Rhonda L. (Hall) Greer v. John Bradley Greer

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 30, 2010
DocketW2009-01587-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Rhonda L. (Hall) Greer v. John Bradley Greer (Rhonda L. (Hall) Greer v. John Bradley Greer) 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
Rhonda L. (Hall) Greer v. John Bradley Greer, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON July 27, 2010 Session

RHONDA L. (HALL) GREER v. JOHN BRADLEY GREER

Rule 3 Appeal from the Chancery Court for Madison County No. 65321 James F. Butler, Chancellor

No. W2009-01587-COA-R3-CV - Filed September 30, 2010

This is a divorce appeal involving parenting issues. The parties are the parents of three minor children. Prior to trial, the parties went through mediation and arrived at an agreement on many of their issues. The trial court then conducted a trial, taking testimony from the parties on a range of issues, including some that were the subject of the mediated agreement. The divorce decree and the parenting plan entered by the trial court adopted some of the parenting provisions in the mediated agreement, but not others. The father filed a motion to alter or amend this final decree, and a subsequent motion to enforce the parenting plan. The trial court modified the parenting plan in part and issued a final order. The father now appeals. We affirm, holding that the trial court did not abuse its discretion with respect to the number of parenting days allocated to the parties or the decision-making authority on the children’s medical decisions.

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

H OLLY M. K IRBY, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D AVID R. F ARMER, J., and J. S TEVEN S TAFFORD, J., joined. John Bradley Greer, Jackson, Tennessee, for the Defendant/Appellant, John Bradley Greer1

Rhonda L. (Hall) Greer, Jackson, Tennessee, for the Plaintiff/Appellee, Rhonda L. (Hall) Greer.2

OPINION

F ACTS AND P ROCEEDINGS BELOW

Defendant/Appellant John Bradley Greer (“Father”) and Plaintiff/Appellee Rhonda L. (Hall) Greer (“Mother”) were married on September 10, 1994. The parties had three children during their marriage, born in 1996, 1997, and 1999.

Both parties have college degrees; Mother has a music degree, and Father has a degree in business administration. Prior to their marriage, Father began a business selling promotional products, a sole proprietorship called Premier Promotions.3 Mother was employed by a blood services company. Mother left her employment in 1997, when the parties’ children were quite young. Father’s business came to have several employees, for administrative work and for sales. After a while, Mother began doing part-time work for Father’s business, to increase the revenues from the business and to allow Mother flexibility for parenting responsibilities. Neither parent got a paycheck from Premier Promotions; instead, Father would simply ask the employee who handled the funds for the business to write him a check to meet the family’s needs.

After a while, Father’s business, and therefore the parties’ family, began experiencing financial difficulties. At the same time, the records for the business were apparently not well-kept. Concomitantly, no income tax returns were filed by the parties, specifically for the years 2000-2004. The parties argued over financial matters, in particular about Father’s failure to gather and organize the business records necessary to file income tax returns.

In 2004, Mother took a salaried position with a pharmaceutical company. In 2005, the parties resumed filing income tax returns every year. Despite the financial challenges regarding Father’s business, in 2005, the parties apparently purchased a building for the business,

1 Mr. Greer represented himself in this proceeding. Both parties were represented by counsel in the trial court below. 2 Ms. Greer did not file a brief or appear for oral arguments. 3 Father described the business’s various promotional products as “things with logos on them.”

-2- borrowing money to do so. After a while, however, Father ceased operating his business under the name Premier Promotions, and its employees were let go. Father began operating as an independent contractor, in the same line of business, through his father’s company, in the basement of the marital home.

In March 2008, the parties separated and Mother filed a complaint for divorce. After some contentious litigation, Father filed an answer and counterclaimed for divorce. Both parties asked to be designated as the children’s primary residential parent, and both sought alimony and child support from the other. They disputed who should be responsible for the considerable debt, which included unpaid taxes estimated to be some $100,000.4

On October 30, 2008, the parties entered into mandatory meditation. They were successful in reaching an agreement as to many of the issues in the case, including parenting time and responsibility for decision making. Under the signed mediation agreement, Mother was designated as the primary residential parent and allocated 200 residential parenting days per year, and Father was allocated 165 residential parenting days. Decision making was to be joint, and neither party would pay either alimony or child support. Some issues, such as the residential parenting schedule and responsibility for many of the parties’ debts, remained outstanding.

The trial was held on February 17, 2009. The mediated agreement was introduced into evidence. Several witnesses testified, including both of the parties. The parties testified about their financial issues that were not resolved in mediation, and testified at length about parenting issues as well. At the time of trial, the parties’ children were twelve, eleven, and nine years old; the eleven-year-old has asthma and uses prescription medication and a machine to help her breathe.

Mother testified that Father had the responsibility for gathering the records for his business and preparing the parties’ tax returns, and his continuing failure to do so had been a bone of contention for several years. She said that she had offered repeatedly to assist him, but the tax returns were nonetheless never filed. The parties resumed filing income tax returns in 2005, after Mother went back to work full-time. Mother made approximately $65,000 per year in her new job, and claimed no dependents for tax purposes, so that the maximum taxes would be withheld from her paycheck, in order to offset the tax liabilities associated with Father’s failure to file returns for the years 2000-2004. Mother maintained that the debt for unpaid taxes and penalties, as well as the debt for a $38,000 bank loan for Father’s business,

4 The marital home had a tax lien of approximately $26,000, as well as a judgment lien for the loan that was used, at least in part, to purchase the building for Premier Promotions.

-3- the loan to purchase a building for Father’s business, and a credit card used for Father’s business, should be allocated to Father.

Mother testified about the residential parenting schedule that she believed was in the children’s best interest. Father wished to have the parenting time allocated on a “week on, week off” basis. Mother testified that she preferred more of an extended weekend approach, in which the children would not have to go an entire week without seeing either parent. Mother said that the children had indicated that they did not want to be away from her more than a few days. When Father’s attorney objected to parenting questions on matters that were covered under the parties’ mediated agreement, the trial court responded:

I’m going to let her go into that, and I’ll let him go into it. I don’t know that it was settlement negotiations because apparently it wasn’t settled. We had the hearing after the mediation, and I’m going to have to make a decision about the time specifics of the children. So, I would like to know . . . what she feels and . . . what he feels about it. . . . I’ve got to decide if that’s in their best interest.

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Rhonda L. (Hall) Greer v. John Bradley Greer, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhonda-l-hall-greer-v-john-bradley-greer-tennctapp-2010.