Lindsey Bailey Harmon (Jean) v. Richard Bradley Harmon

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 27, 2018
DocketW2017-02452-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Lindsey Bailey Harmon (Jean) v. Richard Bradley Harmon (Lindsey Bailey Harmon (Jean) v. Richard Bradley Harmon) 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
Lindsey Bailey Harmon (Jean) v. Richard Bradley Harmon, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

11/27/2018 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON September 12, 2018 Session

LINDSEY BAILEY HARMON (JEAN) v. RICHARD BRADLEY HARMON

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Shelby County No. CT-001670-13 Mary L. Wagner, Judge ___________________________________

No. W2017-02452-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

Mother/Appellant sought to relocate from Memphis, Tennessee to Chattanooga, Tennessee with the parties’ minor child. Father/Appellee opposed the relocation. The Circuit Court for Shelby County granted Father’s petition in opposition of the relocation, finding that (1) the parties were spending substantially equal time with the child, and (2) the proposed relocation was not in the child’s best interest. From this decision Mother appeals. Discerning no error, we affirm.

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

J. STEVEN STAFFORD, P.J., W.S., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ARNOLD B. GOLDIN and KENNY ARMSTRONG, JJ., joined.

Mitzi C. Johnson, Collierville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Lindsey Bailey Harmon (Jean).

Sharon G. Lichliter, Germantown, Tennessee, for the appellee, Richard Bradley Harmon.

OPINION

Background

This is a post-divorce parental relocation case. Lindsey Bailey Harmon (Jean) (“Appellant” or “Mother”) and Richard Bradley Harmon (“Appellee” or “Father”) divorced in 2013 after having one child together, Bailey Kate Harmon (“the child” or “B.K.”). The child was approximately two and one-half years old at the time the parties divorced. A permanent parenting plan was entered designating Mother the primary residential parent and allocating her 209 days per year with the child. Father was allocated 156 days with the child. Under the parenting plan, Father was to have the child Thursday through Saturday of every week; every other weekend, Father would also keep the child through Sunday. Mother and Father both lived in Memphis, Tennessee at the time, and by all accounts the parties worked well together co-parenting and splitting their time with the child for the first several years after their divorce. Because Father’s employment required extensive travel, Mother and Father would often deviate from the parenting plan in order to accommodate the child and one another’s schedule.1 Both Mother and Father have always been extensively involved in the child’s life and activities.

Both Mother and Father remarried in 2015. Mother married Dr. Robert Jean (“Step-Father”) and Father married Lyndsey Williams Harmon (“Step-Mother”). Since these subsequent marriages, both Step-Mother and Step-Father have also become involved in the child’s life, and the record reflects that both step-parents have a healthy relationship with the child. Step-Mother in particular is quite close with the child and even coaches the child’s soccer team. Father’s and Step-Mother’s families both reside in the Memphis area, while Mother’s family primarily resides in Knoxville. Step-Mother has a large extended family with whom the child spends extensive time. Both Mother and Father have since had new children with their respective spouses, such that the child has a half-brother and a half-sister. It is undisputed that she is attached to and has formed a bond with both of her half-siblings.

All parties agree that in general, both families cooperate with one another to co- parent the child. Mother, Step-Father, Father, and Step-Mother all regularly attend the child’s athletic and cheerleading events, and both Mother and Father make an effort to attend field trips, school parties, and lunches with the child. Both families often attend the child’s events and interact with one another with no issue. No one disputes that the child is happy, well-adjusted, and enjoys a loving relationship with both families.

Prior to January of 2017, the parties would deviate from the parenting plan in order to accommodate one another, often by “trading” days with one another, or would allow one another to take the child on special trips or vacations regardless of the parenting plan’s requirements. In January of 2017, however, the parties came to the conclusion that stricter adherence to the parenting plan would be in the child’s best interest, as the constant trading back and forth seemed to be tiring the child and upsetting her weekly routine. While the parties would still occasionally trade days after January of 2017, they primarily adhered to the parenting plan. Mother’s 209 days under the plan amounts to roughly 57% of the child’s time, while Father’s 156 days of parenting time amounts to 43% of the child’s time. This arrangement worked well for the parties for a time.

1 Father has since changed jobs and is not currently required to travel for work. -2- Tension arose, however, on August 13, 2017, when Mother informed Father that Step-Father was offered a job opportunity in Chattanooga that he intended to accept. Step-Father is a successful surgeon, and the Chattanooga job afforded him a much higher salary, better retirement and insurance benefits, and a large bonus that would go towards his student loans. Additionally, Mother and Step-Father wished to relocate because most of Mother’s family resides in Knoxville, and it was Mother’s desire to be closer to her own family in East Tennessee. In informing Father of the relocation, Mother indicated that it was her intention to take the child with her, but that Mother would continue to help facilitate the child’s relationship with Father and Step-Mother.

In response, Father filed a petition in opposition to the relocation on August 31, 2017, with the Circuit Court of Shelby County (“trial court”). Therein, Father alleged that the relocation would cause actual harm to the child by essentially ending Father’s day-to- day interaction her. Additionally, Father expressed concerns over Mother’s recent behavior, noting that “Mother has already been telling the minor child that this move is ‘what’s best for her life’[,]” and that Mother further told the child “you will see your daddy all the time . . . Chattanooga isn’t that far.” In closing, Father asked that the trial court deny Mother’s request to relocate or, alternatively, name the Father primary residential parent in the event that Mother relocated without the child.

Mother responded on September 11, 2017, averring that “she has and will continue to encourage a consistent ongoing and meaningful relationship between Father and . . . the child.” The trial court, however, issued an injunction on September 19, 2017, prohibiting Mother from relocating with the child, barring Mother from further discussing the relocation with the child, and setting a hearing on the matter. The parties engaged in discovery and proceeded with trial on October 30, 2017.

In addition to hearing from Mother, Father, Step-Mother, and Step-Father, various family friends and members of the parties’ extended families testified. Testimony began with Father, who explained to the court that while he traveled quite a bit early in the child’s life, he recently accepted a job that requires no travel and allows for flexibility in his work schedule. Indeed, Father noted that he could work from home from time to time were a problem to arise with the child. Father also testified that while he and Mother always worked together to share their time with the child, Mother is also quick to remind him that she, as the primary residential parent, is entitled to more time with B.K. Father indicated that on occasions when he sought additional time with the child, the conversations often did not go “smoothly” because “[Mother] wouldn’t allow it.” On balance, Father expressed that he believed Mother was a good parent to the child and recognized the strong, loving bond between Mother and the child.

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Bluebook (online)
Lindsey Bailey Harmon (Jean) v. Richard Bradley Harmon, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindsey-bailey-harmon-jean-v-richard-bradley-harmon-tennctapp-2018.