members of the armed forces. The court named the mother as the primary residential parent of their two minor children, and a parenting plan with flexible provisions was fashioned in the event of overseas deployment by one or both parents. Both parties were deployed overseas at various times during the next five years. The children spent the majority of that time in the care of the father, or, during father’s deployments, in the care of his mother or his new wife. The father moved to Clarksville, Tennessee in April of 2007, and after living there with the children for eighteen consecutive months, he filed a petition in the Tennessee court for registration of the Colorado judgment and modification of the parenting plan. He asked the court to name him as the children’s primary residential parent. After a hearing, the trial court granted the father’s petition. The mother argues on appeal that the trial court erred in finding that there had been a material change of circumstances which was unanticipated at the time of the divorce, and she contends that the father had therefore failed to meet the statutory threshold before a change in a parenting plan may be ordered under Tennessee law. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-6-101(a)(2)(B). She also argues that Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-6-113 limits the authority of the trial court to permanently modify the custody and visitation arrangements for the children of a mobilized parent. We affirm the trial court.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed

P ATRICIA J. C OTTRELL, P.J., M.S., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which A NDY D. B ENNETT and R ICHARD H. D INKINS, JJ., joined.

Benjamin K. Dean, Clarksville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Jessica Miller (Tolbe).

John Terrance Maher, Clarksville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Jeremy Miller. OPINION

I. A C OLORADO D IVORCE D ECREE AND A P ARENTING P LAN

This case presents a vivid example of the dislocations that the requirements of service can force military families to endure, especially when our forces are fighting overseas, resulting in multiple deployments for long stretches of time by both mothers and fathers. Although the parents in this case divorced when the children were quite young, and they remain at odds with each other over the most appropriate parenting arrangements for their children, the evidence indicates that the children are doing remarkably well, despite the frequent changes in custodians, residences, and schools that they have experienced. We describe some of those changes below.

Jeremy Miller (“Father”) and Jessica Miller (“Mother”) are both active-duty members of the United States Army. They became the parents of two children, Jordan Miller (d.o.b. 9/7/98) and Jackson Miller (d.o.b. 6/8/01) during the course of their marriage. The parties entered into a separation agreement in 2003, while they were both stationed in Colorado. Mother subsequently filed a petition for divorce in the District Court of El Paso County, Colorado. The court reviewed the parties’ separation agreement, and on February 20, 2004, it incorporated the agreement’s provisions into a Decree of Dissolution of Marriage, a Support Order, and a Parenting Plan.

Under the heading of “Physical Location,” the Parenting Plan declared that “[t]he children will reside with Mother,” and it designated her as the custodian of the children, “solely for the purposes of the federal and state statutes which require a designation of determination of custody.” Father was granted specific visitation with the children “while both parties are in Colorado,” including alternate weekends and dinner every Wednesday and Friday evening. The plan decreed that both parents would make all major decisions regarding the children together.

The plan also provided that “once the parties separate to different states or countries due to military obligations, the children will spend the summers with the father.” Also, “[o]verall scheduling will be very flexible to provide for the best welfare of the children.” Father was ordered to pay Mother $600 per month in child support, but in the event that the children were in his care for an extended period of time and he had to pay for daycare, “he will not be obligated to pay the mother child support for that month.”

The following years showed ample evidence of the need for flexibility. Both parties were members of units that were scheduled for deployment to Iraq in 2004. Father’s unit was

-2- scheduled to deploy in November, and Mother’s in December.1 The parties testified that they typically underwent a month of training prior to deployment. In May of 2004, Mother asked Father to assume primary parenting responsibilities for the children, and they remained with him or with his new wife (Father remarried in August of 2004) from that time through Mother’s deployment to Iraq in December 2004 and for several months after she returned from her deployment.

Mother returned from Iraq around November or December of 2005. She re-enlisted and was transferred to Hawaii shortly thereafter. At that time, Father was serving in Germany, and his wife was taking care of the children.2 In March of 2006 , Father’s wife called Mother and told her she could no longer care for the children because of medical problems she was experiencing and an impending surgery. The children were left in the care of Father’s mother until April of 2006, when Mother arrived and took them to Hawaii to live with her. However, Mother was scheduled to deploy once again in December of 2007. Father was transferred to Fort Campbell in Clarksville, Tennessee in April of 2007, and at Mother’s request, he took over the care of the children in that same month.

Father filed an administrative action for child support in Clarksville, which was transferred to Hawaii, and then sent back to the State of Tennessee. The result was that Mother began paying Father child support of $400 per month in July of 2007, continuing through September or October of 2008 when she started paying support of $170 per month “in compliance with a modified support order.” She stopped paying support in December of 2008.

Mother deployed as scheduled, and she returned to Hawaii in March of 2009. Father’s custody of the children after April of 2007 had continued for the next two years without any further changes, except for three weeks in November of 2007, when Mother took them out of school for three weeks and took them to Hawaii so they could be present at her wedding to her new husband, another member of the armed forces. He subsequently left active duty and became a member of the reserves.

1 The evidence showed that Mother had deployed on two occasions prior to the divorce, and the children had lived with Father’s mother during those deployments. 2 Mother testified that Father served in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Germany at different times, but the testimony of the parties is not specific enough for us to construct an accurate timeline of his various deployments.

-3- II. A P ETITION IN THE T ENNESSEE C OURT

On February 3, 2009 Father filed a petition in the Circuit Court of Montgomery County to register the Colorado decree of dissolution of marriage and to modify it.

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Bluebook (online)
Jeremy Miller v. Jessica Miller (Tolbe), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeremy-miller-v-jessica-miller-tolbe-tennctapp-2011.