Melanie Gayle King (Lyon) v. James David King

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 22, 2008
DocketM2007-01156-COA-R3-PT
StatusPublished

This text of Melanie Gayle King (Lyon) v. James David King (Melanie Gayle King (Lyon) v. James David King) 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
Melanie Gayle King (Lyon) v. James David King, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE February 6, 2008 Session

MELANIE GAYLE KING (LYON), ET AL. v. JAMES DAVID KING

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Cannon County No. 501 J. Mark Rogers, Judge

No. M2007-01156-COA-R3-PT - Filed February 22, 2008

The mother and stepfather of two minor children filed a petition against the father of the children to terminate the father’s parental rights. The petitioners alleged, inter alia, that the father abandoned the children by failing to exercise any of the residential time and vacation time awarded to the father in the divorce and that he had willfully failed to visit the children during the four months preceding the filing of the petition. Following a bench trial, in which the mother and stepfather were represented by counsel, but the father was pro se, the trial court dismissed the petition to terminate based upon the finding that “due to the costs of transportation between the parties respective homes in Giles County and Cannon County and due to [the father’s] limited income,” the petitioners had failed to establish the ground of abandonment. The mother and stepfather have appealed, contending the trial court failed to correctly apply the law to the facts of this case and that the evidence clearly and convincingly proves that the father’s failure to visit was willful due to the fact he had a vehicle, for which he could afford insurance, and the cost of driving the approximately sixty miles between their homes was within his financial means. We have determined that the trial court committed reversible error when it failed to appoint a guardian ad litem to represent the best interests of the minor children, which is mandated by Tenn. S. Ct. R. 13 § 1(d)(2) in proceedings to terminate a parent’s rights when the petition is contested. We have also determined that if the father was indigent, which fact may be significant to the issue of willfulness, he had a constitutional right to appointed counsel. As Tenn. S. Ct. R. 13 § 1 (c) and (e) mandates, when the father appeared without counsel, the trial court had an affirmative duty to advise the father of his rights and to conduct an indigency hearing to determine if he was without sufficient means to pay reasonable attorney fees for representation in this case and, if so, to appoint counsel to represent him. We therefore vacate the judgment of the trial court and remand this matter to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion, including if necessary a new trial on the merits of the issues raised in the petition filed in this matter.

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

FRANK G. CLEMENT, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, P.J., M.S., and RICHARD H. DINKINS, J., joined. Stephen W. Pate, Murfreesboro, Tennessee, for the appellants, Melanie Gayle King (Lyon) and Bradley N. Lyon.

William H. Bryson, Woodbury, Tennessee, for the appellee, James David King.

OPINION

In 2004, the mother and father of the two minor children, who are the subject of this action, were granted a divorce in the Chancery Court of Maury County at which time the mother was designated as the primary residential parent of the two minor children, the father was awarded residential time and vacation time, and the father was ordered to pay child support. Thereafter, the mother married Bradley N. Lyon. According to the mother, as time went by she became increasingly frustrated with the father’s failure to exercise his residential time and vacation time, which he was awarded in the divorce. She also became increasingly frustrated with the father’s failure to pay child support in the amount set by the court. Although the father usually paid some child support each month, the mother claimed he seldom paid the amount he was ordered to pay, and thus, a substantial arrearage developed, and as a consequence, the mother and step father assumed an even greater financial burden to support the children, which was exacerbated by the father’s failure to exercise his parenting time.

After two years of little to no visitation and erratic and insufficient child support, the mother decided to take action to terminate the father’s parental rights and to facilitate the adoption of her children by their stepfather. Accordingly, the mother and her husband filed the petition at issue to terminate the father’s parental rights with respect to their two minor children and for her new husband, the children’s stepfather, to adopt both children. The petition was filed on August 21, 2006. After the father was served, he filed an informal answer to the petition, written in his hand on lined notebook paper, admitting most of the allegations in the petition, including a relationship with a sixteen year old, whom he impregnated. Although the father denied some of several other specific allegations, he did so in an inartful manner and did not generally deny or specifically deny all allegations. As a consequence, his failure to properly deny some of the allegations could be construed as admissions.1

At trial, the mother testified that the father had not visited the children at any time during the four months preceding the filing of the petition. Following the close of the petitioners’ proof, the trial court advised the father that the petitioners had carried their initial burden of proof, and if the father were to choose not to testify, the court could only draw one conclusion – one in favor of the petitioners. As a consequence, the father took the witness stand to testify, but only briefly. The father stated that he had one visit with the children and that was at his parents’ home, but he did not

1 For example, the petition alleged in paragraph 4 that since the entry of the final decree of divorce that the father “failed to exercise residential time with the minor children, with father not exercising any overnight residential time and father willfully failing to visit with the children for more than four months prior to the filing of this petition, with father only contacting the children by phone on a very sporadic basis.” His answer to paragraph 4 read: “denied [sic] tried to get them for several different weekends but she already had plans.”

-2- recall when that occurred. In response to counsel’s question concerning whether the visit occurred between April 21 and August 21, 2006, being the four-month period preceding the filing of the petition, the father stated “to the best of my knowledge” that visit occurred between April 21 and August 21. The father admitted that he had not exercised his parenting time or summer vacation time and that the children had not spent an evening with him since the divorce. He claimed his failure to exercise his parenting time or summer vacation was a result of being without full time employment. He did not state how much he earned or could earn, but that he could not afford to drive his truck sixty miles to Cannon County, Tennessee to see the children. He also explained that he only made enough money to pay on his truck, to pay insurance for his truck, and to pay his share of the utilities.2 He also testified that he did not have enough money to do all of these things and pay child support. Following the father’s testimony, the mother returned to the witness stand to rebut his testimony that he had visited the children during the critical four-month period. She testified that the father’s only visit with the children occurred when she took them to his parents’ house which was during the children’s spring break in March, and therefore, his only visit with the children was not within the four-month period preceding the filing of the petition.

At the close of the hearing, the trial court held that the father had not abandoned the children. This appeal followed.

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Bluebook (online)
Melanie Gayle King (Lyon) v. James David King, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/melanie-gayle-king-lyon-v-james-david-king-tennctapp-2008.