Judith Anne Shaw v. Jason Patrick Shaw

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 20, 2011
DocketE2010-01070-COA-R10-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Judith Anne Shaw v. Jason Patrick Shaw (Judith Anne Shaw v. Jason Patrick Shaw) 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
Judith Anne Shaw v. Jason Patrick Shaw, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE December 14, 2010 Session

JUDITH ANNE SHAW v. JASON PATRICK SHAW

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Hamilton County No. 10-D-126 Jacqueline E. Bolton, Judge

No. E2010-01070-COA-R10-CV - FILED JANUARY 20, 2011

In this divorce case, we granted the request of Jason Patrick Shaw (“Father”) for a Tenn. R. App. P. 10 extraordinary appeal on three issues: (1) whether the Trial Court erred when it refused to grant his request for access to his older daughter’s counseling records with a licensed clinical social worker; (2) whether the Trial Court properly prohibited Father from taking this daughter’s deposition, and (3) whether the Trial Court erred when it refused Father visitation with any of the parties’ three children. As to the first issue, we remand this case to the Trial Court for a determination of whether furnishing the social worker’s records would be against the daughter’s best interest, as discussed more fully in this Opinion. We vacate the Trial Court’s refusal to allow Father to depose the daughter. Finally, we vacate the Trial Court’s refusal to allow Father any meaningful visitation and remand for the Trial Court to determine an appropriate supervised visitation schedule.

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

D. M ICHAEL S WINEY, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which H ERSCHEL P. F RANKS, P.J., and J OHN W. M CC LARTY, J., joined.

Selma Cash Paty, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the Appellant, Jason Patrick Shaw.

Glenna M. Ramer, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the Appellee, Judith Anne Shaw. OPINION

Background

The record in this Tenn. R. App. P. 10 extraordinary appeal begins with a complaint for divorce filed by Judith Anne Shaw (“Mother”) in January 2010. The parties have three children; two daughters who currently are ages eight and twelve, and a five year old son. Mother sought a divorce from Father on the ground of inappropriate marital conduct. Mother also requested an equitable division of the marital property and that she be designated the children’s primary residential parent.

In the complaint, Mother also sought entry of an order of protection and filed an affidavit in support thereof. According to Mother’s affidavit:

In August of 2009, our oldest Child made allegations of sexual abuse against my husband. The incidents were investigated by Child Protective Services, but because of the inconclusive nature of the allegations, no charges were pressed against my husband.

Last weekend, I discovered cameras hidden in my bathroom and the bathroom used by our oldest Child. I called the police. When the police arrived, they removed the cameras and discovered that the cameras were attached to a laptop computer hidden in our attic.

The matter is now under serious investigation. . . . (original paragraph numbering omitted)

Based on the contents of Mother’s affidavit, the Trial Court entered a restraining order prohibiting Father from coming about the parties’ children or the residence where the children were residing.

Father responded to the complaint, denied any wrongdoing, and filed a counterclaim for divorce. In the counterclaim, Husband alleged that it was Mother who had engaged in inappropriate marital conduct. Alternatively, Father alleged that irreconcilable differences had arisen between the parties. Father sought joint custody of the children and equal co-parenting time.

-2- In March 2010, Father filed a motion seeking entry of a court order allowing him access to the records of all heath care providers for Mother and the parties’ older daughter (“Daughter”), the child whom Father allegedly molested. According to this motion, a release signed by Father was sent to Daughter’s therapist, Laura Hubone, M.A., L.C.S.W., (“Hubone”), but Hubone refused to release any records pursuant to specific instructions by Mother’s attorney.

A hearing was conducted concerning whether Father should receive any co- parenting time with the children while the divorce action was pending. At the hearing, Father admitted that he had placed cameras in both Mother’s and the children’s bathrooms sometime after he moved out of the marital residence. Mother testified that she notified the police after she discovered the cameras. The police confiscated the two cameras as well as the computer at least one of the cameras was connected to through wiring. The computer was found in the attic. Father claimed that he installed the cameras because many times when he would call to speak with the children at night, he was told by Mother that they already were in bed. Father claimed he installed the cameras so he would know when the children were getting ready for bed and could determine if Mother was being truthful.

It also was established at the hearing that while the police investigation regarding the cameras was ongoing, at the time of the hearing, no criminal charges had been brought against Father based either on Daughter’s allegations of sexual abuse or the fact that Father had placed two hidden cameras in the home. At the hearing, Mother stated that she has a good relationship with Father’s mother and stepfather and acknowledged that she believed the children were safe when they were spending time with them.

Following the hearing, the Trial Court made the following ruling from the bench:

The Court finds it’s in the best interest of the children that the Court not allow visitation either supervised or unsupervised based upon the proof that I’ve heard here today. I want to await the outcome of this TBI investigation and the sheriff’s investigation before I allow anything further. However, [Father] can call the two younger children three times a week for no longer than 30 minutes . . . .

An order was entered by the Trial Court reflecting the above ruling.

A hearing also was conducted regarding Father’s request for access to Mother’s and Daughter’s medical and psychological records. At this hearing, Father made an oral

-3- motion seeking permission to take Daughter’s deposition. Following the hearing, the Trial Court entered an order granting Father access to all the requested records except Daughter’s psychological and counseling records and denying his request to take Daughter’s deposition. According to this Order:

Based on the testimony heard on March 8, 2010, the waiver of [Mother’s] privilege by her attorney and argument of counsel, the Court finds said motion is well taken as [to] medical records for both [Mother and Daughter]. However, as to the psychological, psychiatric and counseling records, [Father] shall be permitted to secure those records for [Mother], but not for [Daughter], who has an independent right of privacy not to release those records.

The Court grants [Father’s] motion for medical records only for [Daughter] . . . . That portion of the motion to secure the psychological and counseling records for [Daughter] is denied.

Further, [Father’s] oral motion to depose [Daughter] is denied.

Defendant’s oral motion for [a Tenn. R. App. P. 9] interlocutory appeal on the issues of [Father’s] securing the psychological, psychiatric and counseling [records of Daughter] and to take the child’s deposition is denied. . . .

After the above quoted order was entered, the Trial Court appointed a Guardian ad Litem on the children’s behalf. One of the specific responsibilities the Trial Court granted to the guardian was to “review the medical and psychological records of the above-named minor children and to release the records to counsel for the parties if in the guardian’s opinion it is appropriate to do so.”

Because the Trial Court denied Father’s request for a Tenn. R. App. P. 9 interlocutory appeal, Father filed with this Court a Tenn. R. App. P.

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Bluebook (online)
Judith Anne Shaw v. Jason Patrick Shaw, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/judith-anne-shaw-v-jason-patrick-shaw-tennctapp-2011.