Sharon Faye Brown Hartman v. Leonard Lee Hartman

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 20, 2001
DocketE2000-1927-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Sharon Faye Brown Hartman v. Leonard Lee Hartman (Sharon Faye Brown Hartman v. Leonard Lee Hartman) 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 Faye Brown Hartman v. Leonard Lee Hartman, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE May 9, 2001 Session

SHARON FAYE BROWN HARTMAN v. LEONARD LEE HARTMAN

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Greene County No. 98000350 Thomas R. Frierson, II, Chancellor

FILED JULY 20, 2001

No. E2000-1927-COA-R3-CV

In this divorce action, Leonard Lee Hartman (“Defendant”), appeals the Trial Court’s award of alimony in futuro to Sharon Faye Brown Hartman (“Plaintiff”), in the amount of $800 per month for twenty years or remarriage, whichever occurs first. Defendant does not dispute the Trial Court’s determination that Plaintiff can not be economically rehabilitated. We affirm.

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

D. MICHAEL SWINEY , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which HERSCHEL P. FRANKS, J. and CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., J., joined.

Jerry W. Laughlin, Greeneville, Tennessee, for the Appellant, Leonard Lee Hartman.

Mark D. Slagle, Johnson City, Tennessee, for the Appellee, Sharon Faye Brown Hartman.

OPINION

Background

The parties were married for thirty years. Plaintiff was age 15 and Defendant was 23 years old when they married. Plaintiff, age 45 at the time of trial, did not finish high school but later obtained a GED. Defendant, age 54 at the time of trial, is a chiropractor and was just starting his practice when they married. The parties have three children, all over the age of 18. The parties owned several pieces of real property including their marital residence and an adjacent farm totaling approximately 200 acres; Defendant’s chiropractic office building; an apartment building housing five apartments; a parcel of property consisting of 25 acres and 2 houses (“Brick House Property”); and an apparently unimproved lot on Fairgrounds Road.

Plaintiff has been employed as a teaching assistant by the Greeneville City School System for the past six years and earns approximately $730 per month in gross income and $590 in net income monthly.1 Plaintiff’s teaching assistant position was the first job that she held outside of working in the parties’ home, on their farm, and occasionally assisting in Defendant’s chiropractic clinic. The only list of monthly expenses that Plaintiff submitted was filed in support of her pre-trial Motion for Possession of Marital Residence and Temporary Spousal Support. Plaintiff’s list of monthly expenses totaled $2,760.2 Moreover, the record establishes that Plaintiff had no involvement with the parties’ finances as Defendant had complete control over their spending. Plaintiff was not allowed to write any checks from the parties’ joint account. Defendant testified that if Plaintiff had to purchase groceries, she had to ask for a check from Defendant.

As for Defendant’s earnings, the proof in the record establishes that Defendant’s chiropractic practice between 1994-98 earned an annual, average gross of approximately $137,100 with an annual, average net profit of $67,870. Defendant testified that he anticipated earning less in 1999, around $59,000, due to changes in referrals to his practice precipitated by HMO’s. The record contains limited proof regarding Defendant’s expenses.

In addition to the chiropractic clinic, Defendant testified that the parties also enjoyed income of $1,380 per month or $16,560 per year from rental property composed of five apartments. Defendant did not specify whether this was net or gross income. The parties’ 1998 tax return, however, shows an actual yearly net rental income of $12,940, or $1,078 per month. The parties also have a cattle and tobacco farming operation which, according to the parties’ 1994-98 tax returns, sustained yearly losses of between $28,000 and $74,000. The claimed farming losses, of course, substantially reduced the parties’ adjusted gross income.

1 Plaintiff’s list of ex penses su bmit ted in support of her Motion for Possession of Marital Residence and Temporary Spousal Support shows that she has a monthly net income of $550. Plaintiff, however, entered into evidence a pay stub which sh ows that h er mon thly net inc ome is $ 594. It should be no ted that we refer to the p arties’ incomes and expenses in rou nd num bers.

2 Part of Plaintiff’s stated monthly expenses included $1,450 in expenses for the parties’ marital home. As will be discussed, Plaintiff was not awarded the parties’ marital home by the Trial Court but was awarded the Brick House Property that included two houses, one of which Plaintiff intended to make her new residence (“Brick H ouse”). Although there is proo f in the record regarding what types of repairs will be needed for the Brick House, no proof was submitted regarding the actual, average m onthly expe nses associated with the Brick Hou se. Nevertheless, the parties’ expenses during th eir marria ge are an “excellen t indicator o f the amo unt of sup port wh ich will b e needed after the divorce.” Smith v. S mith, 912 S.W.2d 155, 15 9 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1995).

-2- At trial, the issues for determination by the Trial Court were the 1) grounds for divorce; 2) division of marital property; and 3) spousal support. The parties submitted a list of values for their marital property and essentially agreed upon the values with the exception of Defendant’s chiropractic practice. Plaintiff valued Defendant’s practice at $200,000, while Defendant testified that he was not able to provide a value.

Defendant submitted proof at trial that Plaintiff could earn more money if employed by Greene Valley Developmental Center, a facility for mentally disabled children and adults. Defendant called as a witness a patient of his who is a supervisor at Greene Valley (“Greene Valley Supervisor”). The Greene Valley Supervisor testified that at Defendant’s request, he contacted Plaintiff regarding potential employment and an interview. The Greene Valley Supervisor testified that Plaintiff could earn approximately $1,310 per month but that Plaintiff was not interested. On cross-examination, the Greene Valley Supervisor admitted, however, that he did not have any actual hiring authority.

The Trial Court awarded Plaintiff a divorce on grounds of inappropriate marital conduct. Defendant committed adultery in 1998. Defendant’s adultery precipitated Plaintiff’s filing for divorce. The parties attempted reconciliation but failed because, according to Plaintiff, Defendant would not stop seeing his paramour. Defendant denied this was the reason the reconciliation attempt failed. Regarding the issue of spousal support, the Trial Court, in light of the disparities in the parties’ earning power, awarded alimony in futuro to Plaintiff in the amount of $800 per month for twenty years or until Plaintiff’s remarriage, whichever occurs first.

In its Memorandum Opinion incorporated into the Trial Court’s Final Decree of Divorce by reference thereto, Defendant was awarded the marital residence and the adjacent farm and farm equipment; the 1999 livestock and tobacco sales proceeds; two pick-up trucks; and his chiropractic practice, office building, equipment and fixtures. According to the Trial Court’s Memorandum Opinion, the total value of property awarded to Defendant was $698,960, plus Defendant’s life insurance and the undetermined value of his chiropractic practice.3 The Trial Court also ordered Defendant to pay all of the parties’ marital debts of $239,000. As one of the parties’ marital debts, Defendant claimed a debt owed to his mother in the amount of $127,000. Plaintiff disputed that this was a marital debt.

The Trial Court awarded Plaintiff the Brick House Property, which included two houses; the apartment building; the Fairgrounds Road parcel; the parties’ 1989 automobile; and furniture.

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Bluebook (online)
Sharon Faye Brown Hartman v. Leonard Lee Hartman, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharon-faye-brown-hartman-v-leonard-lee-hartman-tennctapp-2001.