Neil Price v. Toni Price

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 12, 2000
DocketM1998-00840-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Neil Price v. Toni Price (Neil Price v. Toni Price) 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
Neil Price v. Toni Price, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

NEIL PRICE, ) ) Plaintiff/Appellant, ) ) Appeal No. v. ) M1998-00840-COA-R3-CV ) TONI PRICE, ) ) Davidson Circuit Defendant/Appellee. ) No. 94D-3333

COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR DAVIDSON COUNTY

AT NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE

THE HONORABLE MARIETTA SHIPLEY, JUDGE

JAMES G. MARTIN, III GREGORY D. SMITH Farris, Warfield & Kanaday 424 Church Street, Suite 1900 Nashville, Tennessee 37219 ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT

ROBERT L. JACKSON STANLEY A. KWELLER Jackson, Kweller, McKinney & Badger One Washington Square, Suite 103 214 Second Avenue North Nashville, Tennessee 37201 ATTORNEYS FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE

AFFIRMED IN PART REVERSED IN PART AND REMANDED

WILLIAM B. CAIN, JUDGE OPINION

This case involves the dissolution of a seventeen-year long marriage. The parties have raised on appeal issues involving spousal support, child support, their partial marital dissolution agreement and attorney fees. Upon a review of the record and the relevant law, we find that the decision of the trial court should be reversed in part and affirmed in part.

I. Facts

Dr. Neil Price (“the Husband”) and Toni Naugle Price (“the Wife”) were married in 1981 at which time the Wife had a college degree and the Husband was within weeks of completing medical school. The parties made several moves while the Husband completed his medical education as a specialist in gastroenterology. In July 1987, the parties moved to Nashville where the Husband accepted a job with the Frist-Scoville Medical Group earning $125,000 per year. In January of 1988, the Wife took a job in advertising at $40,000 per year. Later in 1988, the parties purchased a home on Golf Club Lane for $500,000. A few months after purchasing this house, the Wife quit her job. She found another job at $60,000 per year in June of 1989 but left this job after about three months.

In December of 1990, the parties' one child was born. Before the birth of this child, a daughter named Noel, the Wife had decided to go to law school. She began attending the University of Tennessee in Knoxville in the fall of 1992 when Noel was twenty months old. During her first year of law school, the Husband was the primary care giver for Noel during the week and the Wife returned to Nashville to spend the weekends with the Husband and Noel.

In the spring of 1993, while the Wife was in her second semester of law school, the Husband engaged in a brief romantic relationship with a woman who was a friend of the parties and whose mother babysat regularly for the child. Though the Wife did not learn of the affair until 1995 through the Husband’s answers to interrogatories, the parties experienced marital troubles much earlier.

2 The Wife did not return to law school for the 1993-1994 academic year, but instead remained in Nashville. During this time, the parties spent seven or eight months in marital counseling. In August of 1994, the Wife, along with the daughter, moved back to Knoxville to resume her law school education. The Husband bought a condo in Knoxville for the Wife and child to live in while the Wife attended law school. The parties have not lived together since the summer of 1994.

The Husband testified that other than the purchase of their home for $500,000, the evidence established that the parties lived moderately. They had little furniture, they drove medium-priced vehicles, they took annual driving trips to the beach and they did not belong to clubs. The Husband testified that the Wife began to spend more money after he informed her that he was unhappy in the marriage. He claims that in the fall of 1994, she spent $18,000 to furnish the Knoxville condominium including an $11,000 bedroom suite for their young daughter.

The Husband filed for divorce in September of 1994 at which time the parties entered a pendente lite order which required the Husband to continue to pay all of the Wife’s expenses including the monthly mortgage payment on the Knoxville condo of $1,817, the costs of tuition, fees and books for the Wife's law school, $5,700 per month for the child’s and the Wife’s support, $5,000 to be applied to the Wife’s attorney fees. In addition, the Husband maintained the monthly payments and utilities on the Golf Club Lane residence until it was sold. At the 1998 trial, the Husband stated that he had been paying between $7,500 and $8,000 per month pursuant to the pendente lite order for more than three years, even though his present take-home pay had declined to $11,000 per month. Except for $5,000 that the Wife earned through temporary employment in the fall of 1997, the Husband provided all of her support before the final divorce. He completely financed the Wife’s living and school expenses while she obtained her law degree.

The trial was heard in two segments: the first segment in 1996 and the second in 1998. During the 1996 hearing, after a full day of trial was held but

3 before the case was reconvened to conclude the trial, the parties entered into a Reconciliation Agreement by Order entered September 16, 1996. However, by order entered in June of 1997, the Reconciliation Agreement was set aside and the case was reinstated on the docket for trial. This second and final segment of the trial was heard in March of 1998.

Prior to the 1996 trial, the parties had entered into a Partial Marital Dissolution Agreement (PMDA). This agreement purported to settle all issues involving child custody, visitation, the division of marital property and the responsibility for the payment of debts other than attorney fees. The PMDA specifically included a provision that “each party shall be responsible for paying debts incurred by that party except for attorneys fees and expenses that may be awarded by the court.” Following the 1996 Order of Reconciliation, the parties continued to recognize the PMDA as binding. For example, all of the marital assets, including the proceeds from the sale of the Golf Club Lane residence, were divided pursuant to the PMDA. The 1998 Final Decree held that the PMDA was approved by the court and that each provision of it was made an order of the court except as modified by the parenting plan.

At the time of the 1998 trial, the Husband was a partner in the Frist- Scoville partnership and a shareholder of the Nashville Medical Group. His gross salary was approximately $18,244.32 per month plus a $1,000 per month stipend for serving on his company’s executive committee for a monthly total of $19,244.32. The parties stipulated that during January and February of 1998, the Husband had received a gross monthly salary of $19,234.46 and that 21% of the net monthly income from that monthly salary was $2,748. The evidence was that the Husband’s income from salary had been much higher in 1994 and 1995 during which he made $35,798 per month and in 1995 and 1996 during which he made $27,376 per month. The proof showed that his salary had declined based upon matters out of his control. For example, his firm had hired an additional gastroenterologist, overhead had increased, production by his group had decreased and he was working fewer hours so his schedule could accommodate visitation with an out-of-town child. The president of the Nashville Medical Group Corporation, Dr. Bolds, testified that the Husband’s

4 salary was likely to continue to decrease. Dr. Bolds stated that the Husband had no direct participation in setting his salary.

Dr. Bolds testified with regard to recruitment bonuses that were given to doctors in the Nashville Medical Group when the group received new recruits. He said that Dr. Price had received $14,261 in recruitment bonuses in 1996 and $18,352 in 1997 but that he should not expect any such bonus in 1998.

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Neil Price v. Toni Price, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neil-price-v-toni-price-tennctapp-2000.