Katie J. Rountree v. Joshua Rountree

369 S.W.3d 122, 2012 WL 359354, 2012 Tenn. App. LEXIS 69
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 1, 2012
DocketM2011-01283-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 369 S.W.3d 122 (Katie J. Rountree v. Joshua Rountree) 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
Katie J. Rountree v. Joshua Rountree, 369 S.W.3d 122, 2012 WL 359354, 2012 Tenn. App. LEXIS 69 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

J. STEVEN STAFFORD, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which DAVID R. FARMER, J., and HOLLY M. KIRBY, J., joined.

This is a divorce case involving issues related to the permanent parenting plan and the division of marital property. The trial court adopted Mother’s proposed permanent parenting plan, which provided that the child would attend preschool, against Father’s wishes, even though prior to trial Father had been the primary care *124 giver of the child while Mother worked. The trial court also adopted Mother’s proposed division of marital property. We conclude that the trial court erred in finding that Father’s desire to care for the child during the day was based on a self-serving motive. Accordingly, we vacate the parenting plan and remand for the establishment of a new permanent parenting plan. We further conclude that Mother was improperly assigned her attorney fees as a marital debt, and we reverse that award. In addition, we reverse portions of the trial court’s findings regarding the marital property, but affirm the overall division as equitable. Affirmed in part, reversed in part, vacated in part, and remanded.

I. Background

Plaintiff/Appellee Katie J. Rountree and Defendant/Appellant Joshua Rountree were married on June 26, 2001. Mr. Rountree was injured in an accident prior to the parties’ marriage and is confined to a wheelchair. Because of the pain associated with his injuries, Mr. Rountree was prescribed narcotics, including Oxycodone, and later, Methadone.

The parties’ only child, a daughter, was born on June 16, 2008, while the parties were living in Texas. After the birth of the child, Ms. Rountree stayed home with the child for eight weeks and then returned to work as a paralegal. Prior to the birth of the child, Mr. Rountree worked as a legal assistant in his brother’s law office; however his brother closed the office to seek a new profession and Mr. Rountree did not seek further employment. Instead, the parties agreed that Mr. Rountree would serve as the primary caregiver of the child in order to allow Ms. Rountree to work.

At some point, Ms. Rountree informed Mr. Rountree that she wanted to return to Tennessee, where both her parents and Mr. Rountree’s parents resided. Mr. Rountree agreed and the parties attempted to sell their home. In April of 2009, while the home was still on the market in Texas, Ms. Rountree moved back to Tennessee with the child to pursue a career opportunity. Mr. Rountree stayed behind in Texas for the purpose of selling the parties’ home. While in Tennessee, Ms. Rountree and the child lived with Ms. Rountree’s parents, who cared for the child during the day after Ms. Rountree took a full time job with a law office. Athough the home in Texas sold in July of 2009, Mr. Rountree remained in Texas until September because he did not want to stay in Ms. Rountree’s parents’ home, which was not wheelchair accessible.

After Mr. Rountree moved to Tennessee, the parties moved into their own apartment. Per the parties’ previous arrangement, Mr. Rountree returned to taking primary responsibility for the child during the day while Ms. Rountree worked. After Ms. Rountree came home from work, she would care for the child until bedtime, and Mr. Rountree would care for the child throughout the night.

This arrangement worked for approximately one month; however, on October 20, 2009, an incident occurred that caused Ms. Rountree to question Mr. Rountree’s ability to care for the child. This incident occurred after a weekend where Mr. Rountree returned to Texas to refill his Methadone prescription. According to Ms. Rountree, Mr. Rountree became panicked because no local physicians would provide him a Methadone prescription. In order to obtain Methadone, Mr. Rountree traveled back to Texas on a weekend when Ms. Rountree was scheduled to undergo a cancer screening. The cancer screening made Ms. Rountree ill and rendered her unable to care for herself for a number of *125 days. 1 Following Mr. Rountree’s return to Tennessee and the conclusion of the cancer screening, Ms. Rountree returned to work. However, when Ms. Rountree came home from work for lunch, she observed that the child had not been fed or changed and that Mr. Rountree appeared to have over-medicated himself. Ms. Rountree refused to leave the child with him for the remainder of the day. When Ms. Rountree came home for lunch the next day, she noticed the same issues. The parties had an argument, wherein Mr. Rountree intimated that he might take the child and return to Texas. After this incident, Ms. Rountree moved out of the apartment she shared with Mr. Rountree and moved in with her parents.

Based on this incident, Ms. Rountree filed for an ex parte order of protection on October 22, 2009, asking that Mr. Roun-tree be restrained from “taking, interfering with or otherwise depriving Petitioner from exercising custody and control of the Parties’ minor daughter.” The order of protection was granted on the same day, with a hearing scheduled for October 26, 2009. According to the record, no hearing was ever held.

On January 28, 2010, Ms. Rountree filed a complaint for divorce, alleging that Mr. Rountree was guilty of drug or alcohol abuse and inappropriate marital conduct. The complaint asserts that Mr. Rountree “is an able bodied person capable of contributing to the financial support of the minor child of the Parties,” and asks that Ms. Rountree be named primary residential parent of the child. Accordingly, Ms. Rountree sought both pendente lite and permanent child support.

On the same day as the filing of the complaint, the record contains an agreed order scheduling Ms. Rountree’s motion for pendente lite support and Mr. Roun-tree’s motion to set visitation for hearing. Neither of these motions is contained in the record. Interestingly, the agreed order also states that the cause was heard on January 27, 2010 although no order was subsequently entered on either motion.

The parties entered into another agreed order on April 5, 2010, wherein Mr. Roun-tree agreed to be restrained from “taking, interfering with or otherwise depriving Petitioner from exercising custody and control of the Parties’ minor daughter.” However, the agreed order further states that:

The Parties are working out an agreement concerning the times, duration, and supervising agent for the Father to exercise in this manner. If the Parties cannot reach an agreement, the Father may move this Honorable Court to decide this issue. Father agrees to continue counseling and pain management with a local (Tennessee) pain management specialist.

According to later testimony, the parties eventually agreed to allow Mr. Rountree to spend parenting time with the child, provided that the visitation was supervised by Ms. Rountree’s parents.

*126 On April 9, 2010, Mr. Rountree filed an answer to the petition for the order of protection, and an answer and counter-complaint to the complaint for divorce, admitting irreconcilable differences and denying all other material allegations. In his countercomplaint, Mr. Rountree sought to be named primary residential parent and sought both spousal and child support.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
369 S.W.3d 122, 2012 WL 359354, 2012 Tenn. App. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/katie-j-rountree-v-joshua-rountree-tennctapp-2012.