Nicolle M. Johnson v. Brian Keith Johnson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 31, 2013
DocketM2012-00900-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Nicolle M. Johnson v. Brian Keith Johnson (Nicolle M. Johnson v. Brian Keith Johnson) 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
Nicolle M. Johnson v. Brian Keith Johnson, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE November 27, 2012 Session

NICOLLE M. JOHNSON v. BRIAN KEITH JOHNSON

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Rutherford County No. 090728DR Royce Taylor, Judge

No. M2012-00900-COA-R3-CV- Filed January 31, 2013

Mother and Father were divorced, and Mother was named the primary residential parent of their three children. Mother remarried and decided to relocate to California. Father opposed the relocation and sought to be named the primary residential parent. By the time of hearing, relocation of only one child was at issue. Father introduced expert testimony that the relocation would pose a threat of specific and serious harm to the child that outweighed the threat of harm to the child from a change of custody, as set forth in Tenn. Code Ann. §36-6- 108(d)(1)(B). Relying on the expert’s testimony, the trial court denied Mother the opportunity to relocate with the child to California. Mother appealed, and we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

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

P ATRICIA J. C OTTRELL, P.J., M.S., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which F RANK G. C LEMENT, J R. and R ICHARD H. D INKINS, JJ., joined.

Laurie Y. Young, Joe M. Brandon, Jr., Murfreesboro, Tennessee, for the appellant, Nicolle M. Johnson.

Daryl Miller South, David O. Haley, Murfreesboro, Tennessee, for the appellee, Brian Keith Johnson.

OPINION

Nicolle M. Johnson (“Mother”) and Brian Keith Johnson (“Father”) were married for sixteen years and had three children together when Mother filed for divorce in May 2009, citing irreconcilable differences. The trial court granted Mother a Final Decree of Divorce in January 2010 and approved the Permanent Parenting Plan the parties submitted to the court. Mother was named the primary residential parent and Father was awarded 122 days of visitation with the children per year.

Mother sent Father a notice of relocation in April 2011 in which Mother announced her intention of relocating to Anaheim, California. Mother’s stated purpose for relocating to California was to attend a school to become a marine biologist.1 Father filed a Petition in Opposition of Relocation and Modification of Parenting Plan in which he opposed Mother’s relocation with the parties’ children and asked the court to modify the parenting plan to name Father the primary residential parent.

The trial court held a hearing in February 2012 to determine whether Mother would be permitted to relocate with the parties’ eleven year old daughter and seventeen year old son.2 The seventeen year old son was in his final semester of high school and testified during the hearing that he intended to remain in Tennessee after high school and live with Father while he attended college. Mother agreed that the seventeen year old should be allowed to remain in Tennessee. The majority of the hearing centered on whether Mother should be permitted to take the parties’ daughter 2000 miles away to live with Mother in California.

Father introduced an expert during the hearing who testified that moving to California would cause the daughter to suffer substantial emotional harm:

I believe that - - based on her statements and her behavior in my office that it would cause her a great deal of emotional stress to move to California. It causes her a great deal of emotional distress to even discuss moving to California. . . . [I]f the Court should decide that she will move to California she is going to need continued counseling, I believe, before that move takes place to even really address the reality of it.

The expert continued:

I believe it would cause her substantial emotional harm to move to California. Tennessee is her home. Her father is here. Her friends are here. Her school is here. She has established real - - her teachers, her brother, real connections with people that, in essence, she would have to give up for long extended periods of time if she were to move to California.

1 Prior to the hearing Mother married a man she had been dating who lives in California. There was evidence that Mother’s husband was working for a company he helped to start and that it was not likely he would be able to find a similar job in Tennessee that paid as well as his job in California. 2 The parties’ oldest child had reached the age of majority by the time of the court hearing.

-2- On the other side of it, [the child] sees herself as in a losing situation either way the Court goes with this, in that she also does not want to lose her mother. But the harm of losing her mother is not as great as the harm of losing her father and all of those other factors in her life that I just stated.

Father’s attorney then asked the expert, “[L]et’s make it clear, is it, in fact, your professional opinion that she would, in fact, suffer substantial emotional harm if she’s directed by this the Court to leave and go to the Anaheim, California area?” The expert responded, “Yes.”

On cross examination Mother’s attorney asked the expert whether the child’s emotional distress was average and the same as any child would feel if she was moving out of state. The expert answered:

No. I wouldn’t say that that’s necessarily true. I think there are other factors. The typical child in your scenario who moves out of state is generally moving out of state with the mother and father and family intact.

This child would be moving out of state with the mother, leaving behind a father, leaving behind a brother and other family members that makes it, I think, a little less typical.

In response to Mother’s attorney’s question whether the child had an emotional disorder, the expert responded:

The diagnosis that I gave her, which is basically the most minimal diagnosis that you can give, is an adjustment disorder. That means that there is a particular situation that at this point she is grappling with and trying to adjust to and it’s an adjustment disorder with anxiety and some depressed moods.

When asked whether any child would have these same feelings in this situation, with divorced parents and one moving away, the expert answered:

I think that she will have some emotional issues if her mother moves away, that if the Court decides to let the mother move to California and that [the child] can stay here. That’s an adjustment too. And that she will have some depression, might even have some anxiety along with that. . . . But I would say that it would be considerably worse with the move to California.

-3- Following the hearing the trial court issued an Order sustaining Father’s opposition to Mother’s relocation to California with the parties’ eleven year-old daughter. The court determined that the parties do not spend substantially equal time with the children and that, therefore, section 36-6-108(d) of the Tennessee Code Annotated was applicable to resolving the parties’ dispute. The court wrote:

3. [T]he court has considered whether the mother has proposed and provided evidence of a reasonable purpose for her proposed relocation. The court finds that the mother’s suggestion of relocating to California to go to school to become a Marine Biologist is not supported by the evidence and does not support a finding of a reasonable purpose.

4. Upon consideration of the mother’s very recent marriage, the court has reviewed case law and finds that her recent marriage does support a reasonable purpose for relocation.

5. The court further finds that the mother’s proposed relocation has not been submitted for any vindictive purpose.

6.

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Bluebook (online)
Nicolle M. Johnson v. Brian Keith Johnson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicolle-m-johnson-v-brian-keith-johnson-tennctapp-2013.