Kimberly Lou Uselton et vir, Terry Twayne Uselton v. Jessica Walton and Clinton Brandon Woodard

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 21, 2013
DocketM2012-02333-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Kimberly Lou Uselton et vir, Terry Twayne Uselton v. Jessica Walton and Clinton Brandon Woodard (Kimberly Lou Uselton et vir, Terry Twayne Uselton v. Jessica Walton and Clinton Brandon Woodard) 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
Kimberly Lou Uselton et vir, Terry Twayne Uselton v. Jessica Walton and Clinton Brandon Woodard, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE March 27, 2013 Session

KIMBERLY LOU USELTON ET VIR, TERRY TWAYNE USELTON v. JESSICA WALTON AND CLINTON BRANDON WOODARD

An Appeal from the Chancery Court for Dickson County No. 2011-CV-484 Larry J. Wallace, Chancellor

No. M2012-02333-COA-R3-CV - Filed June 21, 2013

This is a grandparent visitation case. The biological parents of the child at issue were never married. When the child was born, the father was in the military and away most of the time. The mother permitted the father’s parents, the petitioners in this case, to have liberal visitation with the child. As time went on, the mother got married and had children with her new husband. When the subject child was five years old, the mother limited the grandparents’ visitation with the child, but she did not end it. Dissatisfied with the limitations, the grandparents filed this petition for court-ordered visitation pursuant to the Grandparent Visitation Statute, Tennessee Code Annotated § 36-6-306. The trial court granted the petition and ordered a visitation schedule that essentially allowed the grandparents to have the father’s visitation rights when he was away. The court-ordered schedule even provided for visitation for the grandparents in the event the father chose to exercise all of the visitation to which he was entitled. The mother now appeals. We hold that the trial court erred in essentially placing the paternal grandparents in the stead of the father, and that the Grandparent Visitation Statute is not applicable because there was no proof that the mother opposed the grandparents’ visitation before the grandparents filed their petition for court-ordered grandparent visitation. Therefore, we reverse and dismiss the petition with prejudice.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court is Reversed and the Petition is Dismissed

H OLLY M. K IRBY, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which J. S TEVEN S TAFFORD, J., joined. A LAN E. H IGHERS, P.J., W.S., filed a dissent. Irene R. Haude, Nashville, Tennessee, for the Respondent/Appellant, Jessica Warren (Walton)1

Shannon L. Crutcher, Nashville, Tennessee, for the Petitioner/Appellees, Kimberly Lou Uselton et vir, Terry Twayne Uselton 2

David D. Wolfe, Dickson, Tennessee, for the Respondent/Appellee, Clinton Brandon Woodard

OPINION

F ACTS AND P ROCEEDINGS B ELOW

Background

In 2005, Respondent/Appellant Jessica Warren (formerly Walton) (“Mother”) had a brief romantic relationship with Respondent/Appellee Clinton Brandon Woodard (“Father”), and she became pregnant with his child. Mother lived in Tennessee; Father’s domicile was Tennessee, but he was in the military and was stationed elsewhere. In May 2006, while Father was on leave prior to the child’s birth, Mother filed a parentage petition in the Dickson County Chancery Court against Father to establish paternity and to adopt a parenting plan for the child.

Later in 2006, while the parentage petition was pending, Mother gave birth to a daughter, Isabella D. W. (“Bella” or “the child”). After testing established Father as the child’s biological parent, the chancery court entered an order to that effect. The chancery court acknowledged Mother as the child’s primary residential parent, granted Father parenting time when he was home in Tennessee on leave per agreement of the parents, and ordered Father to pay child support.3 Mother and Father were never married to each other.

When Bella was about four months old, Mother brought her to meet Father at the home of his parents, Petitioner/Appellee Kimberly Uselton, and her husband, Petitioner/Appellee Terry Twayne Uselton (individually, “Grandmother” and “Grandfather;” collectively,

1 Ms. Haude did not represent Respondent/Appellant during the trial court proceedings. 2 Ms. Crutcher did not represent Petitioner/Appellees during the trial court proceedings. 3 The chancery court also determined that Father owed Mother a child support arrearage of $2,542.31.

-2- “Grandparents”).4 It was understood at the time that Father would be absent most of the time because of his military duties. Mother chose to permit the Grandparents to develop a relationship with the child.

Grandparents lived less than a mile from Mother and Bella. When Bella was an infant, Mother brought her for weekly visits with Grandparents. Initially, Mother stayed with the child during the visits, but she later began leaving the child unsupervised with Grandparents. This pattern of weekly visits continued until the child was about one year old.

After Bella turned one, Mother permitted Grandparents to have very generous visitation with the child. In a typical week, the child would visit with Grandparents several times and stay overnight with Grandparents on Saturday night unless the parties made other arrangements. For Bella’s third, fourth, and fifth birthdays, Mother and Grandparents jointly celebrated at Grandparents’ home, and the families of both Mother and Grandmother were included in the celebration. Bella spent time with Grandparents on holidays and even accompanied them on out-of-town vacations. When the child started school, Mother placed Grandparents on a list of approved visitors at the school, and Grandparents visited her there often. This pattern of generous visitation continued for several years.

In 2010, Mother married her current husband, Bobby Joe Warren (“Stepfather”). In 2011, after Father finished his five-year stint in the military, he moved to Hawaii with his wife to take a short-term job as an air traffic controller. Father’s intent at that time was to move back to Tennessee after concluding his job in Hawaii.5

In the summer of 2011, Father and Mother reached an agreement regarding Father’s parenting time while he lived in Hawaii. On July 25, 2011, the chancery court presiding over the paternity case entered a consent order that incorporated the parents’ agreed Parenting Plan. The agreed Plan allocated Mother 275 days per year of residential parenting time, and allocated Father 90 days per year; but in light of the fact that Father lived in Hawaii, it did not have a definite schedule for Father’s residential parenting time except for holidays and vacations. Instead, the agreed Plan indicated that Mother and Father would cooperate for Father to have “reasonable and liberal visitation” with the child if he was able to travel to Tennessee.

4 Mr. Uselton is not Father’s biological father, but he married Grandmother when Father was a young boy. He has standing to seek visitation under the Grandparent Visitation Statute as “[t]he spouse of a biological grandparent.” See Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-6-306(e). 5 At oral argument in this appeal, counsel for Father appeared and said that Father had, in fact, moved back to Tennessee.

-3- An incident arose in October 2011. At that time, Mother and Stepfather had a one-year-old daughter of their own, and Mother was pregnant with their second (Mother’s third) child. The one-year-old daughter fell; she sustained a skull fracture and was taken to the hospital. This prompted an investigation by the Tennessee Department of Children’s Services (“DCS”).

Pending resolution of its investigation, DCS temporarily removed both the one-year-old daughter and Bella from Mother’s care. Initially, both were placed with their maternal grandmother, but Bella became upset, so the maternal grandmother allowed Bella to stay with Grandparents instead. The DCS investigation ultimately resolved with no charges against either Mother or Stepfather.

While Bella was staying at Grandparents’ house during the DCS investigation, she was observed playing “girlfriend and boyfriend” with a female playmate.

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Bluebook (online)
Kimberly Lou Uselton et vir, Terry Twayne Uselton v. Jessica Walton and Clinton Brandon Woodard, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kimberly-lou-uselton-et-vir-terry-twayne-uselton-v-jessica-walton-and-tennctapp-2013.