Samuel Adam Reese v. Lynette Erin Reese

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 11, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of Samuel Adam Reese v. Lynette Erin Reese (Samuel Adam Reese v. Lynette Erin Reese) 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
Samuel Adam Reese v. Lynette Erin Reese, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

12/11/2025 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs October 1, 2025

SAMUEL ADAM REESE v. LYNETTE ERIN REESE

Appeal from the General Sessions Court for Roane County No. 21CV1039 Dennis Humphrey, Judge

___________________________________

No. E2024-01615-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

The parties sought a divorce from one another and specifically contested who should be their child’s primary residential parent. After a three-day trial, the General Sessions Court for Roane County (“the Trial Court”) entered a final decree of divorce and designated the mother as the child’s primary residential parent. The father appealed. Finding that the Trial Court’s judgment lacked sufficient findings of fact and consideration of the best interest factors codified in Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-6-106, we vacate the Trial Court’s custody determination and remand this cause for the Trial Court to provide written findings of facts and conclusions of law, demonstrating its consideration of the best interest factors.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the General Sessions Court Vacated in Part and Remanded; Case Remanded

D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ANDY D. BENNETT and CARMA DENNIS MCGEE, JJ., joined.

Jennifer L. Chadwell, Oak Ridge, Tennessee, for the appellant, Samuel Adam Reese.

Judith R. Whitfield, Farragut, Tennessee, for the appellee, Lynette Erin Reese. OPINION

Background

In June 2021, Samuel Adam Reese (“Father”) filed a complaint for divorce against his wife, Lynnette Erin Reese (“Mother”), alleging the ground of irreconcilable differences. Mother filed a counter-complaint for divorce, alleging inappropriate marital conduct, and alternatively, irreconcilable differences. They share one daughter, Leliana, (“the Child”), born in 2016.

With her counter-complaint, Mother filed a proposed temporary parenting plan, proposing that the Child live with her during the school year in Ohio. Father subsequently filed an amended complaint, alleging that Mother moved to Ohio shortly before he filed for divorce. According to his amended complaint, Mother initially took the Child with her to Ohio. Father retrieved the Child, and she has lived with Father in Tennessee ever since. Father filed a proposed parenting plan naming him the primary residential parent.

During a three-day trial in March and May of 2022, Father and his former romantic partner, Regina Rollins, testified about their sexual relationship. Father testified that his sexual relationship with Ms. Rollins did not begin until after the parties’ separation. In addition, testimony was provided by and about Melissa Boring, the Child’s godmother and live-in caretaker, who had lived with Father and Mother since 2008 and continued to live with Father after the parties’ separation.

In August 2022, the Trial Court entered a final decree of divorce, granting Mother a divorce based on Father’s inappropriate marital conduct. In its judgment, the Trial Court incorporated its oral ruling regarding the care and custody of the Child and a permanent parenting plan. From the bench, as incorporated in its final judgment, the Trial Court named Mother primary residential parent, stating:

The primary concern of this court is the stability of the parent that can provide the better home for the child, and I do resolve the credibility issue against Mr. Reese. He’s lied under oath. As to cross-examination, he was evasive at times. He began to justify his answer before he gave it on occasion. He would answer with a question. And Regina, whose last name escapes me right now . . . Rollins also answered questions in that manner to some extent. And Ms. Boring was also the type of person that would justify her answer as she was giving it. The parties agreed to move one woman in that was a mutual friend, but then two others have lived in their home, two other women. And one of them, Mr. Reese has admitted to the divorce in his role -- I’m sorry, to the adultery, and he questioned whether or not it would be considered adultery. He’s a pastor, a man of God, and he -2- even said, “Well, I don’t know if they would look at it as adultery or not.” But having sex outside of your marriage, having sex outside of wedlock is adultery. And so I don’t know why he would be evasive on something like that. It’s pretty cut and clear. And having Ms. Boring there, I think it’s detrimental to the child to have a godmother who acts as the child’s mother who sits in taking meals with her father every meal, who delivers her to and from school, who takes her alone on trips to other states. That has to be confusing for the child as to who her real mother is. And I don’t find that he’s tried to foster the relationship between mother and child. I find, in effect, that he is the dominant personality of this marriage and she’s more of a submissive person who has let him make all these decisions and was finally put in the position of having to move out because he surprised her with a note, while in marriage counseling, that their marriage was over. The court is going to declare her as the parent with the primary responsibilities.

The permanent parenting plan entered by the Trial Court designated Mother as the primary residential parent, granting her 245 days of parenting time and Father 120 days of parenting time. Given that Mother lived in Ohio, the Trial Court’s decision required the Child to relocate to Ohio to live with Mother most of the year.

The Trial Court “bifurcated the calculation of child support and transferred that determination to the Chancery Court in Anderson County.” The Chancery Court for Anderson County resolved the child support issues in October 2024. Father timely filed a notice of appeal.1

Discussion

Although not stated exactly as such, Father raises the following issues: (1) whether the Trial Court made sufficient findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure 52.01; (2) whether the Trial Court erred by designating Mother as primary residential parent; and (3) whether the Trial Court erred by prohibiting Melissa Boring, the Child’s godmother and live-in caretaker, from staying overnight in Father’s home during the Child’s visits.

This Court has previously described the standard of review for child custody determinations as follows:

1 Father initially filed an appeal before the Chancery Court for Anderson County resolved the issue of child support. This Court dismissed his appeal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction because there was no final, appealable judgment. Reese v. Reese, No. E2022-01116-COA-R3-CV, 2023 WL 6157248, at *1 (Tenn. Ct. App. Sept. 21, 2023).

-3- “We review the judgment of a trial court in a bench trial de novo upon the record, according a presumption of correctness to the factual findings of the court below.” We review the trial court’s legal conclusions de novo with no presumption of correctness.

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Related

Eldridge v. Eldridge
42 S.W.3d 82 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 2001)
Hogue v. Hogue
147 S.W.3d 245 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2004)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Samuel Adam Reese v. Lynette Erin Reese, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samuel-adam-reese-v-lynette-erin-reese-tennctapp-2025.