Kara Krulewicz v. Joshua Krulewicz

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 1, 2022
DocketM2021-00190-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Kara Krulewicz v. Joshua Krulewicz (Kara Krulewicz v. Joshua Krulewicz) 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
Kara Krulewicz v. Joshua Krulewicz, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

02/01/2022 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs November 1, 2021

KARA KRULEWICZ v. JOSHUA KRULEWICZ

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Montgomery County No. 63CC1-2017-CV-557 Kathryn Wall Olita, Judge ___________________________________

No. M2021-00190-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

The trial court modified the divorced parties’ residential parenting schedule, increasing Father’s parenting time. Mother appeals. Discerning no error, we affirm.

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

J. STEVEN STAFFORD, P.J., W.S., delivered the opinion of the court, in which THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II and W. NEAL MCBRAYER, JJ., joined.

James Robert Potter, Clarksville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Kara Krulewicz.

Ryan Kyle McFarland, Clarksville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Joshua Krulewicz.

OPINION

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Kara Krulewicz (“Mother” or “Appellant”) and Joshua Krulewicz (“Father” or “Appellee”) were married on August 17, 2006, in Oklahoma. They have two minor children: Preston, born in 2008, and Blake, born in 2012 (“the children”). The parties separated in July 2013 in Virginia, and Mother filed for divorce on March 17, 2017, in the Montgomery County Circuit Court (the “trial court”).1 Mother is a full-time nurse practitioner in the Army stationed in Fort Campbell, Kentucky. She currently lives with her new husband in Cumberland City, Tennessee. Father is enlisted in the Air Force and stationed at Moody Air Force Base in Valdosta, Georgia. He currently lives with his new wife outside of Nashville, Georgia. At the time Mother filed for divorce, she was stationed at Fort Campbell, and Father was stationed in Nevada. 1 A different trial judge presided over the divorce proceedings than the instant custody proceedings. The parties entered a Marital Dissolution Agreement (“MDA”), which Father signed on March 7, 2017 and Mother signed on March 14, 2017. The MDA was filed in the trial court on March 17, 2017. An Agreed Permanent Parenting Plan (the “initial parenting plan”) was also signed by Father on March 7, 2017 and by Mother on March 14, 2017, and approved by the trial court on April 10, 2017. Father was unrepresented at the time he signed the initial parenting plan and MDA. The initial parenting plan designated Mother as the primary residential parent and provided her 300 days of parenting time per year and Father sixty-five days per year. All major decisions regarding the children were to be made jointly under the initial parenting plan. The trial court held a hearing on the divorce complaint on July 7, 2017. A final decree of divorce was filed in the trial court on August 24, 2017, which incorporated the MDA and initial parenting plan.

On October 24, 2019, Father filed a petition to modify the initial parenting plan, for immediate return of the children, and for a restraining order. Therein, Father alleged, inter alia, that the children were being abused by Mother and Mother’s then-boyfriend (who later became her husband). The same day, Father also filed a motion for emergency custody, for a restraining order, and for appointment of a guardian ad litem (“GAL”), which essentially mirrored his petition. A hearing on Father’s emergency motion occurred in the trial court on November 1, 2019. The trial court determined that Father “had not established a likelihood of immediate harm to the children such that the [initial parenting plan] should be modified prior to a final hearing.” However, the trial court ordered, inter alia, that corporal punishment was not to be used by anyone against the children and that a GAL would be appointed.

Several other motions and orders were filed in the case. The parties agreed to stay the proceedings when Father was deployed in June 2020, pending his return. A final hearing occurred in the trial court on January 19, 2021.2 At that time, Preston was twelve years old, and Blake was eight years old. Preston, Mother, Father’s sister, Mother’s husband, and Father testified. Father testified that from the time he signed the initial parenting plan until he deployed to Turkey in August 2018, he did not exercise his visitation time under the initial parenting plan, in part because he could not afford round-trip plane tickets from Nevada to visit the children.3 He was deployed in Turkey until August 2019, during which time he had one week of leave, almost all of which he spent with the children. From the summer of 2017 until August of 2019, Father testified that he spoke to the children any time that his sister, mother, or father had them, but that the eight-hour time difference and his work schedule made it very difficult to coordinate calls when he was in Turkey. However, he also acknowledged that he had “dropped the ball” by not seeking to call the children directly through Mother during that time, and was now trying to improve by reaching out to them through Mother, which he generally tries to do twice per week. He

2 The hearing occurred via Zoom, presumably due to COVID-19. 3 Mother testified that Father exercised visitation during spring break in March 2018, which she reiterates in her brief. It is unclear if she meant to say March 2019 instead. -2- volunteered that Mother is “actually pretty good about having [the children] call [him].”

Upon returning from deployment in Turkey, Father stated that he did not have fall break visitation in 2019 because it occurred when he was in the process of moving to Georgia and therefore living in a hotel. However, he exercised visitation with the children for Thanksgiving and Christmas of 2019, switching some visitation time with Mother because she had decided to plan a trip to Disney for the children during his allotted time. According to Father, his next deployment was between June 12, 2020 and October 8, 2020, so he attempted to work with Mother to move his summer 2020 visitation up before he left. However, he testified that Mother would not agree to that, so he only got a short amount of time with the children during that summer (approximately two weeks instead of the allotted four). Father testified that during this deployment, he was in Saudi Arabia and did not have access to a phone system, so he was unable to phone anyone. When he returned from Saudi Arabia, he stated that he saw the children with his new wife during a visit in November 2020, during which time he asked Mother if the children could stay with him an extra night, which she did not allow. He also testified to spending the first week of Christmas 2020 with the children.

Regarding the abuse allegations, Father testified that when he first learned of them from his mother, he could not leave his deployment in Turkey because he was in a position he could not be released from (and that due to national security reasons, he could not discuss what that position was). He also testified that while he was in Turkey, he attempted to call “child services, and [] was working with them up until the point” he decided to file his emergency petition and motion around August 2019, which is when he started seeking counsel.

Each party testified that they gradually introduced their new spouses to the children (though Wife alleged that Father did the opposite). Father and his wife own a two- bathroom, three-bedroom house on four acres of land, where Preston and Blake each have their own rooms. He testified that he had requested to be stationed at Shaw Air Force Base as his first preference, which was the option closest to the children, and that Moody was the second-closest. He also stated that other Air Force bases would have afforded him better career opportunities than Moody, but he turned those down to be closer to the children.

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Bluebook (online)
Kara Krulewicz v. Joshua Krulewicz, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kara-krulewicz-v-joshua-krulewicz-tennctapp-2022.