Priscilla Lee Slagle v. Lawrence Fred Slagle

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 30, 2012
DocketE2011-00785-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Priscilla Lee Slagle v. Lawrence Fred Slagle (Priscilla Lee Slagle v. Lawrence Fred Slagle) 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
Priscilla Lee Slagle v. Lawrence Fred Slagle, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE January 31, 2012 Session

PRISCILLA LEE SLAGLE v. LAWRENCE FRED SLAGLE

Appeal from the Probate and Family Court for Cumberland County No. 17140 John R. Officer, Judge

No. E2011-00785-COA-R3-CV-FILED-APRIL 30, 2012

This is a divorce case. The parties are Priscilla Lee Slagle (“Wife”) and Lawrence Fred Slagle (“Husband”). They were married for more than thirty years and, prior to the entry of the divorce judgment, they shared the custody of their adopted grandson (“the Child”). Wife sued for divorce on the grounds of inappropriate marital conduct and irreconcilable differences. Husband filed a counterclaim on the same grounds. At a pre-trial hearing, the court held Husband in contempt for violating the statutorily-mandated 1 injunction prohibiting, among other things, the transferring of or the borrowing against “any marital property.” Following the trial, the court additionally found Husband in contempt (1) for failing to comply with discovery requests and (2) for dissipating marital assets. Husband left the country and did not appear at trial. The court granted Wife a divorce predicated on Husband’s inappropriate marital conduct; designated Wife as the Child’s primary residential parent; and prohibited any contact between Husband and the Child until he had purged himself of contempt. The court classified and divided the parties’ assets, awarded Wife $5,000 a month in alimony in futuro, and set Husband’s child support obligation. Husband appeals. He challenges the contempt findings and some financial aspects of the court’s decree. We reverse that part of the judgment barring contact between Husband and the child and downwardly adjust the award of alimony to $3,200 per month. In all other respects, the judgment is affirmed.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Probate and Family Court Reversed in Part and Modified in Part; Affirmed as Modified; Case Remanded with Instructions

C HARLES D. S USANO, J R., J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which H ERSCHEL P. F RANKS, P.J., and J OHN W. M CC LARTY, J., joined.

1 See Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-4-106(d)(1)-(7) (2010). Thomas F. Bloom, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Lawrence Fred Slagle.

Randal R. Boston and Kevin D. Poore, Crossville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Priscilla Lee Slagle.

OPINION

I.

Husband and Wife met in 1967, when Wife was 14 years old. They began dating and the following year their daughter Lisa was born. The parties established a home and married in 1980. In 2000, Lisa gave birth to the Child – a son named Jesse. Wife testified that a few months after the Child was born, Lisa began suffering from depression and became disabled and was unable to care for the Child. As a result, Husband and Wife adopted the Child and have raised him since infancy. At the time of trial, Husband was 67, Wife was 57, and the Child was 10. In addition to Wife and the Child, both Wife’s elderly mother and the parties’ daughter, Lisa, were living with the parties. We will now summarize the operative facts and the testimony presented in the proceedings below. It should be remembered that, because Husband did not appear at the December 2010 trial, his testimony is limited to that given by him at the August 2009 contempt hearing.

Husband worked in the travel and resort development businesses. For 21 years, throughout the 1970s and at the beginning of the marriage, he worked for a development company called Fairfield Communities located in Virginia. In the late 1980s, Husband and Wife relocated to Crossville. They later left and returned there more than once, while Husband pursued business ventures outside the country. In all, Husband worked in South Africa for eight years and on St. Maarten Island for three years. In 2004, Husband established his company, “World Vacations,” a member-managed corporation with Husband as the sole member. At the time of trial, it continued to be active under the name of “Universal Dreams, NV.” In addition, Husband established another business, “Marine Vacations.” Wife testified that he subsequently sold it in 2006 for $500,000.2 Wife had kept the company’s books and said all of the earnings from Husband’s business ventures were deposited into bank accounts in the United States. Husband agreed that in 2005 and 2006, he began taking Wife’s name off of the parties’ joint accounts and placing them in his name alone. He also closed other accounts. At the time of trial, Husband held an account at an offshore bank on St. Maarten.

2 Few details regarding the company were provided and its relationship, if any, with World Vacations is unclear from the record before us; some testimony indicates that it was “World Vacations” that Husband sold and later regained.

-2- At the time of the marriage, Wife had her GED and also worked for Fairfield Communities. After the marriage, she began college; she graduated with a business degree in 1985 and became a certified public accountant. While in Virginia, Wife worked, but left her job when the parties moved to Crossville. From that time on, Wife worked intermittently, repeatedly leaving her employment every few years, at Husband’s request, to help him with his foreign business ventures. For a time, she worked in Crossville for MasterCorp, earning over $30,000 a year. This was her best-paying position. She was there until 1996, when the parties returned to South Africa. Later, Wife worked for Crossville Realty, in which Husband had an interest, and for a local CPA’s office. In 2003, the parties moved to St. Maarten and Wife worked, without pay, for Husband’s company, until she decided to end the marriage. According to Wife, she maintained her CPA license until 2004, when Husband told her she would not need to work anymore and didn’t need to keep her license. Wife testified that her license is in an inactive status, and that reactivation required her to complete 80 hours of continuing education classes at a cost of $2,500. Wife said she did not have the necessary funds and had been unable to find a job with an employer who would pay the reactivation fees for her.

Wife testified that in 2006 the marriage was especially strained. By April 2007, the situation became worse and Wife felt that she and the Child needed to leave Husband. That month, Wife said things were “strange.” Husband had been shredding many documents and became “real agitated” when Wife refused to sign their tax return. She suggested that they have everything appraised, split it 50/50, and go their separate ways. Wife said Husband responded by telling her that she would die “an old lonely penniless bitch” and threatened her that “you’re not going to get one damn red cent. I will blow your damn ass away.” Wife said this “was it,” and two weeks later she left with the Child while Husband was out of the country.

On April 28, 2007, Wife called Husband in St. Maarten and told him she was divorcing him. Husband scheduled a return to Crossville the following day only to find that Wife and the Child had left the marital home. When Wife left, she removed $16,000 in cash and a $12,000 check made out to her from a safe of property. Husband met with an attorney that same day. Wife filed her complaint, accompanied by the standard injunction, on April 30, 2007. The return of service is not included in the record, but other evidence indicates that Husband was served on May 3, 2007. Beginning the following day, Husband started to engage in transactions involving marital funds held in various business and personal accounts and other marital property that later led the trial court to hold him in contempt for dissipation of marital assets in willful violation of the temporary injunction.

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Priscilla Lee Slagle v. Lawrence Fred Slagle, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/priscilla-lee-slagle-v-lawrence-fred-slagle-tennctapp-2012.