Rodney W. Schutt v. Jodie Ann Miller (Schutt)

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 27, 2012
DocketW2010-02313-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Rodney W. Schutt v. Jodie Ann Miller (Schutt) (Rodney W. Schutt v. Jodie Ann Miller (Schutt)) 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
Rodney W. Schutt v. Jodie Ann Miller (Schutt), (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT MEMPHIS1 April 18, 2012 Session

RODNEY W. SCHUTT v. JODIE ANN MILLER (SCHUTT)

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Shelby County No. CT-005175-07 D.J. Alissandratos, Special Judge

No. W2010-02313-COA-R3-CV - Filed September 27, 2012

This appeal concerns post-divorce motions to set aside a marital dissolution agreement. The parties were divorced based on a mediated marital dissolution agreement. Shortly after the final decree was entered, the appellant wife filed post-divorce motions to set aside the marital dissolution agreement. The original trial judge first recused herself as to certain issues in the proceedings, and then later recused herself as to the entire case, so the post-divorce matters were ultimately heard by a special judge. All told, the appellant wife filed over 83 post- divorce pleadings, most involving efforts to set aside the parties’ marital dissolution agreement. Eventually, the trial court denied the wife’s motions to set aside and awarded the appellee husband over $61,000 in fees as sanctions pursuant to Rule 11 of the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure. The wife now appeals. We affirm.

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

H OLLY M. K IRBY, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which A LAN E. H IGHERS, P.J., W.S., and J. S TEVEN S TAFFORD, J., joined.

Craig V. Morton, Memphis, Tennessee, for the Defendant/Appellant Jodie Ann Miller (Schutt)

Daniel Loyd Taylor and John N. Bean, Memphis, Tennessee, for the Plaintiff/Appellee Rodney W. Schutt

1 Oral argument in this case was held at the University of Memphis School of Law. OPINION

F ACTS AND P ROCEEDINGS B ELOW

Plaintiff/Appellee Rodney W. Schutt (“Husband”) and Defendant/Appellant Jodie Ann Miller (Schutt) (“Wife”) were married in 1990. They had one daughter, born in 1993.2 Husband filed for divorce in October 2007.

The parties attempted to mediate their divorce. After a couple of false starts,3 the parties participated in a mediation on October 8, 2008. In the mediation, Wife was represented by attorney Hal Gerber. At the time of the mediation, Husband was not employed, had no offers of employment, and was interviewing for positions in various parts of the country. This mediation resulted in a Mediation Agreement, executed by both parties on the day of the mediation in the presence of both parties’ counsel.

The Mediation Agreement signed by the parties listed their investment accounts and provided that their IRA accounts would be divided evenly between them. Under the Agreement, Husband was to pay Wife $3,600 per month in alimony for five years; upon sale of the marital residence, the alimony was to increase to $4,000 per month. The Agreement stated that, in exchange for Wife’s interest in the marital residence, Husband agreed to pay her the sum of $55,000, payable in three cash installment payments in designated months in 2009. After the mediation, the parties’ attorneys apparently set about drafting a marital dissolution agreement that would incorporate the terms of the Mediation Agreement.

Approximately a month after the parties executed the Mediation Agreement, Husband was offered a job as the chief executive officer for a California-based corporation, Aspyra, Inc. He accepted the job offer and signed an employment contact on November 12, 2008. Husband’s employment contract provided that he would receive a base salary of $225,000 per year plus stock options as approved by the company’s board of directors at the next annual shareholders’ meeting. Husband began working for Aspyra, Inc. on November 17, 2008. He did not immediately tell Wife that he had secured employment.

2 This appeal does not involve any issues related to the parties’ parenting arrangement. 3 The record indicates that the parties reached a tentative agreement on two occasions prior to signing the Mediation Agreement that is at issue in this appeal. Husband claimed that Wife backed out of these two prior agreements, so for the October 8, 2008 mediation, the parties agreed as a precondition to the mediation that any mediated agreement had to be executed by the parties prior to leaving the mediation.

-2- In the meantime, on November 14, 2008, Wife signed the first version of the parties’ marital dissolution agreement; its terms were identical to those in the Mediation Agreement. Five days later, on November 19, 2008, Wife signed a second marital dissolution agreement (“MDA”). The reason why there was a second MDA is not entirely clear; there may have been slight changes from the prior agreement.4 However, in all ways pertinent to this appeal, this MDA was identical to the prior marital dissolution agreement, and it incorporated the essential terms of the parties’ Mediation Agreement. The MDA was filed with the trial court and incorporated into the final divorce decree. The final decree was entered the next day, on November 20, 2008, in the Shelby County Circuit Court, Division V, Judge Kay Robilio presiding.

Approximately two weeks later, Wife filed a motion to alter and amend the final decree of divorce.5 Wife’s motion noted that even though Husband’s new job started two days before the final MDA was signed, he had failed to disclose to her the terms of his new employment. Wife argued that Husband’s new annual base salary of $225,000 per year would affect his alimony payment under the MDA and also claimed that she was entitled to half of the stock options referenced in Husband’s new employment agreement.

A short while later, on December 15, 2008, the proceeds in the investment accounts referenced in the MDA and listed in the Mediation Agreement were disbursed to the parties, pursuant to the terms of the MDA. There were significant changes in the market between the date of the mediation and the date of disbursement. By the date of disbursement, the value of the investment accounts had dropped significantly.

Not long after that, Husband’s new job with Aspyra, Inc. evaporated; the company became unable to meet its payroll obligations. Husband received his salary from Aspyra, Inc. for only two months. Husband never received the stock options referenced in his employment agreement.

In April 2009, Wife substituted counsel, and she eventually retained the attorney who now represents her in this appeal. Shortly thereafter, Husband’s financial obligations to Wife under the MDA became due, specifically the alimony payments and the payments for Wife’s interest in the marital residence. Apparently, anticipating that Wife would file a motion to

4 It appears that the MDA was slightly modified to require that Husband pay $65,000 in three installments, as opposed to $55,000, in exchange for Wife’s interest in the marital residence. 5 This motion to alter and amend was filed on December 4, 2008. On December 9, 2008, it was amended to include a petition for contempt, alleging that Husband refused to make certain payments under the MDA. Wife later withdrew this petition for contempt.

-3- set aside the MDA, Husband on his own initiative began depositing his monthly alimony obligation with the trial court clerk.6

In May 2009, Wife filed a motion seeking immediate release of the funds Husband had deposited with the trial court clerk, as well as an order directing Husband to cease depositing the payments for Wife with the clerk’s office. The trial court held a hearing on Wife’s motion later the same month. At the hearing, Husband asserted that Wife was seeking at once to rescind the MDA and still retain the benefits of it, and he argued that she should be required to choose whether to affirm it or disaffirm it. The trial court apparently agreed with Husband and took a somewhat unorthodox approach to the issue:

THE COURT: . . .

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