Lisa Alfaro Munday v. William Mark Munday

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 15, 2000
DocketE1999-02605-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Lisa Alfaro Munday v. William Mark Munday (Lisa Alfaro Munday v. William Mark Munday) 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
Lisa Alfaro Munday v. William Mark Munday, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE June 2000 Session

LISA ALFARO MUNDAY v. WILLIAM MARK MUNDAY

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Knox County No. 100381-2 Daryl R. Fansler, Chancellor

FILED AUGUST 15, 2000

No. E1999-02605-COA-R3-CV

In this post-divorce proceeding, the trial court designated William Mark Munday (“Father”) as the primary residential custodian of two of the parties’ children. He had been awarded primary residential custody of the parties’ third child at an earlier time. Lisa Alfaro Munday (“Mother”) appeals, arguing (1) that the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to modify the custodial arrangement and (2) that there had not been a material change of circumstances to warrant a change in custody. We affirm.

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

CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which HOUSTON M. GODDARD , P.J. and HERSCHEL P. FRANKS, J., joined.

Mary Evars-Goan, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Lisa Alfaro Munday.

Gregory S. McMillan and Charles W. Swanson, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellee, William Mark Munday.

OPINION

I.

The parties were divorced in 1990. The divorce judgment awarded the parties joint custody of their three children, Lisa Alexandra Munday (DOB: October 4, 1984) (“Alexandra”); Maria Christina Munday (DOB: May 3, 1986) (“Christina”); and Natalie Grace Munday (DOB: January 2, 1988) (“Natalie”). Mother was designated as the primary residential custodian of the children. In 1997, Father filed a petition to modify residential custody, specifically seeking primary residential custody of the parties’ oldest daughter, Alexandra. Father also requested that the Court “make any necessary and appropriate amendments” to the residential custody of Christina and Natalie. An agreed order was entered on July 11, 1997, designating Father as the primary residential custodian of Alexandra. Christina and Natalie continued to reside with Mother. In June, 1998, Father filed the subject petition in the original divorce case, seeking primary residential custody of Christina and Natalie. In his petition, Father alleged that the following constituted a material change of circumstances warranting an alteration of the custodial arrangement:

[Mother’s] mental and emotional status has changed so as to render her disabled from employment and from managing the emotional, physical and financial burdens associated with the responsibility of being a primary residential custodian of minor children. [Mother’s] emotional or psychological disability results in a significant degree of lethargy which, in turn, causes the minor children to be called upon to maintain the home and care for the mother, essentially reversing the roles of mother and children. Also, [Mother] has separated from current husband and, upon information and belief, [Father] alleges that during the period of separation from her current husband [Mother] has exposed the minor children to inappropriate influences in her household.

Mother moved to dismiss Father’s petition on the basis of a lack of subject matter jurisdiction, arguing that the petition raises issues of dependency and neglect, which issues, Mother contended, placed Father’s petition within the exclusive jurisdiction of the juvenile court. The trial court denied Mother’s motion and the case proceeded to trial on August 11 and 12, 1999.

The testimony at trial revealed the following facts. Mother was first hospitalized for depression in 1991. In October, 1996, Mother had what she described as a nervous breakdown and was hospitalized for a week. During her hospitalization, Mother reported having visual and auditory hallucinations. After being released from the hospital, she commenced therapy and started taking various medications. She admitted that she did not tell Father at the time about her 1996 hospitalization.

Mother denied having any visual hallucinations after leaving the hospital. Her medical records, however, indicate that Mother continued to suffer from hallucinations and other manifestations of her illness after her 1996 hospitalization. In August, 1997, she reported to her therapist that she was having hallucinations and conversations with God and Satan. In September, 1998, she called her therapist and reported that she thought that the rapture had occurred and that her neighbors were aliens impersonating human beings. Later that month, she reported increased paranoia, hallucinations, and delusions.

Mother did not recall making many of the statements documented in her medical records. She asserted at trial that, in any event, none of these psychotic episodes occurred in front of the children.

Mother is currently unemployed and receives disability benefits. She testified that there are days when she stays in bed, but that she gets out of bed when the children come home from school. Her disability records also reflect that she has difficulty with everyday activities. In March, 1998,

-2- Mother completed a form entitled “Report of Continuing Disability Interview” with the Social Security Administration. In that document, Mother stated that she suffers from severe depression, panic attacks, confusion, and irrational thoughts and fears. She stated that her personal mobility “varies on a day to day basis” and that her children or her mother help her with most activities. She asserted that social contacts make her nervous and that she can drive but that she prefers to have her children with her. Mother further stated that she is not able to manage her finances.

In May, 1998, Mother completed an “Activities of Daily Living” questionnaire for the Social Security Administration. In response to a question regarding whether she hears, smells or sees things that later do not appear to have been there, Mother responded in the affirmative, noting “hallucinations, poison gas, sometimes I think I have supersensitivity to odors and auras and demonic forces in the world.” She reported erratic sleep patterns and that she had thought at “different times” about ending her life. She stated that she can cook, shop, and do household chores only with assistance from her children or her mother. Mother further stated:

Each day is different. Some days I feel like I will be able to get better and try to be hopeful. Other days I struggle to find a reason to keep living and fighting this overwhelming depression. Need help to do almost everything. Am afraid of people, places and activities. I don’t know what causes the good days to be better or the bad days to be worse. Sometimes a memory or a conversation can cause a complete mood swing. My parents and my children give me a great deal of help with my life to keep everything going as close to normal as possible. I have to keep taking medicine and seeking therapist [sic] to try to stay optimistic. It caused me a great deal of stress filling out this form and my mother has helped me complete it.

Mother testified that since her hospitalization in 1996, her condition has improved dramatically and that recently “things have been very, very manageable. Very, very good.” She reported that by September, 1998, she was able to take the children to basketball and football games and no longer needed their presence around her in order to perform certain tasks such as driving and cooking. Her medical records indicate some improvement in Mother’s condition in early 1999. However, these records also indicate that she missed several counseling sessions in June and July, 1999. At trial, Mother could not recall that she had scheduled these appointments or that she had failed to show up for them.

Nell Alfaro, the children’s maternal grandmother, also testified that Mother has shown marked improvement since her hospitalization in 1996.

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Bluebook (online)
Lisa Alfaro Munday v. William Mark Munday, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lisa-alfaro-munday-v-william-mark-munday-tennctapp-2000.