Lisa Gail Hayes v. Mark C. Pierret

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 27, 2013
DocketM2012-00195-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Lisa Gail Hayes v. Mark C. Pierret (Lisa Gail Hayes v. Mark C. Pierret) 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 Gail Hayes v. Mark C. Pierret, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE April 9, 2013 Session

LISA GAIL HAYES v. MARK C. PIERRET

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Williamson County No. 32262 Donald P. Harris, Judge

No. M2012-00195-COA-R3-CV - Filed June 27, 2013

In these acrimonious post-divorce proceedings, the father of two minor children filed a petition seeking, inter alia, to be given sole decision-making authority over the children’s educations, non-emergency health care, religion, and extracurricular activities, and to be designated the primary residential parent or alternatively to receive more parenting time. The trial court found a material change of circumstances had occurred due to the parties’ total inability to cooperatively co-parent and that it was in the children’s best interest to spend more quality time with their father. However, the court found it was in the children’s best interest for the mother to remain the primary residential parent and to have final authority over the children’s non-emergency medical care after consultation with the father. The court found that the other major decisions concerning the children should be made jointly. Each party was ordered to pay his or her own attorney’s fees. We affirm the foregoing decisions; however, we have determined the father may be entitled to a modification of his child support obligation, which was not addressed in the trial court’s final order, and we remand this issue for further proceedings.

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

F RANK G. C LEMENT, J R., J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which P ATRICIA J. C OTTRELL, P.J., M.S., and A NDY D. B ENNETT, J., joined.

Dana C. McLendon, III, Franklin, Tennessee, for the appellant, Mark C. Pierret.

Stephen Walker Pate, Murfreesboro, Tennessee, for the appellee, Lisa Gail Hayes. OPINION

Lisa G. Hayes (“Mother”) and Mark C. Pierret (“Father”) are the parents of two minor children – Ethan, born August of 1998, and Claire, born September of 2002. Both parties are highly educated and have successful careers. Mother earned a bachelor’s degree in engineering from Vanderbilt University, and currently works as a marketing manager for Vanderbilt University Medical Center. Father holds a bachelor’s degree in computer science from the University of Louisiana and a master’s degree in business administration from the University of Tennessee. He works as a senior analytics manager for Avaya, an international business telecommunications company. Father works from home; Mother has an office at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, but she has a flexible work schedule.

The parties were granted a divorce on February 13, 2007, after approximately eight years of marriage. Pursuant to the parties’ 2007 Marital Dissolution Agreement and Agreed Permanent Parenting Plan, Mother was designated the primary residential parent. Father was granted 114 days of visitation per year, to be exercised every other weekend and Thursday nights during the school year, alternating weeks in the summer, Father’s birthday, and Father’s Day. The parties alternated visitation on the remaining holidays. As the 2007 parenting plan provides, the parties agreed Father would pay $2,035 per month in child support, which included considerable “additional expenses” for the cost of a daytime nanny for the younger child, Claire. The parenting plan further provided that child support “will be recalculated” after 2008, when Claire was expected to begin attending Grassland Elementary School. Shortly after the divorce, both parents purchased homes in the same subdivision to ensure the children would be close to their schools, friends, and various extracurricular activities, regardless of which parent the children were with.

Despite what seemed to be favorable circumstances for recently divorced parents of two young children, Mother and Father began exhibiting hostility toward one another immediately after the divorce. They engaged in drawn-out and heated disagreements over everything from whether they could park in one another’s driveways when picking up and returning the children to whether their daughter should undergo major surgery. To make things worse, they frequently put their children in the middle of their arguments, against the advice of two court-ordered parenting coordinators, two forensic psychiatrists, and a veritable army of counselors, psychologists and other mental health professionals. Moreover, they involved other family members in their disputes, as well as their children’s nannies, teachers, and doctors.

-2- We shall not repeat the parties’ hateful and frequently hypocritical accusations in detail nor shall we identify the numerous petitions, motions, and responses filed by the parties in the short time during which they have been divorced. We limit our summary to the facts and procedural history that are relevant to the issues on appeal, which are as follows.

On July 17, 2009, Father filed a Petition for Change of Custody and/or Residential Parenting Schedule in the Williamson County Chancery Court, alleging there had been a substantial and material change of circumstances which required a modification to the parties’ Agreed Permanent Parenting Plan, and that it was in the children’s best interests for Father to be the primary residential parent and to have final decision-making authority over the children’s educations, non-emergency healthcare, religion, and extracurricular activities. Mother filed an answer denying Father’s allegations. Father filed an Amended Petition on March 8, 2010, alleging additional facts in support of his Petition, and Mother filed another answer again denying Father’s allegations.

On March 29, 2010, Father filed a “Motion for Protection of Children and Relief,” requesting, inter alia, a modification in his child support obligation. The trial court reserved the child support issue, stating:

[T]he Court shall not address that issue at this time, but will allow the Father to renew the child support issue if mediation fails in this cause; however, the Court at [this] time again will inquire as to why that issue cannot be heard at the final hearing . . . since it has been an issue since the initial filings in this cause.

Subsequently, on February 16, 2011, the parties entered an Agreed Order reducing Father’s child support to $1,504 per month, due to the fact that, as expected, the children were both attending school and Mother’s childcare expenses had been reduced from $1,639 per month at the time of the divorce in 2007, to $782 per month in 2011. The Agreed Order further provides that the reduction is based solely on the childcare expenses and was entered “without prejudice to the claims or defenses either party may raise at trial . . . .”

The Amended Petition for Change of Custody and/or Residential Parenting Schedule was tried before Senior Judge Donald P. Harris on August 30 and October 21, 2011. Both parties testified, as did Mother’s Parents, Father’s brother, Mother’s next-door neighbor, Mother’s direct supervisor at Vanderbilt, and a former nanny. In lieu of calling the parties’ son Ethan to testify, the parties stipulated as to his preference to reside with Mother. The parties also submitted a number of exhibits at trial, including a Forensic Parenting Time Evaluation conducted at Vanderbilt Medical Center, a 296-page report from the parties’ first

-3- Parenting Coordinator, several photos, and hundreds of pages of emails between the parties and various mental health professionals.

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Bluebook (online)
Lisa Gail Hayes v. Mark C. Pierret, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lisa-gail-hayes-v-mark-c-pierret-tennctapp-2013.