Samuel Forrester Hunter v. Winnie Sue Cooper

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 30, 2024
DocketM2022-01050-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Samuel Forrester Hunter v. Winnie Sue Cooper (Samuel Forrester Hunter v. Winnie Sue Cooper) 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 Forrester Hunter v. Winnie Sue Cooper, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

10/30/2024 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE October 3, 2023 Session

SAMUEL FORRESTER HUNTER v. WINNIE SUE COOPER

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Williamson County No. 19CV48536 James G. Martin III, Chancellor ___________________________________

No. M2022-01050-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

After declaring the parties divorced, the trial court fashioned a permanent parenting plan for their minor child. The plan designated the mother as the primary residential parent and gave the father 80 days of parenting time each year. The father argues that the trial court abused its discretion in adopting a parenting plan that failed to maximize his parenting time. We affirm.

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

W. NEAL MCBRAYER, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ARNOLD B. GOLDIN and JEFFREY USMAN, JJ., joined.

Donald Capparella and Jacob A. Vanzin, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Samuel Forrester Hunter.

P. Edward Schell, Franklin, Tennessee, for the appellee, Winnie Sue Cooper.

OPINION

I.

A.

After less than two years of marriage, Samuel Forrester Hunter (“Father”) filed for a divorce from his fourth wife, Winnie Sue Cooper (“Mother”). Mother counterclaimed for divorce. In their respective filings, both parents asked to be named primary residential parent of their six-month-old child. After the divorce filing, Father had only sporadic contact with the child. In December 2019, the court established a temporary parenting plan designed to create a bond between them. Father had multiple short visits throughout December. Then, beginning in January 2020, the temporary plan gave Father four two-hour visits during the week and one overnight visit on the weekend. Because of Father’s busy work schedule, the court directed him to send a text message to Mother “no later than 3:00 pm on the day parenting time [wa]s to begin that he intend[ed] to exercise the designated time.” If he failed to do so, Father forfeited his parenting time.

Almost two years later, the case went to trial.1 Both parents endeavored to prove that their proposed parenting plans were in their child’s best interest. In addition to the parents, the court heard evidence from a wide variety of witnesses, including two experts.

Proof at trial showed that Father is a neuroimmunologist with a Ph.D. in pharmacology-toxicology. He owned a private medical clinic where he primarily treated patients with multiple sclerosis. He also provided consulting services, performed sponsored research, and authored numerous studies in medical journals. Father often worked more than 12 hours a day. A well-known expert in his field, he traveled extensively for speaking engagements.

During the marriage, Mother was employed as Father’s office manager. After the child was born, Mother was the primary caregiver. She never returned to her former position in the medical clinic. While the child was still an infant, Mother severely fractured her arm, requiring surgical repair. Even then, Mother continued to care for the child without assistance from Father. After Father moved out, Mother obtained a job in the insurance industry and enrolled the child in daycare while she worked.

During Father’s first few visits with the child under the temporary plan, he became convinced that she was developmentally delayed. He voiced his concerns with the court and the child’s pediatrician. Mother maintained that Father’s concerns were unwarranted. Without Mother’s knowledge or consent, Father arranged for developmental testing through Tennessee Early Intervention Services. Father then forwarded the test report to the child’s pediatrician, who agreed that further evaluation was reasonable.

With input from both parents, Dr. Rachel Goode, a developmental and behavioral pediatrician, conducted the evaluation. She identified possible delays in the child’s fine motor and receptive language skills. Dr. Goode strongly recommended a formal speech language therapy evaluation. She also suggested that additional testing by an occupational therapist “would not be inappropriate.”

1 Mother and Father also presented evidence on a myriad of other issues not relevant to this appeal.

2 The additional occupational therapy testing was reassuring. The child’s fine motor skills were normal for her age. Because the child had some difficulty transitioning between activities and the parents gave conflicting reports about her sensory processing skills, the therapist recommended some sensory integration therapy and home programming. Still, the therapist considered the child to be “fairly average.”

The formal speech and language evaluation was inconclusive. The therapist noted that the test she used relied heavily on parent input. And the parents gave conflicting reports about the child’s communication skills. Based on those reports, the child’s language skills were in the average range. But the child did not demonstrate average communication skills in the therapy clinic. Unable to definitively rule out a speech delay, the therapist recommended another evaluation in a year.

After reviewing these reports, Dr. Goode remained concerned about a possible speech delay. She recommended that the parents arrange a “play-based language assessment, if possible[,]” in six months. Although she was no longer concerned about fine motor delay, she advised the parents “it would be wise” to do the recommended home exercises to help with any transition issues.

At trial, Mother and Father still had diametrically opposed views on the child’s development. Father contended that, at two and a half years old, she lagged behind her peers in language development and toilet training. Father wanted to remove her from daycare. As he explained, “I can, with a nanny, tailor what she gets and provide more in direct enrichment for the child.” Mother was happy with the child’s progress. She believed it was in the child’s best interest to remain at her current daycare facility.

The director and assistant director of the daycare explained that their staff was trained in child development. Overall, the child was “pretty normal” for her age. Her teachers were working to expand her vocabulary. And although she was not yet fully toilet trained, they were not overly concerned.

Father acknowledged that he had been banned from the daycare campus. He hired surrogates to pick up the child from daycare when he had parenting time. He blamed Mother for turning the daycare personnel against him. The daycare director explained that Father was banned because of his unacceptable behavior. On three occasions, Father became visibly upset when daycare staff did not accede to his demands. His angry rants were disturbing and disruptive. The director had never experienced similar behavior from another parent.

Father claimed Mother was the volatile parent. He believed she had untreated bipolar disorder. She yelled at him for no reason. And she tried to turn his family and co- workers against him. Mother candidly admitted that she took medication for depression. At Father’s insistence, she began seeing a psychiatrist during the marriage. She 3 acknowledged that Father often made her angry. But she claimed he was equally to blame for their ongoing conflict.

Father also complained that Mother was inflexible about the temporary parenting schedule. Despite his busy work schedule, Father exercised most of his temporary parenting time. According to Father, he would have liked even more time with his daughter, but Mother denied his repeated requests to pick up the child early from daycare. Still, he admitted that Mother gave him extra time with the child on some Saturdays.

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Bluebook (online)
Samuel Forrester Hunter v. Winnie Sue Cooper, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samuel-forrester-hunter-v-winnie-sue-cooper-tennctapp-2024.