Sharon Clayman Sitz v. William Grant Sitz

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 30, 2013
DocketE2012-01726-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Sharon Clayman Sitz v. William Grant Sitz (Sharon Clayman Sitz v. William Grant Sitz) 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
Sharon Clayman Sitz v. William Grant Sitz, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs August 1, 2013

SHARON CLAYMAN SITZ v. WILLIAM GRANT SITZ

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Sullivan County No. K0036800(C) E.G. Moody, Chancellor

No. E2012-01726-COA-R3-CV-FILED-SEPTEMBER 30, 2013

After some 16 years of marriage, Sharon Clayman Sitz (“Wife”) sued William Grant Sitz (“Husband”) for divorce. Following a bench trial, the court awarded Wife a divorce on the ground of inappropriate marital conduct. The court adopted Wife’s proposed parenting plan, which made Wife the primary residential parent of their minor child and divided the marital property. The court further determined that Husband was voluntarily underemployed and imputed additional income to him in order to calculate his child support obligation. Husband appeals. We affirm with one modification.

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

C HARLES D. S USANO, J R., P.J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D. M ICHAEL S WINEY and J OHN W. M CC LARTY, JJ., joined.

William Grant Sitz, Kingsport, Tennessee, appellant, Pro se.

George K. Samuel and Katherine W. Singleton, Kingsport, Tennessee, for the appellee, Sharon Clayman Sitz.

OPINION

I.

Husband and Wife were married in October 1993. Their only child, Zane, was born in 1999. In January 2010, Wife filed for divorce. The parties separated a week after the filing. At the time of trial, Zane was 12. Husband and Wife were 55, and 50, respectively. Husband holds degrees in chemical and civil engineering. When the parties married, he had worked as a plant manager for Cypress Foote Mineral Company, in nearby Duffield, Virginia, for five years. He earned approximately $47,000 a year. In 1994, the company was sold, the plant relocated to Nevada, and Husband was terminated. Husband said he passed up other potential jobs with the company largely because Wife couldn’t handle the thought of moving out of state. Wife admitted she cried when Husband approached her about relocating.

In 1995, Husband started an engineering consulting firm. Over the next several years, his self-employment income steadily declined. After Zane was born, Husband worked even less on engineering projects. Husband always reflected a loss from his business on his tax return. In the Fall of 2006, Husband, in order to supplement his income, accepted temporary employment. He worked for about five months as a consulting engineer for Think Resources, Inc., in Greeneville. For his work, he earned some $18,000 in 2006, and $8,000 in 2007. By 2010, Husband’s income was almost zero; he closed his firm. That year, Husband worked during the summer as a census taker and during the holidays for UPS. He did not work again until September 2011, when he obtained a part-time job with Walmart as a service writer. Husband described taking in customers’ vehicles and writing up service orders as hard “grunt work” that paid him less than $8 an hour. He did not have a set schedule which, in turn, caused him to miss some time with Zane.

Wife worked full-time as a pharmacy materials manager at Indian Path Medical Center where she had been employed for nearly 25 years. She earned close to $30,000 a year. Wife paid for the family’s health insurance. Her take-home pay was $376.07 a week. Wife’s former supervisor described Wife as a good worker and a “compassionate, caring, . . . and patient” person. A co-worker testified Wife and Zane had a loving relationship.

Pre-marriage, Husband owned the house that later became the marital home. A year into the marriage, Wife took $32,000 from a CD she and her father owned and applied it to pay down the existing mortgage on the house. In return, Husband executed a deed to Wife so that thereafter title was held in their names as tenants by the entirety. Its appraised value was $117,500. The parties also purchased an adjacent lot, worth $14,000, and a time-share condominium in Florida. None of the property was encumbered. By 1996, the parties were debt-free.

When Zane was an infant, Husband remained self-employed. He also cared for Zane during the daytime, as did Wife’s parents who kept him two to three days a week. Wife took over when she came home from work, particularly if Husband had any work to do. She admitted that, because she worked, Husband stayed with Zane if the child was sick or otherwise home from school. Husband said he took care of Zane with very little help from

-2- Wife. Wife noted that Zane was in daycare from the time he was two until he started kindergarten.

After the separation, Wife moved out of the marital home. Her father purchased her a condominium where she and Zane lived. She paid $500 a month in rent to her father under a written lease agreement. Husband remained in the marital home. Under the initial temporary parenting plan, Wife was the primary custodian and Husband had parenting time every other weekend. Husband’s temporary child support obligation was initially set at $863 based on his earnings at Think Resources, his last full-time engineering employment. Following mediation, the parties agreed that, pending trial, Husband’s temporary monthly child support payment would be reduced to $526.1 Further, Husband received additional parenting time during two afternoons each week. On other matters, the parties attended mediation four times with little success. Neither party sought an award of alimony. Pending trial, Husband accrued a child support arrearage of over $5,000. The trial court found him in contempt and Husband went to jail. At the time of the trial, Husband was current on his child support obligation.

Wife testified that she wanted a divorce because she could no longer live with the many “rules” Husband instituted in their home. Many of the rules resulted from Husband’s efforts to keep down utility costs. Wife gave several examples: Husband turned off the water to the toilets and saved the water after everyone bathed to use to flush the toilets. He required that the hot water heater be kept “off” until just before showers were taken; afterwards, it was immediately turned off again. Husband took showers with Zane to conserve water. In addition, Husband kept the air conditioning turned up in the summer. According to Wife, it became so hot that she became nauseated and sometimes wore a bathing suit in the house. Husband and Zane wore only their underwear. In the winter, everyone wore double layers of clothing – even to bed – because Husband would not keep the heat on. The lights could not remain on. Husband required that the curtains stay closed so that no one could look inside the house. The cable box could only be on while someone was watching a show. Husband did not allow Wife to use the stove or oven during the summer months. He permitted Wife to run the microwave no longer than four minutes at a time. Husband timed her when she used the blow dryer. Husband did not allow Wife to use the dishwasher or the clothes dryer. Instead, he hung wet clothes “all over” the house – on doorknobs, over chairs and curtain rods to dry. He fashioned hooks from wire coat hangers, which he used to dry their underwear and socks outside. Wife said she complained about the rules and resulting living conditions, but Husband largely ignored her. She claimed he was “persistent to keep everything – all these rules a-going.” Wife further testified to Husband’s

1 The payment is based on the imputed annual gross income of a male parent in Tennessee under the Child Support Guidelines. See Tenn. Comp. R. & Regs., ch. 1240-2-4-.04(3)(a)(2)(iv)(I)(III).

-3- insistence that, like Zane, he and Wife go to sleep every night at 7:00 p.m.

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Sharon Clayman Sitz v. William Grant Sitz, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharon-clayman-sitz-v-william-grant-sitz-tennctapp-2013.