Jesse Clay King v. Brittany Bourgeois Jones

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 18, 2022
DocketM2020-01252-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jesse Clay King v. Brittany Bourgeois Jones (Jesse Clay King v. Brittany Bourgeois Jones) 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
Jesse Clay King v. Brittany Bourgeois Jones, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

07/18/2022 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE May 3, 2022 Session

JESSE CLAY KING v. BRITTANY BOURGEOIS JONES

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Maury County No. 13-631 Stella L. Hargrove, Judge ___________________________________

No. M2020-01252-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

Unwed parents filed competing petitions to modify a permanent parenting plan. The parents agreed that there had been a material change in circumstances warranting a modification. But they disagreed over the parenting schedule and who should be the primary residential parent. After a hearing, the trial court changed the primary residential parent and, based on proof of domestic abuse, limited the mother’s parenting time. We conclude that neither decision was an abuse of discretion. So we affirm.

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

W. NEAL MCBRAYER, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which FRANK G. CLEMENT, JR., P.J., M.S., and ANDY D. BENNETT, J., joined.

Dana C. McLendon III, Franklin, Tennessee, for the appellant, Brittany Bourgeois Jones.

Cory L. Ricci, Columbia, Tennessee, for the appellee, Jesse Clay King.

OPINION

I.

A.

Brittany Bourgeois Jones (“Mother”) is the mother of Ethan and Sophia King. In 2013, the chancery court decreed that Jesse Clay King (“Father”) was the children’s legal father. Two years later, the court adopted an agreed permanent parenting plan, which provided for equal parenting time. At that time, both parents lived in Maury County, Tennessee. Mother was named the primary residential parent for the children “so long as both parents reside in the same school zone.”

In May 2016, Mother moved to Louisiana with her then-boyfriend, Edwin Jones. Father believed it was a temporary move. So he agreed that four-year-old Sophia could stay with Mother. That fall, Sophia enrolled in a Louisiana school. She visited Father during school vacations. Meanwhile, Ethan, age eight, lived with Father in Tennessee and visited Mother during his school breaks. In the summer of 2017, Mother married Mr. Jones. And she informed Father that she intended to stay in Louisiana with Sophia.

Father moved to modify custody. Alleging that split custody was not in the children’s best interest, he asked the court to award custody of both children to him. He maintained that he was a more fit custodian for the children based on alleged instability in Mother’s home. Mother responded with her own modification petition. She requested that the court make the temporary split custody arrangement permanent in a modified parenting plan.

In late August 2017, the court adopted the status quo parenting arrangement as a temporary plan pending a final hearing.1 For the next four years, Ethan continued to reside primarily with Father, while Sophia lived with Mother.2

Before the final hearing, Father filed an amended and supplemental modification petition. In addition to Mother’s move to Louisiana, he alleged multiple reasons that it was in the children’s best interest to modify custody. Specifically, he alleged domestic violence and drug use in Mother’s home, ongoing discord between Mother and Father’s new wife, Annie King, and Mother’s poor parenting decisions. Father proposed that the court name him primary residential parent and limit Mother to 80 days of residential parenting time.

For her part, Mother gave the court two options. She requested that the court make the temporary split custody arrangement permanent. But she also submitted a proposed plan that essentially mirrored Father’s plan. In her alternative plan, she sought full custody of both children, with Father limited to 80 days of residential parenting time.

B.

The court heard proof from multiple witnesses. The court also met with the children, then aged 9 and 12, in chambers. Proof at trial revealed that much had changed in the

1 The temporary plan was never memorialized in a written order. 2 In February 2020, the court suspended Father’s visitation based on Mother’s allegations that his alcohol use endangered the children. But the court dissolved the ex parte order a month later.

2 children’s lives since the entry of the original plan. In addition to Mother’s move, both parents had married new partners, and the two children had acquired new half-siblings.

Mother lived in Louisiana with her husband, Mr. Jones, Sophia, and three sons under the age of five.3 Mother was the primary caregiver for the children. Mr. Jones worked long hours as a pipe-fitter. At the time of trial, he was working on an extended project in another state.

Father and his wife, Annie Fay King, lived with Ethan and their newborn daughter in Tennessee. Both Father and Mrs. King worked full time outside the home. Father often relied on his family, particularly his mother and grandmother, for help in caring for the children.

Neither parent had a stellar track record. The court heard abundant evidence highlighting the parents’ missteps. Social media posts reflected poorly on both parents. Many of Mother’s negative posts were directed at Father’s wife. She blamed Mrs. King for posting nude pictures of her on social media. Mother agreed that her relationship with Mrs. King was “toxic.” Father admitted that he pled guilty to driving under the influence in 2019. And he acknowledged that his stepbrother was a registered sex offender. But Father denied Mother’s suggestion that he allowed his stepbrother to have contact with the children.

Mother also maintained that Father delegated his parenting responsibilities to his family, specifically to his “marijuana-smoking” mother. It was undisputed that Father’s mother and stepfather smoked marijuana. According to several witnesses, Father’s mother used marijuana for health reasons. She regularly transported Ethan to and from school. And she was the school’s primary contact for Ethan. Father explained that, until her retirement, his mother worked in close proximity to the school. And she never smoked marijuana in the children’s presence.

Before trial, the court ordered drug screens for individuals in regular contact with the children. Father’s mother and stepfather tested positive for marijuana. So the court limited them to supervised contact. Father submitted proof that his parents had recently tested negative for illegal substances. He assured the court that his parents were committed to staying clean.

Mother told the court that she was significantly more involved in the children’s lives than Father. She was a full-time caregiver. She did not rely on family members to care for her children. She typically accompanied the children to the exchange point. At times, she

3 Mother contended that Father was also the biological father of one of her other children. But Father was never declared the child’s legal father.

3 went the extra mile and drove Sophia to Tennessee so that Sophia could spend time with Ethan. Father, on the other hand, had never been to Louisiana. And he rarely came to the exchanges, opting to send his mother or grandmother instead. Father explained that Mother had friends and family in Tennessee. He knew no one in Louisiana.

Father complained that Sophia often arrived at his home with lice. He blamed Mother’s poor housekeeping. Mother denied responsibility, claiming that Sophia’s lice came from an unsanitary hotel room.

Father also had grave concerns about Mother’s husband, Mr. Jones. According to Father, he learned through Sophia that Mr. Jones had a drug problem and an explosive temper. Mr. Jones admitted that he had drug problems in the past. He pled guilty to possession of marijuana in 2016. And, in 2017, he overdosed, resulting in a mandatory inpatient hospital stay. According to Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
Jesse Clay King v. Brittany Bourgeois Jones, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jesse-clay-king-v-brittany-bourgeois-jones-tennctapp-2022.