Kathryn C. Black v. Stevan L. Black

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 13, 2004
DocketW2003-01648-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Kathryn C. Black v. Stevan L. Black (Kathryn C. Black v. Stevan L. Black) 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
Kathryn C. Black v. Stevan L. Black, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON February 17, 2004 Session

KATHRYN C. BLACK v. STEVAN L. BLACK

An Appeal from the Chancery Court for Shelby County No. CH-03-0315-3 D. J. Alissandratos, Chancellor

No. W2003-01648-COA-R3-CV - Filed July 13, 2004

This is an independent action for fraud and coercion based on a marital dissolution agreement. On September 13, 2000, the parties executed a marital dissolution agreement, and they were divorced by final decree entered in circuit court ninety days later on December 12, 2000. In February 2003, the wife brought this independent action in the chancery court below for damages for fraud, deceit, and coercion. She alleged that the husband had coerced her into signing the marital dissolution agreement by the use of threats, had prevented her from obtaining the benefit of counsel, and had misrepresented the value of his marital assets. The husband filed a motion to dismiss, alleging that the wife had failed to state a claim upon which relief could granted. The trial court dismissed the wife’s lawsuit, determining that the complaint was essentially an action to set aside the divorce decree, and that the wife did not set out sufficient facts to support that claim. From that decision, the wife now appeals. We affirm, finding that the allegations in the complaint cannot be the basis for an independent action essentially to set aside the divorce decree.

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

HOLLY M. KIRBY , J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which JOE G. RILEY , SP . J., and FRANKLIN MURCHISON , SP . J., joined.

Hal Gerber and Margaret M. Chesney, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant, Kathryn C. Black.

Daniel L. Taylor, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellee, Stevan L. Black.

OPINION

On October 6, 1990, Plaintiff/Appellant Kathryn C. Black (“Wife”) and Defendant/Appellee Stevan L. Black (“Husband”) were married. One child was born of the marriage. Husband is a lawyer with a practice that focuses on domestic relations law.

On September 13, 2000, Husband and Wife signed a Marital Dissolution Agreement (“MDA”) setting forth the parties’ respective rights to property and other matters arising out of the marital relationship. On the same day, the MDA was filed in the clerk’s office of the Shelby County Circuit Court.1 On November 29, 2000, the parties executed an amendment to the MDA. Husband drafted both the MDA and the amendment thereto.

On December 12, 2000, ninety days after the original MDA was signed, a final decree of divorce was entered by the circuit court. The parties did not have independent counsel, but represented themselves, pro se, during the divorce proceedings.

On February 14, 2003, over two years after the divorce became final in the circuit court, Wife filed the instant lawsuit against Husband in the chancery court below. Wife’s complaint was entitled “Complaint For Damages For Fraud, Deceit and Coercion.” In the lawsuit, Wife alleged that Husband had engaged in fraud and coercion in inducing her to sign the MDA. Wife claimed as follows:

A. On or about September 8, 2000, Defendant presented Plaintiff with a proposed Marital Dissolution Agreement. When she told Defendant she wanted to have the advice of counsel, Defendant then told her if she did so, and if she did not sign the document, he would have her prosecuted for child abuse and put in jail; that he would see to it that she would never see her children again; that she would have to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees; that she would receive nothing in the event of a divorce and she would have to pay child support.

B. Plaintiff refused to sign the Marital Dissolution Agreement, but reverted to drinking and remained under the influence of alcohol to and including, on or about September 13, 2000, when she was driven to the airport by Defendant to depart for an Alcoholics Anonymous convention at which time Defendant repeated these threats, if she did not sign the Marital Dissolution Agreement. As the [sic] result, due to the capacity and willingness of the Defendant to carry out his threats, she executed the document.

C. Defendant fraudulently concealed his true net worth in that:

1. He withheld the net equity value of real estate owned by him;

2. He withheld the identity and value of securities owned by him;

3. He withheld the value of his law practice as well as the furniture, furnishings and equipment contained in his office . . . .

1 The record on appeal does not include a petition for divorce filed by either party, although the MDA states that “Husband will be filing a complaint for absolute divorce against W ife in the courts of Shelby County, Tennessee.” Apparently, the MDA was the first document filed in the divorce proceedings.

-2- In sum, Wife alleged that Husband prevented her from retaining her own lawyer and obtained her signature on the MDA through the use of threats and coercion, and that Husband fraudulently concealed his true net worth. Wife sought $1,000,000 in compensatory damages, plus punitive damages for Husband’s wrongful conduct.

On April 16, 2003, Husband filed a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted, pursuant to Rule 12.02(6) of the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure. He argued that Wife’s complaint was in reality a motion to set aside the MDA which was incorporated in the parties’ final decree of divorce, entered by the circuit court. On May 23, 2003, a hearing was held on Husband’s motion to dismiss. At the conclusion of the hearing, the chancellor granted the motion. The chancery court held that Wife’s chancery lawsuit, “though . . . word[ed] in terms of a tort, . . . really effectively is more of a setting aside [or] modifying the divorce . . . .” (Trans. 2). The chancellor reasoned:

. . . When one looks at this complaint and looks at the facts that are alleged, one has to take a look at the context of the very nature of the beast of the circumstances that brings this about. The parties were in obviously a rather acrimonious divorce. In that context, [Wife] maintains that she was a recovering alcoholic but still under the influence of alcohol. That in and of itself is not a circumstance by which she can say I now seek the protection of the Court.

She alleges in the light most favorable to her that in the middle of this knock- down, drag-out divorce, [Husband] was taking a very strong position, that he was telling her in essence to sign this document or I’m going to go after you with all the might of the law in such a circumstance regarding the children of this marriage. Terrible as that may seem, it is nevertheless part of what acrimonious divorces are about. To say that that sounds under the tort of coercion when he said either sign this, or if you don’t sign it, I’m going full bore against you, that is hard-ball negotiations, perhaps harsh, but not tortious.

*** . . . [W]hen the Court looks at the substance of the complaint and the nature of what was going on which is that this sounds in a domestic relations case to begin with, it is an acrimonious divorce to begin it, [sic] is the nature of the beast that people who have the closest relationship in the world they can have as a husband and wife and they turn on each other, it gets really fierce and nasty, it is the nature of the beast that you are going to have a certain amount of this kind of unpleasant discussion.

Thus, the chancery court found that Wife’s lawsuit against Husband was, in essence, an independent action to set aside the divorce decree based on fraud. Treating it as such, the chancery court concluded that the complaint did not set out facts that would support such a claim.

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Bluebook (online)
Kathryn C. Black v. Stevan L. Black, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kathryn-c-black-v-stevan-l-black-tennctapp-2004.