Marcus v. Marcus

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 24, 1999
Docket02S01-9804-CH-00036
StatusPublished

This text of Marcus v. Marcus (Marcus v. Marcus) 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
Marcus v. Marcus, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON

FOR PUBLICATION

LORRAINE BURTON SPIERS ) Filed: May 24, 1999 MARCUS, ) ) Plaintiff/Appellee, ) SHELBY COUNTY ) v. ) Hon. Floyd Peete ) Chancellor TRENT WRIGHT MARCUS, ) ) Supreme Court Defendant/Appellant. ) No. 02S01-9804-CH-00036

FOR APPELLANT FOR APPELLEE Daniel Loyd Taylor Caren B. Nichol Craig B. Flood, II Memphis, TN Memphis, TN

OPINION

COURT OF APPEALS REVERSED, TRIAL COURT JUDGMENT REINSTATED. DROWOTA, J. In this case, we consider whether the Chancery Court of Shelby County

abused its discretion in declining jurisdiction of a suit for the modification of child

custody. Apparently finding that the plaintiff was barred from filing suit in Tennessee

due to her violation of previous child custody orders entered in North Carolina, the

trial court dismissed the plaintiff’s complaint. The Court of Appeals reversed.

Because we find that the trial court acted within its discretion as set forth in Tenn.

Code Ann. § 36-6-209(b) (1996), we reverse the Court of Appeals and reinstate the

trial court’s order dismissing the plaintiff’s complaint.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Plaintiff/Appellee Lorraine Burton Spiers Marcus (“the Wife”) and

Defendant/Appellant Trent Wright Marcus (“the Husband”) were married in Memphis

in 1990. Shortly thereafter, the parties moved to Winston-Salem, North Carolina,

where the Husband was attending medical school. The parties’ only child, Natalie

Spiers Marcus, was born in November of 1991. The parties separated in the Fall of

1992.

In response to a petition filed by the Husband seeking custody of the child and

a counterpetition filed by the Wife seeking custody, child support, and alimony, a

North Carolina court entered an order on March 16, 1993. In this order, the North

Carolina court found:

That both the [Husband] and the [Wife] are fit and proper parents to have the joint legal care, custody, and control of the minor child. That it would be in the best interests of the minor child that her primary physical care, custody, and control be awarded to the [Wife] subject to secondary physical custody with the [Husband] as set out herein.

-2- The court set forth a visitation schedule and awarded alimony and child support to

the Wife.

Around January of 1993, shortly before this North Carolina order was entered,

the Wife and the child relocated to Memphis.1 In July of 1993, the Husband moved

to Arkansas, where he filed a suit for divorce, division of property, and a finding that

neither party was entitled to alimony. An Arkansas court granted the Wife’s motion

to dismiss all of the Husband’s requests for relief except for divorce. The Arkansas

court scheduled a hearing on the complaint for divorce in December of 1994.

While these proceedings were occurring in Arkansas, the Husband also filed

a petition in North Carolina to alter the March 1993 order. Following a hearing on this

motion in which both parties were represented by counsel, the North Carolina court,

on September 30, 1993, entered an order setting forth a more specific visitation

schedule. The order stated that all other aspects of the March 1993 order would

remain in effect and that “this cause is retained for further orders of this Court.”

In response to a show cause motion filed by the Husband, the North Carolina

court, on November 22, 1994, entered an order finding that the Wife was in civil and

criminal contempt for failure to adhere to the visitation schedule set forth in the

September 1993 order. The North Carolina court ordered that the Wife be

1 This relocation was ackno wledged by the North Carolina court in its March 1993 orde r:

That the [Wife] has testified and indicated that she is in the process of moving to M e m phis, Tennessee along with the minor child . . . , and that the reason for her relocation to Memphis, Tennessee is so that she can secure employment, since the employment conditions are more favorable in Memphis, Tennessee, than in Winston- Salem , North C arolina.

-3- incarcerated until she complied and that she pay for the Husband’s attorney’s fees.

Although the Wife was not present during this hearing, she was represented by

counsel. Interestingly, another order was also entered by a different North Carolina

judge on the same date, November 22, 1994. The order stated that it was in

response to the Husband’s “Motion for Review, requesting, among other things,

modification of [the Husband’s] secondary physical custody and termination of [the

Wife’s] alimony.” The order further stated that the W ife “appeared in Court

represented by her attorneys.” This order made no reference to the contempt order

or any allegation that the Wife had failed to comply with the visitation schedule. The

North Carolina court simply reaffirmed the existing joint custody arrangement,

increased the Husband’s alimony and child support obligation, and directed that he

pay the Wife’s attorney’s fees. The order noted that although both parties were living

out-of-state, they were residents of North Carolina six months prior to the filing of the

action.

The record includes an additional contempt order entered by the North

Carolina court on December 16, 1994. Although the Wife was not present, she was

represented by counsel at the hearing. Asserting that it retained jurisdiction over the

matter, the North Carolina court found that the Wife had “willfully and intentionally

violated” the September 30, 1993 order relating to the visitation schedule and the

November 22, 1994 contempt order. The court again found the Wife to be in civil and

criminal contempt, ordered that she be incarcerated, and directed that she pay the

Husband’s attorney’s fees.

-4- A few days later, on December 21, 1994, the Arkansas court held a hearing

regarding the Husband’s petition for divorce. After finding that the Husband was a

resident of Arkansas and, thus, that the court had jurisdiction, the court granted the

Husband a divorce “on the ground of general indignities,” but refused to make a ruling

“on any other matter.” This order was entered January 11, 1995.

Meanwhile, on December 19, 1994, the Wife filed a complaint for divorce and

injunctive relief in the Chancery Court of Shelby County, Tennessee. The complaint

sought a divorce, a division of property, an award of child support and alimony, and

a finding that the Wife was entitled to custody of Natalie.2 The Wife’s complaint

includes the following statement:

Plaintiff is aware of, and calls this court’s attention to, a custody order which was entered on March 16, 1993, by the General Court of Justice, District Court Division, Forsyth County, North Carolina, Docket number 92 CVD 6246. The Order awarded legal custody of the parties’ minor child jointly to the Plaintiff and Defendant. It further awarded primary physical care, custody and control of the minor child to Plaintiff and secondary physical custody to the Defendant. No divorce action is pending in North Carolina.

Plaintiff avers that the North Carolina Court has continued to exercise jurisdiction over the custody issue although it does not have the authority to do so. Plaintiff further avers that pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 36-6-207(a) and the Federal Parental Kidnapping Prevention Act, U.S.C.

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