Shannon Robert Gregory v. Kelly Ann Gregory

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 30, 2016
DocketM2015-01781-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Shannon Robert Gregory v. Kelly Ann Gregory (Shannon Robert Gregory v. Kelly Ann Gregory) 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
Shannon Robert Gregory v. Kelly Ann Gregory, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE May 17, 2016 Session

SHANNON ROBERT GREGORY v. KELLY ANN GREGORY

Direct Appeal from the Chancery Court for Rutherford County No. 08-0271DR Mitchell Keith Siskin, Judge

No. M2015-01781-COA-R3-CV – Filed June 30, 2016

This is an appeal of a post-divorce order reinstating Father‟s alimony obligation and denying Father‟s petition to terminate child support. Father brought a petition to terminate his alimony and child support obligations after discovering that his ex-wife was living with a third party. Additionally, he argued that his twenty-one year old daughter was not severely disabled and his child support obligation should be terminated. The trial court suspended Father‟s alimony obligation for the duration of his ex-wife‟s cohabitation but reinstated the alimony obligation as the cohabitation had ceased by the time of trial. The trial court also determined that the child was severely disabled and ordered child support to continue. Father appealed. We affirm.

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

BRANDON O. GIBSON, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which J. STEVEN STAFFORD, P.J., W.S., and ANDY D. BENNETT, J., joined.

Brad William Hornsby and Heather Graves Parker, Murfreesboro, Tennessee, for the appellant, Shannon Robert Gregory.

Phillip Macklin George, Smyrna, Tennessee, for the appellee, Kelly Ann Gregory.

OPINION

I. Background & Procedure

Shannon Gregory (“Father”) and Kelly Gregory (“Mother”) were married for twenty-three years before divorcing in 2009. At the time of the divorce, the parties had one minor child, Stephanie, who has epilepsy. During the pendency of the divorce, Mother received permission from the trial court to relocate to Texas, where Mother‟s family could help take care of Stephanie. In addition to the disposition of the parties‟ marital property, the highly contentious divorce proceedings in this case resulted in Father being ordered to pay Mother $500 per month in alimony in futuro and $865 per month in child support for an “indefinite period” due to the court‟s finding that Stephanie was “severely handicapped.”1 Father filed a petition to alter or amend the final decree of divorce, which resulted in, among other things, Father‟s child support obligation being lowered to $626 per month in an order entered in December 2010. Additionally, the court‟s order reflected that the parties agreed that Father‟s child support obligation would continue until Stephanie turned twenty-two years of age due to her being “disabled” and would be reviewed to determine whether it should continue at that time.

On July 3, 2013, Father filed a petition to terminate alimony and child support. In his petition, Father alleged that there had been a substantial and material change of circumstances in that Mother was employed and living with another individual. Additionally, Father alleged that Stephanie, who was at the time twenty-one years old, no longer lived with Mother but in a group home and received Social Security benefits, thus relieving Mother‟s need for child support. Mother filed an answer and counter-petition on August 10, 2013, denying that there had been a material change of circumstances or that Stephanie did not live with her. Additionally, Mother alleged that Father had failed to pay the previous two months‟ alimony despite being ordered to do so. In her counter- petition, Mother also requested that the trial court find Father to be in willful contempt for failure to pay alimony as well as another marital debt as previously ordered. The chancery court entered an order on January 24, 2014, clarifying that the burden was on Mother to show severe disability and that Stephanie remained under her care and supervision. The January 2014 order also referenced the December 2010 order setting child support but misstated that order in noting that “child support would continue after eighteen years of age,” rather than until the age of twenty-two. This case was originally set for trial on February 18, 2014, but as a result of the parties filing numerous motions with respect to whether Stephanie should be compelled to testify and whether Father‟s alimony obligation should be suspended, the matter was continued until January 2015.

The chancery court heard testimony from Father, Mother, and Mother‟s mother, Linda Key (“Ms. Key”), on January 28, 2015. Additionally, the parties stipulated to the inclusion of written interrogatories completed by Dr. Todd Maraist (“Dr. Maraist”), Stephanie‟s doctor in Texas. Father lives in Nashville, Tennessee and works for the U.S. Postal Service as well as the Tennessee National Guard. According to Father, he earned $57,607.26 from the Postal Service in 2014 and $84,373.86 in 2010-2014 combined for his National Guard service. Father testified that his child support obligation was current but admitted that he was behind on his alimony obligation, although he did not know the

1 The Final Decree of Divorce was entered on December 9, 2009. 2 exact amount. He also admitted that he had not been making payments on a Sallie Mae debt he was ordered to pay in the final decree of divorce due to “a lot of issues with work along with my car and my health” as well as the fact that he was in the process of buying a house.

Father stated that he believed his alimony obligation should be terminated because Mother was living with another man in the trailer she rented from Ms. Key. To the best of Father‟s knowledge, the man was still residing with Mother at the time of trial. Mother admitted to cohabitating with a paramour for about three years from 2012 to 2014 but testified that she had him judicially removed from her home in July 2014. According to Mother, the paramour contributed $250 per month for rent during the first year but was later injured on the job and failed to make financial contributions for the final two years he resided with her. However, Mother stated on cross-examination that sometime after the paramour stopped contributing $250 per month that “[h]e paid some but not much. He would give me $100 for the whole month, and he was supposed to pay [$]250.” With respect to her finances, Mother testified that she earns roughly $20,000 per year from her employment in a school cafeteria and Wal-Mart combined. Mother provided the court an itemization of her expenses, although she admitted that $100 of her $200 cell phone expense was attributable to another adult-aged daughter who occasionally paid her portion of that bill. Mother also explained that a $250 “miscellaneous” section included a variety of expenses for Stephanie, including “[m]ovies, going horseback riding, out to eat [and] going to the country club for the Christmas dance.”

Father did not dispute that Stephanie meets the definition of disabled under the Americans with Disability Act but asserted that he does not believe “that the Government should mandatory [sic] me to pay child support. They have enough control of my life as it is.” Father speaks to Stephanie on the phone “at least four times a week” and has visited with her in Texas. According to Father, Stephanie communicates “very well” and has “math abilities” superior to his own, even though he has a degree in science. Further, Father testified that he believes Stephanie could “easily work” as a cashier and that there was no reason she could not be employed in a hotel cleaning rooms, at a restaurant bussing tables, or in a cafeteria serving food. With respect to daily living capabilities, Father asserted that Stephanie can dress herself, cook for herself, tie her own shoes, fix her bed, and run a vacuum cleaner.

Mother, on the other hand, disputed much of Father‟s assessment of Stephanie‟s capabilities.

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Bluebook (online)
Shannon Robert Gregory v. Kelly Ann Gregory, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shannon-robert-gregory-v-kelly-ann-gregory-tennctapp-2016.