Maryam Ghorashi-Bajestani v. Masoud Bajestani

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 24, 2010
DocketE2009-01585-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Maryam Ghorashi-Bajestani v. Masoud Bajestani (Maryam Ghorashi-Bajestani v. Masoud Bajestani) 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
Maryam Ghorashi-Bajestani v. Masoud Bajestani, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE April 20, 2010 Session

MARYAM GHORASHI-BAJESTANI v. MASOUD BAJESTANI

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Hamilton County No. 08-0098 Howell N. Peoples, Chancellor

No. E2009-01585-COA-R3-CV - Filed August 24, 2010

After seven years of marriage, Maryam Ghorashi-Bajestani (“Wife”) sued Masoud Bajestani (“Husband”) for divorce. After a trial, the Trial Court entered its order, inter alia, awarding Wife a divorce, dividing the marital property, setting Husband’s child support obligation, awarding Wife transitional alimony for nine years, awarding Wife alimony in futuro to begin after the termination of the transitional alimony, and awarding Wife attorney’s fees. Husband appeals to this Court raising issues regarding the classification and distribution of marital property and the awards of alimony, among others. Wife raises issues regarding child support, and also requests that this Court take notice of a post-judicial fact, and award her attorney’s fees on appeal. We modify as to the award of transitional alimony, vacate the award of alimony in futuro, affirm as to the child support and division of property, decline to award attorney’s fees on appeal, and decline to take notice of the post-judicial fact.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Modified, in part; Vacated, in part; Affirmed, in part; Case Remanded

D. M ICHAEL S WINEY, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which H ERSCHEL P. F RANKS, P.J., and J OHN W. M CC LARTY, J., joined.

John R. Meldorf, Hixson, Tennessee, for the appellant, Masoud Bajestani.

Selma Cash Paty, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the appellee, Maryam Ghorashi-Bajestani. OPINION

Background

Wife and Husband were married in July of 2000, first in an Islamic ceremony, and then again in a ceremony at the courthouse in Chattanooga, Tennessee. Two minor children were born of the marriage. Husband has adult children from a previous marriage. In February of 2008, Wife sued Husband for divorce.

Wife testified at trial that she was born on March 23, 1968 in Iran. Wife has dual citizenship in the United States and Iran. Wife holds an engineering degree that she obtained in Florida. Wife stated: “That was my dream always to move to United States and become an engineer. I couldn’t compete or pass the exams in Iran as a female in that field.” Wife speaks Persian, English, and German, and stated that she did not think anyone had a hard time understanding her. Wife admitted she is in good health and has no physical problems.

Wife stopped working outside the home in July of 2001 when she gave birth to the parties’ first child. Wife’s last job outside the home was at Alstom Power in Chattanooga where she worked as a mechanical engineer and earned $43,000 per year. Wife worked at Alstom Power for seven or eight months. When the parties married, Wife had a student loan of $21,000. Wife paid off this loan with money she earned while working at Alstom Power during the marriage. The parties’ second child was born in August of 2003.

When asked if she planned to return to working outside the home, Wife stated:

I feel that I have a job, that is taking care of my kids, already. This is the most important job I’ve ever had, and my kids are very small. And if I want to go back to work force, I need some special education, I need refresh courses and I need to get back to that standard that - - to apply for a job. It’s been eight years I haven’t worked. There’s so many things I’ve forgotten.

But the most important thing that I don’t want to forget is that my kids are most important and the money that I might be able to make outside - - and my kids don’t have an uncle, cousin, grandparents, so I really think that I need to stay with my kids.

Wife testified that her expenses per month were $14,567. Wife also calculated what her expenses would be if she obtained a job outside the home making $43,000 to

-2- $45,000 per year. She testified that if she obtained such a job, her expenses would be $17,000 per month due to:

Additional expenses, the cost of the clothing, car maintenance, laundry, all those things that - - the kids will have to stay at school longer hours, it’s going to add to that, their food, the grocery, the lunch outside, all of these, the gas, is going to add up.

When asked if there would be a benefit to her obtaining a job outside the home, Wife stated: “No, not at all. Actually, it’s better if I don’t let a stranger raise my kids rather than me stay home and be with my kids.” When asked if she was aware of jobs in the community that pay between $70,000 and $80,000 that she could apply for, Wife stated: “My kids need me more.” Wife admitted that the school her children attend has an after-school program that runs until 6 p.m., which her children could attend. She also admitted that there is a pre-care program at the school, and the children could be delivered to the school before 8 a.m.

Wife testified that during the marriage, the family would take two or three trips per year and further stated: “we have an overseas, once-a-year overseas trip with the kids, and the other trips would be to New York City visiting relatives, Virginia.” When asked where she shops for herself and the children, Wife stated: “We go to New York to shop or Atlanta, or on our trips, if we went to London, we do those kind of shopping, going around on tours, we went to Alaska.” Since filing for divorce, Wife has traveled to New York, Alaska, and Washington, D.C.

Husband was 53 years old at the time of trial. He testified that he is an Iranian citizen, and that he also has been a United States citizen since 1982. Husband has lived in the United States since 1975. Husband has three grown children from a previous marriage. Husband owns the home the parties lived in during the marriage and testified that he was awarded this home in his prior divorce. The parties are debt-free except for the mortgage on the home.

Husband works for TVA. Husband described his job stating: “I’m the vice president for Watts Bar Unit 2 project. It’s a new nuclear plant that’s being built and this is going to be the first new plant after 20 years that is going to come online in the United States.” Husband holds a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering and a master’s degree. Husband signed a contract for his current job in October of 2007. He stated: “The contract is for five years and one year after the plant comes online. So it’s for a total of six years. The contract that is written, it actually says that when the plant comes online and runs for some period of time reliably and safely, then there are some incentives. So if you add everything, it’s a six-year contract, essentially.” Per the contract, Husband had four years left

-3- to complete the job as of the time of trial. Husband has no future contracts.

In 2005 Husband moved to Huntsville, Alabama for his job. Wife and the children remained in Tennessee. When asked why she remained in Tennessee, Wife stated:

Because the kids were going already to school here. They had already started to school. They were in the middle of the year, of their school year. And [Husband] told me that project is going to be done, finished earlier than two years. He’s trying to push the process to be done in earlier than two years.

When questioned further, Wife admitted that at that time the parties’ older child was attending pre-school, and the younger child was only three years old. Husband testified that because he was “assigned to a city outside my central station…,” TVA provided Husband with housing and paid his expenses during the time he worked in Alabama. Husband lived in Huntsville, Alabama for eighteen or nineteen months and saw Wife and children on weekends.

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Maryam Ghorashi-Bajestani v. Masoud Bajestani, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryam-ghorashi-bajestani-v-masoud-bajestani-tennctapp-2010.