Parker v. Parker

986 S.W.2d 557, 1999 Tenn. LEXIS 126, 1999 WL 115060
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1999
Docket01S01-9704-CH-00085
StatusPublished
Cited by115 cases

This text of 986 S.W.2d 557 (Parker v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker v. Parker, 986 S.W.2d 557, 1999 Tenn. LEXIS 126, 1999 WL 115060 (Tenn. 1999).

Opinions

OPINION

ANDERSON, C.J.

We granted the appeal in this child custody ease to determine whether the trial court erred in admitting expert testimony regarding the effects of an interracial relationship on the child and in later excluding the trial court’s comments from the statement of evidence.

The Court of Appeals held that the trial court erred in considering the improper testimony and later excluding a comment it made from the record. The court further held, however, that the trial court’s decision awarding custody to the father was properly supported by evidence in the record.

After reviewing the record and applicable authority, we agree with the Court of Appeals that the trial court erred in admitting the race-based testimony and in excluding its comment from the record. Notwithstanding these errors, however, we conclude that the evidence in the limited record before this Court does not preponderate against the trial court’s grant of custody to Richard Parker. The judgment is therefore affirmed.

BACKGROUND

Statement of Evidence

Teri Parker and Richard Parker were married in 1988, and they had a son, Dylan, in June of 1992. In July of 1993, Teri Parker [559]*559filed for divorce alleging inappropriate marital conduct, and Richard Parker counterclaimed alleging inappropriate marital conduct and irreconcilable differences. Both parties sought custody of the minor child.

There was no transcript of the trial, but according to the parties’ written statement of evidence from recollection as approved by the trial court, the witnesses testified substantially as follows. Teri Parker testified that she worked as a nurse for Dr. Sidberry. She had custody of Dylan during the period in which she and Richard Parker were separated. Dylan was enrolled at the Mulberry Bush Day Care Center and was also cared for by babysitters and family members while Teri Parker worked. She testified that she had always supported, cared and provided for Dylan.

Teri Parker denied that she had an affair or sexual relations with Dr. Sidberry, who is African-American. She conceded that they were good friends who occasionally would see one another outside of work. She denied that Dr. Sidberry had visited her at her apartment or engaged in any “inappropriate” conduct. She later admitted, however, that Dr. Sidberry had visited her at home on one occasion to treat Dylan for a cold.

Gail Seism, Teri Parker’s mother, testified that Teri was a good mother and had provided for Dylan. She had asked Teri on one occasion about her relationship with Dr. Sid-berry, and Teri said they were only friends. She conceded that she once said she would try to get custody of Dylan if in fact Teri was having an affair with Dr. Sidberry, “because [she] would not want him in that environment.” Seism reiterated, however, that Teri was a good mother to Dylan.

Richard Parker testified that he works in construction and had arranged to work hours convenient for caring for Dylan. He said that his mother and other family would assist him in caring for Dylan as well. He suspected that Teri Parker had been having an affair with Dr. Sidberry, which he believed interfered with her care of Dylan. Richard Parker claimed to be the primary caretaker and provider for Dylan during the period of separation. Several other witnesses testified that Richard Parker had been a caring and supportive father to Dylan.

A private investigator testified that he had been hired by Richard Parker. He discovered that Dr. Sidberry visited Teri Parker’s apartment on three occasions, for an average of a couple of hours per visit. On one of the three occasions, Dr. Sidberry visited for four hours. A videotape of Dr. Sidberry visiting at Teri Parker’s apartment was introduced into evidence.

Robin Phillips, a family nurse practitioner who trained under Dr. Sidberry, also testified about the purported relationship between Dr. Sidberry and Teri Parker. Phillips, when asked if it would be harmful for Dylan to be raised in this “environment,” testified over objection that it would be “harmful.” She stated that interracial relationships were more acceptable in larger cities, and that it may be harmful for a child “to be raised in an interracial household because of small town views.”

The trial court ruled that custody of the minor child was governed by the law of comparative fitness and found both Teri and Richard Parker to be fit and proper parents. The trial court found that Teri Parker had lied, and that, whether or not there had been marital transgressions, her “primary concern” was for Dr. Sidberry. The trial court stated that the custody decision was not based on race, but that it was wrong for anyone to have a relationship with an employer. The trial court awarded custody to Richard Parker, and visitation to Teri Parker. One unrequested condition of visitation in the trial judge’s order was that the child was to have no contact with Dr. Sidberry.

Post-Trial Events

Teri Parker appealed the custody ruling. Since there was no transcript of the trial, the trial court held a post-trial hearing to reconcile differences in the parties’ proposed statements of evidence from recollection. In alleging that the trial court’s ruling h'ad been affected by racial bias, Teri Parker proposed to include a statement allegedly made by the trial judge during the cross-examination of her mother, Gail Seism:

[560]*560She [Wife’s mother] comes from the same school I do. She can’t help the way she feels. Society today feels differently than the way we were brought up (this referred to the wife who is white, seeing Dr. Sidber-ry, who is black).

Counsel for Teri Parker argued that the parenthetical reference reflected the context in which the trial judge’s statement had been made. The trial judge conceded that he had made a similar statement but denied that there was any inference of racial bias as set forth in the proposed parenthetical:

You can take the parenthesis out, I never referred to that. The Appellate Court can put any kind of interpretation they want to on it, but I am telling you, that’s not my interpretation. That is not the way I intended it.

The court explained:

Never did I — and I do this in a lot of cases, I just have what children said. I have a- — am very much concerned with people, I guess for lack of a better term, shacking up. I am not referring to white and black. I am talking about people that live together without the benefit of marriage in front of children. No where did I ever mean — referring to Dr. Seaberry [sic], that he was black, no where did I mean that. What I was talking about in that case and I think if you have a transcript you will find out that I was talking about people that just go out ... and shacking up, with children. I am opposed to that. The lawyers who regularly practice in front of me know that. I don’t think that it is good for children, and that is what I was referring to. No where did I ever make any comment — it looked like to me ever since this trial started, has been trying to make effort to say that the Court has some objection [to] interracial associations. I don’t care whether they are black, white, red or what they are, I am not going to allow children — I don’t allow children, some of them have to — to be around people that live together without the benefit of marriage. I am just opposed to it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
986 S.W.2d 557, 1999 Tenn. LEXIS 126, 1999 WL 115060, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-parker-tenn-1999.