Paul David Franklin v. Sherry A. B. Franklin

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 15, 2008
DocketE2006-2716-COA-R3-PT
StatusPublished

This text of Paul David Franklin v. Sherry A. B. Franklin (Paul David Franklin v. Sherry A. B. Franklin) 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
Paul David Franklin v. Sherry A. B. Franklin, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE February 11, 2008 Session

PAUL DAVID FRANKLIN v. SHERRY A. B. FRANKLIN, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Monroe County No. 14575 Jerri S. Bryant, Chancellor

No. E2006-2716-COA-R3-PT - FILED APRIL 15, 2008

After nineteen years of marriage, Paul David Franklin (“Husband”) sued Sherry A.B. Franklin (“Wife”) for divorce. Gary Freeman (“Freeman”) was granted leave to intervene in the suit to establish the paternity of the younger of the two minor children (“J.A.F.”) born during the Franklins’ marriage. After a trial, the Trial court entered a Final Decree of Divorce, inter alia, granting Husband a divorce; holding that Freeman is the biological father of J.A.F., but that Husband is the legal father; distributing the marital property; and awarding primary residential custody of both minor children to Husband with Wife to have co-parenting time. Wife filed a motion to alter or amend. The Trial Court entered an order altering its decision in light of the then just released Tennessee Supreme Court opinion in In Re: T.K.Y., and terminating Freeman’s parental rights to J.A.F. on the grounds found in Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-1-113(g)(1). Wife and Freeman appeal to this Court raising issues regarding the termination of Freeman’s parental rights to J.A.F., the custody of J.A.F., and distribution of the marital property. We reverse the termination of Freeman’s parental rights to J.A.F., reverse the Trial Court’s order granting custody of J.A.F. to Husband, vacate that portion of the Trial Court’s order distributing the marital home, and remand this case to the Trial Court to effectuate the custody transfer of J.A.F. to Wife and for an overall equitable distribution of the marital property in light of our decision in this case.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed, in part; Reversed, in part; Vacated, in part; Case Remanded

D. MICHAEL SWINEY , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which HERSCHEL P. FRANKS, P.J. and NORMA MCGEE OGLE, SP .J., joined.

Barry K. Maxwell, Madisonville, Tennessee for the Appellants, Sherry A. B. Franklin and Gary Freeman.

Randy G. Rogers, Athens, Tennessee for the Appellee, Paul David Franklin. OPINION

Background

Husband and Wife were married in 1985. Two children were born during this marriage. The older child reached the age of majority during the pendency of this case. As such, there are no issues on appeal regarding the older child. There are, however, several issues on appeal involving the younger child, J.A.F., who was born in 1998.

Husband sued Wife for divorce in 2004. Freeman moved for leave to intervene in the suit claiming that he was J.A.F.’s biological father. The Trial Court granted Freeman leave to intervene to establish the paternity of J.A.F. The case was tried without a jury.

At trial, Wife admitted to having an affair with Freeman since 1993, and claimed that Freeman is J.A.F.’s biological father. Both Wife and Freeman testified that they have had a sexual relationship since 1992 or 1993. At the time J.A.F. was born, and during the first few years of J.A.F.’s life, Freeman was married to another woman. Freeman and his wife were divorced approximately two years before the trial of this case. Freeman testified at trial that he did not try to establish his parental rights to J.A.F. until after Husband sued Wife for divorce because it was: “Kindly hard to do it. She was married; I was married. It’s just a bad situation.” Genetic testing revealed that Freeman had a 99.9956% probability of paternity of J.A.F. Wife testified that she has never told J.A.F. that Freeman is his father.

Freeman testified that he was at the hospital the day J.A.F. was born to see him. Freeman further testified that he saw J.A.F. every week until J.A.F. was five years old, and that he took J.A.F. and Wife out to eat or to other places mostly in Knoxville or Chattanooga. Freeman testified that he stopped seeing J.A.F. regularly after J.A.F. turned five years old because Freeman was: “Just afraid he would talk, you know, and it would get some trouble started that - - tried to avoid.” Freeman also testified that he was seeing J.A.F. on a regular basis until the Trial Court entered an order directing that Wife not have J.A.F. around any other men including Freeman. Wife testified that Freeman has had a relationship with J.A.F. and has seen him regularly from the time of J.A.F.’s birth until the Trial Court entered the order prohibiting Wife from having J.A.F. around Freeman. Wife also testified that J.A.F. uses the speed dial on Wife’s cell phone and calls Freeman of his own volition “[p]robably three times a week, four maybe.”

Freeman testified that he paid Wife $50 per week for J.A.F., mostly in cash, from the time J.A.F. was born until J.A.F. started school. Wife testified that she used the cash that Freeman gave her for J.A.F. to pay the babysitter who kept J.A.F. while Wife worked. Freeman produced copies of three checks he had written in 2004, one for a hospital bill for J.A.F. and two made out to Wife with a notation of J.A.F. on them. Freeman testified that he still gives Wife money for J.A.F. “whatever she needs....” In addition, Freeman testified that he has purchased toys for J.A.F. and specifically that he had purchased a trampoline for J.A.F.’s last birthday. In addition, Freeman testified that he gave J.A.F. a cow and that cow has had calves which belong to J.A.F. Wife also

-2- testified that one day during the fall of 2005, she and J.A.F. ran into Freeman at a Wal-Mart and that Freeman bought a BB gun for J.A.F. at that time. Additionally, Wife testified that Freeman fixed J.A.F.’s bicycle and gave J.A.F. two fish plaques, among other things.

After a trial, the Trial Court entered a Final Decree of Divorce, inter alia, granting Husband a divorce; holding that Freeman is the biological father of J.A.F., but that Husband is the legal father and further holding that Freeman has no legal rights or obligations to J.A.F. including the right of visitation; distributing the marital property; and awarding primary residential custody of the two minor children to Husband with Wife to have co-parenting time. In the Final Decree of Divorce, the Trial Court specifically found and held:

29. It is further Ordered that after tallying the various values of property awarded to each party listed in this cause, that the plaintiff, Paul David Franklin, has received $33,703.00 in the value of division of property and the defendant, Sherry Franklin, receiving (sic) $4,000.00 of value. 30. It is further Ordered that the parties (sic) real estate referred to as the rental or business building in Vonore, Tennessee shall be sold by the parties and that the house in Englewood shall be sold.… The aforesaid properties shall be sold first and the proceeds from the sale, after paying expenses of sale, commissions to real estate agents and any outstanding new real estate taxes, shall be utilized to adjust the equities set out herein with regard to the division of personal property. Any remaining equity shall be divided equally between the parties. After the above listed properties in Vonore and Englewood are sold, the parties shall resolve their division of equity in their marital residence located in Madisonville, Tennessee, …. a) The Plaintiff, Paul Franklin, shall be allowed to purchase the defendant’s interest in said residential real estate for the sum of one-half (1/2) of the value affixed to said real estate by the Court of $45,000.00 ….

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Bluebook (online)
Paul David Franklin v. Sherry A. B. Franklin, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paul-david-franklin-v-sherry-a-b-franklin-tennctapp-2008.