Livingston v. Livingston

429 S.W.2d 452, 58 Tenn. App. 271, 1967 Tenn. App. LEXIS 267
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 3, 1967
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 429 S.W.2d 452 (Livingston v. Livingston) 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
Livingston v. Livingston, 429 S.W.2d 452, 58 Tenn. App. 271, 1967 Tenn. App. LEXIS 267 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

CARNEY, J.

This case was argued before the Court of Appeals of Tennessee sitting en banc at Knoxville.

The defendant below, Dr. Robert Simpson Livingston, has appealed and assigned error to a judgment of $9,226 entered in the Chancery Court of Knox County in favor of his former wife, Mrs. Joan Lombard Livingston, the complainant below. The judgment represents contribution in the amount of approximately one-half of the expenditures made by Mrs. Livingston for the support of their minor son, Robert Stuart Livingston, usually called Bobby, from May, 1954, to the date of the entry of the judgment on June 1, 1966. Bobby is a retarded child.

The appellant is a Doctor of Physics and is employed at the atomic energy installation at Oak Ridge, Anderson County, Tennessee. Both he and his former wife are now residents of Knox County, Tennessee. They were married on July 31, 1938, in Los Gatos, California. In October, 1943, they moved to Oak Ridge, Anderson County, Tennessee, where they lived continuously until May 7, 1954, when Mrs. Livingston was granted an absolute divorce on her cross-bill in the Trial Justice Court of Anderson County, Tennessee.

Dr. Livingston remarried about a year after the divorce and he and his second wife now have three children. Mrs Livingston has not remarried.

*274 At the time of the divorce Mrs. Livingston also was employed in the atomic energy installation as a statistician making a salary of approximately $300 per month. Dr. Livingston’s salary was approximately $1,100 per month and his take-home pay was approximately $780 per month. Dr. and Mrs. Livingston had two sons born to the marriage: Lawrence Dean Livingston who was 8 years of age at the time of the divorce and Bobby who was 6. At the time of the divorce Bobby was in the Devereaux School at Devon, Pennsylvania. Dr. Livingston had been paying the school $400 per month for his maintenance and care.

In the divorce decree Mrs. Livingston was given custody of the two minor children, Lawrence and Bobby. She received alimony in solido consisting of furniture, automobile and government bonds. In addition, Dr. Livingston was ordered to pay Mrs. Livingston $450 per month as “alimony.” The only furniture decreed to Dr. Livingston was a roll-away bed and a filing cabinet.

Dr. Livingston paid the $400 monthly tuition for Bobby at Devereaux School for April, 1954, the month the divorce was granted, and Mrs. Living'ston paid the $400 payment for the month of May, 1954. She removed the child to the Kings Daughters Hospital School at Columbia, Tennessee, in June, 1954, where the monthly charges were considerably cheaper. She kept Bobby in Kings Daughters Hospital School for many months and later he was placed in Martha’s Vineyard Hospital School in Springfield, Tennessee. Por a year or two Mrs. Livingston tried keeping Bobby at her home but this was not good for Bobby or Mrs. Livingston. Sometime prior to 1963 he was admitted to the Greene Valley Hospital School located at Greeneville, Tennessee. The institution *275 is supported and maintained by tbe State of Tennessee. Tbe monthly cost is $75. Dr. Livingston paid tbe alimony of $450 per month to Mrs. Livingston continuously from April, 1954, until April, 1963. During this time Mrs. Livingston was very hostile toward Dr. Livingston and made every effort to conceal the whereabouts of Bobby from his father. When she learned that Dr. Livingston bad visited Bobby sbe would move tbe child to another school to keep tbe father from seeing him.

Tbe final decree of divorce in tbe Trial Justice Court of Anderson County, Tennessee, contained no specific provisions for the support of tbe two minor children except Dr. Livingston was ordered to keep in full force and effect tbe life insurance which be then bad excluding term life insurance and group life insurance. He was ordered to make bis son, Lawrence Dean Livingston, beneficiary of one-half of such insurance and bis other son, Bobby, tbe beneficiary of tbe other one-half of bis life insurance. Tbe decree further specified that if tbe defendant should cancel such insurance tbe cash surrender value should be paid over to Mrs. Livingston or if tbe cash surrender values were applied for tbe purchase of paid-up insurance then tbe minor children, Lawrence Dean Livingston and Bobby Livingston, should be tbe beneficiaries thereof.

After the divorce decree in April, 1954, Mrs. Livingston bad full custody of tbe children until April, 1963. During this time she provided all of the support for both children and made no request of Dr. Livingston for any contribution toward their support. Mrs. Livingston claimed tbe two boys as her dependents on her federal income tax return.

On April 2, 1963, Mr. Livingston filed a petition in tbe original cause in tbe Trial Justice Court of Anderson *276 County, Tennessee, seeking a modification of the original decree and asking that lie be awarded the custody of the two minor children and to be relieved of making the $450 monthly payments to Mrs. Livingston. He averred that the older son, Lawrence, then aged 17, had not been doing well in school while living with Mrs. Livingston and that Mrs. Livingston had concealed the whereabouts of the younger son, Bobby, from the petitioner and had denied him the visitation rights which he was granted in the original divorce decree.

On May 8,1963, Mrs. Livingston, before filing any plea to the petition in Anderson County for change of custody, filed the present suit in the Chancery Court of Knox County enjoining the prosecution of the petition in Trial Justice Court of Anderson County, Tennessee, and seeking a recovery of one-half of the amounts which she had expended for the support of the two children during the period from May, 1954, to the time of filing of the bill. The bill averred that the $450 per month which she had received from Dr. Livingston was only alimony and ho part of the same was allocable to child support and that therefore, Dr. Livingston was obligated to pay one-half of the cost of support of the two minor children.

A general demurrer filed by Dr. Livingston was sustained by the Chancellor and the cause was appealed by Mrs. Livingston to the Supreme Court. On December 5, 1963, the Supreme Court sustained the demurrer insofar as it related to the injunction against prosecution of the petition in the Trial Justice Court of Anderson County, Tennessee, but reversed the action of the Chancellor for trial insofar as it applied to the recovery of a judgment for contribution for the support of the two minor chil *277 dren. The Supreme Court observed that “alimony, in its proper significance, is not maintenance to the children but to the wife; and the fact that there has been a judgment of divorce, with alimony and custody of the children to the wife, will not of itself operate as a bar to a subsequent claim against the husband for the children’s maintenance.” The Court referred to the case of Pretzinger v. Pretzinger, 45 Ohio St. 452, 15 N.E. 471, 4 Am.St.Rep. 542, which it felt was on all fours with the case then under consideration. In his opinion Judge Burnett, now Chief Justice, made the following statement: “The original bill directly alleges that this alimony was not for the purpose of the maintenance and support of these children.

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Bluebook (online)
429 S.W.2d 452, 58 Tenn. App. 271, 1967 Tenn. App. LEXIS 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/livingston-v-livingston-tennctapp-1967.