S.A.M.D. v. J.P.D.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 25, 2012
DocketW2011-01256-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of S.A.M.D. v. J.P.D. (S.A.M.D. v. J.P.D.) 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
S.A.M.D. v. J.P.D., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON May 23, 2012 Session

S.A.M.D. v. J.P.D.

An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Shelby County No. CT-005438-06 Donna Fields, Judge

No. W2011-01256-COA-R3-CV - Filed October 25, 2012

This post-divorce proceeding involves modification of the primary residential parent designation and contempt. The final decree of divorce designated the mother as the child’s primary residential parent. Subsequently, the mother was found in criminal contempt for failure to adhere to the parenting plan; her sentence was suspended provided there were no violations of the trial court’s orders. A few months later, the mother was found to have further violated the trial court’s orders. Consequently, the trial court ordered the mother to serve a portion of the suspended jail sentence imposed in the prior contempt order. In addition, the trial court held that a substantial and material change in circumstances had occurred, and it modified the parties’ parenting plan to designate the father as the primary residential parent. The mother now appeals. We affirm.

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

H OLLY M. K IRBY, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which A LAN E. H IGHERS, P.J., W.S., and D AVID R. F ARMER, J., joined.

Drayton D. Berkley, Memphis, Tennessee, for the Plaintiff/Appellant S.A.M.D.

Vickie Hardy Jones, Memphis, Tennessee, for the Defendant/Appellee J.P.D. OPINION

Plaintiff/Appellant S.A.M.D. (“Mother”) and Defendant/Appellee J.P.D. (“Father”) were married in 2001 and had one child during the marriage, a son (“Son” or “the child”) born in July 2003.1 They divorced in February 2010.

The February 2010 final decree of divorce incorporated an agreed marital dissolution agreement (“MDA”) and permanent parenting plan (“Parenting Plan”). Under the Parenting Plan, Mother was designated as the child’s primary residential parent. Father travels extensively for his work, so the Parenting Plan provided he would have flexible parenting time, six days each month when his work permitted, so long as Mother was properly notified. The parties divided summer and holiday parenting time.2

On June 7, 2010, Father filed a contempt petition against Mother; the petition also sought injunctive relief and attorney fees (“June Contempt Petition”). Father asserted in the petition that Mother had violated the provisions of the Parenting Plan on Father’s parenting time. He claimed that Mother had consistently failed to cooperate in arranging his parenting time and had refused Father his parenting time unless he gave written confirmation that his girlfriend would not be present. Of immediate importance, Father alleged that he asked to exercise his parenting time from June 7 through June 13, 2010, because he would be participating in a local work-related event that week. Father claimed that Mother had refused this request unless Father certified that his girlfriend would not be present. Father also alleged in the June Contempt Petition that Mother had violated the provisions in the MDA that prohibited harassment and threats and prohibited the parties from placing telephone calls or sending text messages to the other party after 10:00 p.m. except in the event of an emergency involving the child. Father asked the trial court to hold Mother in civil and criminal contempt for violating the Parenting Plan and the MDA, as incorporated into the final decree. Father also requested injunctive relief, enjoining Mother from denying Father his parenting time during the week of June 7, 2010, and from harassing him during that week. He also requested that Mother be required to pay his attorney fees in connection with the motion.

The trial court held a preliminary hearing on Father’s June Contempt Petition on the day that it was filed. On June 18, 2010, the trial court entered a preliminary order which appears, at

1 The trial court below entered an order sealing the entire record in this case. For this reason, we refer to the parties by initials only. 2 The Parenting Plan allocated Father six weeks of parenting time during the child’s summer vacation. Father, in turn, was to notify Mother by May 15 each year about the weeks in which he intended to exercise his summer parenting time.

-2- least in part, to memorialize oral rulings made at the conclusion of the June 7, 2010 hearing.3 The order granted Father’s request to exercise parenting time the week of June 7, 2010. To curtail Mother’s harassment, the trial court enjoined her from coming within 500 feet of Father “at any time or any place pending further orders of the Court.” The trial court noted in the order that it had not prohibited Father’s girlfriend from being around Son, and so specifically permitted her to be present during Father’s parenting time. The order stated that, based on Father’s petition and the trial judge’s own observations, “Mother’s mental condition is in controversy,” and so, sua sponte, the trial court ordered Mother to undergo a psychiatric evaluation pursuant to Rule 35 of the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure “within 30 days of June 7, 2010.” The order stated: “The Court requests that the evaluation be completed and a report prepared thereon prior to the hearing on Father’s petition.” The trial court set Father’s contempt petition for a full hearing on July 2, 2010.4

On July 2, 2010, the trial court conducted the hearing as scheduled. The appellate record does not include a transcript of that hearing, but it does include 15 exhibits introduced into evidence at the hearing. The exhibits include emails and text messages between the parties, as well as Mother’s deposition.5

On July 15, 2010, the trial court issued a detailed six-page order on the June Contempt Petition. Among other things, the trial court found Mother guilty on four counts of criminal contempt for willful violation of the Parenting Plan by denying Father parenting time with Son. She was sentenced to 40 days in jail, ten days for each of the four counts. Mother was also found to have willfully violated the Parenting Plan by sending Father harassing text messages, and she was sentenced to an additional ten days in jail for this violation. The trial court suspended Mother’s sentence, conditioned on her continued compliance with the trial court’s orders. The order warned: “[I]f Mother violates any order of the court in the future, she will have to serve the sentence imposed by this order.”

The July 15, 2010 order also further delineated the parties’ parenting rights and obligations in the apparent hope that detailed instructions and parameters would allow the parties to co- parent. The order permitted Father to have parenting time for half of the child’s summer vacation in 2010 and 2011, with proper notice to Mother, and specified that the child could travel with Father during his parenting time, including trips out of the country. It found that

3 The appellate record does not include a transcript of the June 7, 2010 hearing. 4 On June 29, 2010, the trial court entered an order permitting counsel for Mother to withdraw, and Mother retained her current counsel soon thereafter. 5 Mother’s deposition was taken the day before the hearing.

-3- Mother had “interfered with Father’s ability to communicate with the child by telephone.” For this reason, the trial court ordered that Father “shall be allowed to speak with the child by telephone daily,” without Mother present in the room during the call. Mother was admonished not to coach the child. The order enjoined both parties from sending text messages or making telephone calls to the other after 9:30 p.m. Central Standard Time, except for text messages on emergencies concerning the child.

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Bluebook (online)
S.A.M.D. v. J.P.D., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samd-v-jpd-tennctapp-2012.