Shanira Lee Tankard v. Benjamin Lee Tankard, II

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 28, 2024
DocketM2022-00498-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Shanira Lee Tankard v. Benjamin Lee Tankard, II (Shanira Lee Tankard v. Benjamin Lee Tankard, II) 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
Shanira Lee Tankard v. Benjamin Lee Tankard, II, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

08/28/2024 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE August 2, 2023 Session

SHANIRA LEE TANKARD v. BENJAMIN LEE TANKARD, II

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Rutherford County No. 18CV-1369 Darrell Scarlett, Chancellor ___________________________________

No. M2022-00498-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

A mother relocated out-of-state with her children and filed a petition to modify the existing parenting plan. The father filed a competing petition for modification. The trial court found a material change in circumstances warranting modification of the parenting plan. It crafted two modified parenting plans: one which would take effect if the mother remained out-of-state and the other which would take effect if she returned to Tennessee. The mother returned and now argues the parenting plan should not have been modified. 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 JOHN W. MCCLARTY and JEFFREY USMAN, JJ., joined.

Justin P. Morgan and Michael R. Giaimo, Cookeville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Shanira Lee Tankard.

Tillman W. Payne, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Benjamin Lee Tankard, II.

OPINION

I.

A.

Shanira Tankard (“Mother”) and Benjamin Tankard, II (“Father”) divorced in October 2019. In the final divorce decree, the Rutherford County Chancery Court adopted and incorporated an agreed permanent parenting plan for their two minor children. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-6-404(a) (2021). The parenting plan named Mother primary residential parent and gave her 209 parenting days while Father received 156 parenting days.

Without notifying Father, Mother moved to Connecticut with the children in August 2020. See id. § 36-6-108(a) (2021) (requiring notice to the nonrelocating parent no less than sixty days before a move “unless excused by the court for exigent circumstances”). Months later, she petitioned to modify the parenting plan. She alleged that a material change in circumstances existed due to Father physically assaulting her and then threatening her, causing her to “flee” to her family in Connecticut. She asked the court to “modify the parenting plan to a schedule . . . which allows Mother to be the primary residential parent from . . . Connecticut and grants parenting time to Father.” Under Mother’s proposed parenting plan, the children would reside with Mother 296 days per year. Father’s residential parenting time would be reduced to 69 days.

Father responded with a counter-petition to modify the parenting plan and a petition for civil contempt.1 Father complained he had been unable to exercise his allotted parenting time since Mother moved. He proposed a modification to the parenting plan that would return the children to Tennessee, name him primary residential parent, and increase his residential parenting time to 309 days.

By the time of trial, the children were six and four years old. They had been living in Connecticut with Mother for almost a year and a half. The children had very little contact with Father after the move. At Mother’s request, a Connecticut court issued an ex parte temporary restraining order against Father. The restraining order remained in effect from August to October 2020. After a hearing, the Connecticut court dismissed Mother’s application for an order of protection and the temporary restraining order for lack of jurisdiction. Yet Mother continued to deny Father his residential parenting time. And until March 2021, she only allowed him sporadic phone contact.2

Mother claimed that she relocated to Connecticut because she feared for her safety. She told the court that Father physically attacked her in April 2020. As Mother described it, a heated argument arose when she delivered the children to Father’s house. When she tried to leave for work, Father took her car keys. The argument escalated, and, during the ensuing struggle, Mother was seriously injured. Mother claimed Father grabbed her from behind and slammed her to the ground. Father confirmed that a physical altercation

1 The court dismissed Father’s petition for civil contempt after the final hearing because Mother’s violations of the parenting plan were incapable of being purged. 2 By agreed order, Father was granted a few weeks of visitation with the children in June and December 2021.

2 occurred. But he insisted that Mother was the initial aggressor, and her injuries were accidental.

Despite her injuries, Mother did not immediately report the incident to the police or seek judicial relief. For the next few months, the parents voluntarily implemented a week on/week off residential parenting schedule. But in August, Father texted Mother, “Lol I guess you ain’t learned from being knocked down before uhhh?” Mother testified that she believed Father was threatening her. Father acknowledged that his message could be seen as threatening. But he claimed that he did not intend any actual harm. Shortly after she received Father’s message, Mother moved with the children to her mother’s home in Connecticut.

Mother wanted the children to remain with her in Connecticut. She had extended family in the area. And she had secured stable employment and her own apartment. In her view, the children were thriving in their current environment.

Father wanted Mother and the children to return to Tennessee and comply with the current parenting plan. Father’s family was in Tennessee. Father, his biological parents, and his stepmother testified that Mother and Father were both capable and loving parents that should remain involved in their children’s lives. But if Mother refused to return, Father asked the court to award him primary custody of the children.

B.

The trial court found that a material change had occurred since the entry of the current plan. Several facts informed the court’s finding. The parties were not following the current plan. And Father had been unable to exercise his allotted parenting time for well over a year. Due to the geographical distance between the parents’ residences, the current plan was unworkable.

The court also found that modification of the existing plan was in the children’s best interest. Both parents had a good relationship with their children and the ability to parent them. And the children, due to their young ages, needed both parents to be involved in their lives to the maximum extent possible. Although most of the relevant factors weighed equally between the parties, one factor slightly favored Mother while another strongly favored Father. Mother was the children’s primary caregiver under the current plan. But her conduct since August 2020 demonstrated her unwillingness to encourage a good relationship between Father and the children. She “thwart[ed] Father’s substantial efforts to see his children.”

Out of an abundance of caution, the court also stated how it would have ruled if it had considered the parties’ petitions under the relocation statute. In the court’s view, the geographic distance between the parents would be detrimental for the children because 3 both parents could not be sufficiently involved in their lives. The court also found that Mother chose to relocate to be near her family, not because she feared for her safety. For these reasons, the court would have denied Mother’s relocation had she requested it. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-6-108(b).

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Bluebook (online)
Shanira Lee Tankard v. Benjamin Lee Tankard, II, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shanira-lee-tankard-v-benjamin-lee-tankard-ii-tennctapp-2024.