Leta Hoalcraft v. Walter Troy Smithson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 10, 2001
DocketM2000-01347-COA-R10-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Leta Hoalcraft v. Walter Troy Smithson (Leta Hoalcraft v. Walter Troy Smithson) 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
Leta Hoalcraft v. Walter Troy Smithson, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE November 9, 2000 Session

LETA HOALCRAFT v. WALTER TROY SMITHSON

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Williamson Cou nty No. 91068 Russ Heldman, Judge ________________________

No. M2000-01347-COA-R10-CV - Filed July 10, 2001 ________________________

This Tenn. R. A pp. P. 10 ex traordinary appeal m arks the third time this h otly contested child custody dispute has been before this court. In the first appeal, this court reverse d the trial court’s decision to ignore his predecessor’s final order awarding custody of the children to their mother and to place the children in their father’s custody. Hoalcraft v. Smithson, 19 S.W.3d 822 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999) (“Hoalcraft v. Smithson I”). In the second appeal, this court reversed the trial court’s order requiring the mother to pay the father child support. Hoalcraft v. Smithson, No. M1999-00143-COA-R3-CV, 2000 WL 225583 (T enn. Ct. App. Feb. 29, 2000) (N o Tenn. R. App. P. 11 application filed) (“Hoalcraft v. Smithson II”). In this appeal, the mother asserts that the trial judge erred by (1) deciding to relitigate the custody issue, (2) disqualifying her lawyer for perceived ethical violations, and (3) refusing to disqualify himself from further proceedings in this case. We have determined that the father is entitled to a hearing on his motion for change of custody limited to facts occurring after January 1999. We have also determined that the trial court erred by disqualifying the wife’s lawyer and that the record contain s evidence that prov ides a reasonable bas is for questioning the trial judge’s impartiality.

Tenn. R. Ap p. P. 10 App eal by Permission; Jud gment of the C ircuit Court Reversed

W ILLIAM B. C AIN,, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which W ILLIAM C. K OCH, JR. and PATRICIA J. C OTTRELL , JJ., joined.

R. E. Lee Dav ies, Franklin, Ten nessee, for the appellan t, Leta Hoalcraft.

Virginia Lee Story, Franklin, Tennessee, for the appellee, Walter Troy Smithson.

OPINION

This case presents serious questions relative to the administration of justice in accordance w ith long-settled rules of law. The trial court’s actions at issue on this appeal can only be understood in the context of the matters dealt with in prior appeals. Accordingly, this opinion is extended beyond what would ord inarily suffice to dispose of the issues before the court. Because we are compelled by the record in this case to reverse the action of the trial court in disqualifying counsel for Mrs. Hoalcraft and further find it necessary to disqualify the trial judge from all further proceedings in this case, we wish to avoid any possibility of taking out of context any pronouncement made by the trial judge appearing in this record. We therefore choose to reproduce as an appendix to this opinion verbatim, all orders and memoranda of the trial judge reflecting his actions and forming the basis for our actions. Reference in the opinion to matters appearing in the appendix are appropriately footnoted in the opinion, and a thorough read ing of the entire append ix is helpful in understanding the opinion.

Walter Troy Smithson and Leta Hoalcraft were divorced in the Circuit Court for Williamson County on December 16, 1988. By agreement, Mrs. Hoalcraft received sole custody of the parties’ two minor children. Neither party appealed from this decree. Both parties eventually married other persons.

In 1997, Mrs. Hoalcraft’s husband received a three-year employment assignment in Thailand.1 Mrs. Hoalcraft decided that she and her children would accompany Mr. Hoalcraft, and so she filed a petition seeking permission to relocate the children to Thailand until 2001 when she and Mr. Hoalcr aft planned to return to Tennessee. Mr. Smithson objected to the relocation and filed a petition seeking a change of c ustody. He also stopped paying his court-ordered child support in June 1997. The trial judge conducted a hearing on July 3, 1997. After the trial judge announced that he was authorizing Mrs. Hoalcraft to take the children to Thailand, Mr. Smithson assaulted not only M r. Hoalcraft but a court deputy who attempted to intervene. 2

On July 17, 1997, the trial court entered an order authorizing Mrs. Hoalcraft to take the children to Thailand and denying Mr. Smithson’s petition for change of custody on the ground that there had been no material change in the children’s circumstances. This order also states that the case “shall be placed on the review docket in the summer of 1998 when . . . [Mrs. Hoalcraft] returns from Thailand with the children.”3 Mrs. Hoalcraft and the children moved to Thailand in the summer of 1997, and Mr. Smithson did not appeal from the decision permitting Mrs. Hoalcraft to relocate the children to Thailand and denying his petition for change of custody. In Thailand, Mrs. Hoalcraft and the children lived in an exclusive condominium-like community, and the children attended an exclusive international school. The children were also involved in numerous extracurricular activities, 4 including band, tennis, and horseback riding.

Mrs. Hoalcraft brought the children back to Tennessee during the summer of 1998 to enab le

1 Hoalcraft v. Smithson, 2000 WL 225583, at *2 n.2.

2 Hoalcraft v. Smithson, 19 S.W.3d at 825.

3 Hoalcraft v. Smithson, 19 S.W.3d at 828.

4 Hoalcraft v. Smithson, 19 S.W.3d at 825.

2 them to have a month-long visitation with Mr. Smithson.5 By being extremely permissive and indulgent with the children, Mr. Smithson attempted to induce them to tell Mrs. Hoalcraft and the trial court that they wanted to live with him rather than returning to Thailand.6 Mr. Smithson had some short-term success because immediately after the visitation, both children exhibited “hateful behavior” toward Mrs. Hoalcraft and asked to remain with Mr. Smithson rather than returning to Thailand. Neither Mr. Smithson nor Mrs. Hoalcraft asked the trial court to revisit the question of custody while Mrs. Hoalcraft and the children were in the United States. However, in August 1998, before she returned to Thailand, M rs. Hoalcraft wro te the trial court clerk a letter stating that Mr. Smithson had not paid child support since June 1997.

Judge Henry Denm ark Bell, the trial judge wh o had presided over this case from the beginning retired effective September 1, 1998, and was replaced by Judge Russ Heldman. On September 10, 1998, the trial court ordered M r. Smithson to appear to answ er Mrs. Ho alcraft’s letter regarding his non-payment of child support. On October 13, 1998, the day he was to appear in court, Mr. Smithson filed another petition seeking a change of custody. Mrs. Hoalcraft responded with a petition seeking the child support arrearage.

Mr. Smithson also requested the trial court to interview the children in chambers to discuss their preferences about where they wanted to live. The trial court responded by directing Mrs. Hoalcraft to bring the children to Tennessee during the Christmas holidays to enable him to interview them. This notice contained no indication that anything other than an interview would take place, and neither party expected that the trial court would hold a hearing on custody in addition to the scheduled interviews. 7

As is common in cases of this sort, the children desired to please both parents and accordingly vacillated back and forth regar ding their living preferences. Approximately two weeks before the scheduled interview, the parties’ ch ildren sent a letter to the trial court stating that they desired to remain with Mrs. H oalcraft in Thailand and that Mr. Smithson had pressured them into saying that they wanted to live with him.

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