Melany Faye (Ellett) Morris v. Johnny Edward Morris, II

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 8, 2011
DocketW2010-00293-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Melany Faye (Ellett) Morris v. Johnny Edward Morris, II (Melany Faye (Ellett) Morris v. Johnny Edward Morris, II) 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
Melany Faye (Ellett) Morris v. Johnny Edward Morris, II, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON October 12, 2010 Session

MELANY FAYE (ELLETT) MORRIS v. JOHNNY EDWARD MORRIS, II

Appeal from the Chancery Court of Fayette County No. 14669-PP William C. Cole, Chancellor

No. W2010-00293-COA-R3-CV - Filed February 8, 2011

This is a divorce case. One minor child was born of the marriage. After the parties filed for divorce, the wife relocated out of state with the parties’ child without obtaining court permission to do so. The husband filed a petition to hold the wife in contempt for relocating out of state with the child. The trial court declined to hold the wife in contempt, designated the wife as the primary residential parent, and ordered the husband to pay child support. In dividing the marital property, the husband was ordered to pay the statutory penalty for early withdrawal of the monies in his retirement savings account. The wife was awarded rehabilitative alimony and attorney fees as alimony in solido. The husband now appeals the relocation decision, the designation of primary residential parent, the assessment of the retirement account penalty, and the award of attorney fees. We affirm.

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

H OLLY M. K IRBY, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which A LAN E. H IGHERS, P.J., W.S., and J. S TEVEN S TAFFORD, J., joined.

Andrew S. Johnston, Minor, Johnston, Douglas, PLLC, Somerville, Tennessee, for Plaintiff/ Appellee, Melany Faye (Ellett) Morris.

Courtney S. Vest, McNabb, Bragorgos & Burgess, PLLC, Memphis, Tennessee, for Defendant/ Appellant, Johnny Edward Morris, II. OPINION

F ACTS AND P ROCEEDINGS B ELOW 1

Plaintiff/Appellee Melany Faye (Ellett) Morris (“Wife”) and Defendant/Appellant Johnny Edward Morris, II (“Husband”) were married in 2001. One child was born of the marriage. At the time the parties married, Wife had a daughter from a previous relationship, who resided with Husband and Wife. This was the third marriage for both.2

Both parties graduated from high school; neither graduated from college. Husband has worked for many years for gas and oil companies on projects involving gas pipelines. His work has always involved substantial travel.

Wife grew up in Illinois and her extended family lives there. When the parties met in 2001, Wife was living in Illinois and working as a secretary. Husband was in Illinois for work on a project. He traveled to several states in connection with his work, and Wife traveled with him. In 2001, Husband moved to Tennessee for his work, the parties married, and Wife and her daughter moved to Tennessee. Neither party has family in Tennessee.

Husband and Wife purchased a three-bedroom home on some acreage in Somerville, Fayette County, Tennessee. During the marriage, Husband earned as much as $190,000 per year. He also owned as many as fifteen horses for breeding. The parties’ daughter was born in 2004. During the marriage, Wife was a homemaker and the primary caregiver for the parties’ child and her older daughter; she did not work outside the home.

In the summer of 2007, the parties separated; Wife moved back to Illinois and resumed the job she had held prior to the parties’ marriage. A divorce petition was filed in Fayette County, Tennessee. A few months later, in December 2007, the parties agreed to dismiss the divorce petition, and Wife returned to Tennessee.

The cease-fire was short-lived. In March 2008, Husband filed another complaint for divorce, this time in Mississippi, where he was working on a pipeline job. Later that month, Wife filed a divorce complaint in the Chancery Court in Fayette County, Tennessee.

1 The proceedings in this matter were extensive. We limit our discussion to the pleadings and proceedings relevant to the issues raised on appeal. 2 Husband has three daughters in addition to the parties’ child. Two were grown as of the trial date. The third was a teenager who spent residential parenting time with Husband but lived primarily with her mother.

-2- The ensuing separation proved to be tumultuous. In June 2008, Wife abruptly moved, with her older daughter and the parties’ child, to Illinois. The parties dispute whether the move was planned in advance by Wife, or whether it was forced upon her because Husband locked her out of their Tennessee home. At any rate, Wife and her daughters moved in with Wife’s aunt in Illinois, and Wife resumed her prior secretarial position. Wife’s extended family assisted Wife with child care.

The difficulties inherent in co-parenting over such distance, coupled with Husband’s anger over Wife’s involvement with a man in Illinois, spawned many disputes. This culminated in an incident that occurred in December 2008 when Wife, her then-twelve-year-old daughter, and the parties’ then-four-year-old daughter, met Husband in Illinois for Husband to begin a week of residential parenting time with their young daughter. When Wife disembarked from the SUV to take the four-year-old’s luggage out of the vehicle, Husband jumped into the driver’s seat. The children quickly got out of the SUV and Husband sped away in the vehicle, leaving Wife and the daughters standing in the parking lot.

In January 2009, the Tennessee trial court conducted a pendente lite hearing to consider, among other things, Husband’s petition to hold Wife in contempt of court for moving with the child to Illinois without permission from the trial court. The trial court declined to hold Wife in contempt, temporarily designated her as the primary residential parent, and awarded Wife pendente lite child support.

All of the divorce-related difficulties apparently took a toll on Husband’s work. In 2008, Husband was fired from his job. He then began his own consulting business, doing the same type of work, and was able to maintain an income in excess of $100,000 per year.

The situation was further complicated by the parallel court proceedings in Mississippi and Tennessee.3 Husband purchased a home in Mississippi, and claimed to be a Mississippi resident. In addition, Wife had great difficulty effecting service of process on Husband in the Tennessee litigation. Finally, in February 2009, Husband’s divorce complaint in Mississippi was dismissed. Shortly after Husband’s Mississippi divorce complaint was dismissed, he moved back to the marital home in Somerville, Tennessee. The Tennessee divorce proceedings then continued apace.

The Tennessee court conducted the trial on the parties’ divorce on September 10, 2009. At the outset of the trial, Wife stipulated that she had committed adultery, and that Husband was entitled to a divorce on that ground. The issues that remained for trial included each party’s

3 Apparently Husband also filed another lawsuit in federal court in Illinois against the Illinois man with whom Wife was involved.

-3- request to be designated as the primary residential parent and the attendant requests for child support, Wife’s request for rehabilitative alimony, the division of the marital property and the allocation of the marital debt, and Wife’s request for an award of attorney fees. The testimony at trial came primarily from Husband and Wife. At the time of trial, Husband was fifty-three years old, and Wife was thirty-nine years old.

Husband testified first. He asserted that Wife had planned in advance her move with the children to Illinois, and explained the basis for his belief.

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Bluebook (online)
Melany Faye (Ellett) Morris v. Johnny Edward Morris, II, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/melany-faye-ellett-morris-v-johnny-edward-morris-ii-tennctapp-2011.