Madu v. Madu

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 25, 2000
DocketM1999-02302-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Madu v. Madu (Madu v. Madu) 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
Madu v. Madu, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE September 6, 2000 Session

DOLLY JULIET RAKIRO MADU v. FIDELIS OBI MADU

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Davidson County 99D-537 Muriel Robinson, Judge

No. M1999-02302-COA-R3-CV - Filed October 25, 2000

This appeal involves the dissolution of a three-year marriage between a naturalized citizen and a foreign national attending school on a temporary student visa. Soon after the parties were divorced by agreement in the Circuit Court for Davidson County, the foreign national sought to set the divorce aside because of its effect on her efforts to remain in the United States. The trial court declined to set the divorce aside. The foreign national asserts on this appeal that the trial court should not have declared the parties divorced and that the trial court erred by denying her motion for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence. We have determined that the record supports the trial court’s decision to declare the parties divorced and that the trial court did not err when it denied the foreign national’s post-trial motion. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment.

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

WILLIAM C. KOCH , JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which BEN H. CANTRELL , P.J., M.S., and PATRICIA J. COTTRELL , J., joined.

Randle W. Hill, Jr., Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Dolly Juliet Rakiro Madu.

Dan R. Alexander, Nashville, Tennessee, for appellee, Fidelis Obi Madu.

OPINION

Fidelis Obi Madu and Dolly Juliet Rakiro Madu met in 1994. Ms. Madu, a 34-year-old citizen of Kenya, was pursuing an undergraduate degree at Tennessee State University under a student visa. Mr. Madu, a Nigerian by birth, was a 39-year-old tax accountant working in Nashville and was a naturalized citizen of the United States. The Madus, along with Mr. Madu’s two children from a previous marriage, began living together shortly after they met. Ms. Madu had never been married before. As time passed, Ms. Madu became more insistent about getting married. The parties were eventually married on July 17, 1996 – two weeks before her graduation from Tennessee State University and two weeks before the expiration of her student visa. The marriage enabled Ms. Madu to remain in the United States. In September 1996, Ms. Madu accepted a job as a software engineer requiring her to move to Chicago. At first, the Madus alternated weekly trips between Nashville and Chicago and talked frequently by telephone. After two years, the distance became increasingly difficult to manage, and the frequency of the parties’ visits diminished. In early 1998, Ms. Madu agreed to consider returning to Nashville and began to seek employment. She was unsuccessful in her efforts to find employment in Nashville, and the relationship between the parties continued to deteriorate. Between January and March 1998, the parties did not communicate at all.

After the parties’ marriage in July 1996, Mr. Madu filed a petition with the Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”) seeking alien relative status for Ms. Madu which, if granted, would have enabled Ms. Madu to remain in the United States. In March 1998, Ms. Madu returned to Nashville for an interview with the INS concerning the petition. During this visit, she told Mr. Madu that she did not intend to return to Nashville and that she did not plan to remain married to him after she received her green card. Soon after learning Ms. Madu’s intentions, Mr. Madu withdrew his petition and informed the INS that the parties had been living apart for quite some time.

Ms. Madu returned to Nashville in June 1998 to repair her differences with Mr. Madu. In February 1999, after eight months of acrimonious cohabitation, Ms. Madu filed a complaint for legal separation in the Circuit Court for Davidson County. 1 Mr. Madu counterclaimed for an absolute divorce on the grounds of inappropriate marital conduct, irreconcilable differences, and cruel and inhuman treatment. During the July 1999 divorce hearing, Ms. Madu’s lawyer urged the trial court to grant a legal separation instead of a divorce.2 The trial court rejected the request and, after a portion of the proof had been presented, suggested a recess to enable the parties to discuss a mutually satisfactory resolution of their differences.3 Following a brief recess, Ms. Madu’s lawyer announced

1 Ms. Madu made a clear tactical decision to seek a legal separation as opposed to a divorce. She stated in her complaint that “[g]iven the wife’s current, uncertain immigrant status, the granting of an absolute d ivorce co uld result in the wife’s depo rtation.” In her p rayer for relief, she also reque sted “[t]hat no absolute divorce be decreed in this case unless and until the wife has attained permanent resident status in this country.”

2 The lawyer representing Ms. Madu at trial stated: “We have filed, with this court, literally, under the new statute, a petition for se parate ma intenance, as o pposed to divorce, because Mrs. Madu, at this time, is not a legal immigrant, in this c ountry, and w e were con cerned tha t a divorce w ould further the efforts of dep ortation.”

3 The record unfortunately does not contain the colloquy between the trial court and the parties’ lawyers regarding the reasons for rather abruptly stopping the trial. The only statement shedding any light on the issue is the following statement by the trial court: “Bec ause I don ’t think either one o f you all want to go to the Cour t of Appea ls with these two. Let’s go off the record.” Thereafter, the transcript indicates that there was an “off-the-record discussion” between the trial court and the parties’ trial co unsel followed by a “brief recess.” The trial court’s decision to conduct a portion of these proceedings “off-the-record” causes this court concern because it undermines the parties’ right to an appeal and is contrary to the settled principle that Tennessee’s state trial courts are courts of record. However, neither party has questioned the appropriateness of the trial court’s decision to conduct “off-the-record ” proceedings. Accord ingly, we will not ad dress this issue furth er except to note that it is highly irregu lar.

-2- that the parties had agreed on a division of the marital estate and that the trial court should declare them divorced under Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-4-129(b) (Supp. 1999). The trial court approved the terms of the parties’ settlement, granted the parties leave to amend their complaints, and declared the parties “divorced,” having found both parties guilty of misconduct. The trial court entered its final divorce decree on August 11, 1999.

Ms. Madu retained a new lawyer shortly after the entry of the final divorce decree. Within thirty days after the entry of the divorce decree, Ms. Madu’s new lawyer filed a motion seeking to set aside the divorce decree and for a new trial. The motion asserted that Ms. Madu possessed new evidence that Mr. Madu had engaged in an extramarital affair that had resulted in the pregnancy of another woman and that she was unaware when she agreed to the divorce that it would result in her deportation by preventing her from obtaining permanent residency status. The trial court heard argument on these motions in September 1999 and, on November 7, 1999, entered an order denying Ms. Madu’s motion. On this appeal, Ms. Madu takes issue with the trial court’s denial of her post- trial motions and with the trial court’s decision to declare the parties divorced in accordance with Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-4-129(b).

I. THE PARTIES’ DIVORCE UNDER TENN.

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