Shawn Farien v. Regina Farien

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 20, 2001
DocketW2000-00656-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Shawn Farien v. Regina Farien (Shawn Farien v. Regina Farien) 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
Shawn Farien v. Regina Farien, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON February 20, 2001 Session

SHAWN PATRICK FARIEN v. REGINA CANTRELL FARIEN (McKINNISH)

An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Shelby County No. 151944 - 8 R.D. D’Army Bailey, Judge

No. W2000-00656-COA-R3-CV - Filed June 13, 2001

This is a child custody case. The parties and their minor child lived in Tennessee with the father’s parents. The mother moved to Georgia with the child to live with her parents. Custody was awarded to the mother, and the father was granted broad visitation rights. The father appeals. We affirm, finding that the custody award is based in large part on the trial court’s determinations of credibility and assessment of the parties’ demeanor, and finding that the evidence does not preponderate against the award of custody to the mother.

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

HOLLY KIRBY LILLARD, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which W. FRANK CRAWFORD , P.J., W.S. and DAVID R. FARMER , J., joined.

James D. Causey, David E. Caywood, Marc E. Reisman, Memphis, Tennessee, for the Plaintiff/Appellant, Shawn Patrick Farien.

Melinda Plass Jewell, Cordova, Tennessee, for the Defendant/Appellee, Regina Cantrell Farien (McKinnish).

OPINION

In this child custody case, Shawn Patrick Farien (“Father”) and Regina Cantrell Farien (now McKinnish) (“Mother”) were married on June 26, 1993. At the time of marriage, Father was twenty years old and Mother was eighteen. The parties had met at a church camp, and soon thereafter, Mother became pregnant. The parties’ only child, Joshua Perrin Farien (“Perrin”), was born on September 14, 1993.

Mother, Father and Perrin resided with Father’s parents, Mike and Mary Farien, in Germantown, Tennessee. Father’s parents purchased their home in anticipation of having Mother, Father and their child live with them. Father’s parents paid for their wedding and their honeymoon. At the time of the marriage, Father was full-time student at the University of Memphis, pursuing a degree in mechanical engineering. He graduated in August 1995. During the marriage, Mother stayed at home full-time to care for Perrin. In January 1996, Mother left Father’s parents’ home in Tennessee, taking Perrin with her to her parents’ home in Georgia. Father filed for divorce on April 19, 1996, citing irreconcilable differences and inappropriate marital conduct, and seeking custody of Perrin.

The parties later agreed to a temporary joint custody arrangement whereby Mother and Father would have Perrin for alternating two week periods until the issue of custody was resolved by the court. On July 22, 1997, Mother and Father stipulated the grounds for divorce and agreed to refer the issue of child custody to Judge Wyeth Chandler for arbitration.

Judge Chandler held the first hearing on July 23, 1997. At the conclusion of the hearing, Judge Chandler was dissatisfied with the circumstances regarding both Mother and Father. Consequently, the parties were declared divorced and an award of temporary custody was made, expressly reserving the issue of permanent custody. After Mother filed a petition to modify custody, a second hearing was held on July 28, 1999. Thereafter, permanent custody was awarded to Mother.

At the first hearing, Father testified that when the parties married, he was a full-time student at the University of Memphis, pursuing a degree in mechanical engineering. Father is the only child of Mike and Mary Farien. Prior to the parties’ marriage, Father’s mother, Mary Farien, had been a homemaker for twenty years. Mary Farien obtained a full-time job after the parties moved into their home, in order to have enough money for the needs of all five members of the household.

Father obtained his degree in mechanical engineering in August 1995. However, at the time of the first hearing, nearly two years later, Father had not obtained employment in his field. Instead, he worked part-time at a hobby store. He described sending out approximately 200 resumes, to no avail. He noted that Mother sent his resume to a potential employer in the Nashville area, but that Father’s mother, Mary Farien, told him that it was “a bad place to work.” Father admitted that he was unable to support his family financially during the marriage, even after he was no longer a student, and that they depended on his parents to provide them with room and board. Father said that his parents paid for several vacations, including a trip to Disney World for the parties, their child and Father’s parents. Despite the generosity of his parents, Mother and Father still managed to accumulate over $11,000 in credit card debt during the course of the two and a half year marriage.

Father testified that he and Mother got along fairly well during their marriage, but that he was concerned about the way she treated Perrin. He stated that Mother showed impatience toward him and a lack of interest in his well-being. Father described an instance in which Perrin became ill and began to run a high fever. When Father came home, his parents told him that, although Perrin’s fever had gone down, they felt he should be taken to the emergency room. Father agreed with his parents, and they took Perrin even though Mother did not think it was necessary. At the emergency room, Mother and Father were given a prescription for antibiotics and sent home at approximately 2:00 a.m. Mother thought filling the prescription could wait until morning, so she and Perrin went

-2- to sleep. Mary Farien and Father felt the medication should be obtained immediately. Father testified that he took his mother to the 24-hour drug store with him at 2:00 a.m. because he felt “safer” having her with him to go to a store “in a bad section of town.”

Father also described Mother as less than industrious. He stated that when he came home in the afternoons, he would find Mother still in her nightgown and Perrin in his blanket sleeper with a dirty diaper on. He stated that Mother would be watching television, there would be dirty dishes and dirty diapers lying about, and Perrin would be doing whatever he wanted. He testified that Mother rarely assisted his family in cooking and cleaning. He said that he and his parents hoped Mother would help more in cleaning the house, but that “eventually my parents hired a maid” to help clean. Father said, prior to the parties’ separation, both of them were working part-time. Father acknowledged that Mary Farien had frequently provided more care of Perrin than he did, citing his “time constraints.”

Father testified that when Mother left in January 1996, he had no indication that she planned to leave him. He testified that his mother came home in the mid-afternoon and found a note from Mother stating that she and Perrin had gone to Georgia and would return. When it became apparent to him that they were not coming back, Father testified that he tried to make arrangements to visit Mother and Perrin in Georgia, and that Mother refused, saying that if he came, “there would be shotguns in the hills waiting for you.” Despite this warning, Father went to Georgia to see Mother and Perrin. The efforts at reconciliation failed.

Father testified the parties had always agreed to call their son by his middle name, Perrin, but after Mother moved to Georgia she began calling their son by his first name, Joshua. Father said that during the initial period of separation, Mother allowed him to speak with Perrin on the telephone, but refused to let him have visitation. Since that time, the parties had agreed on a temporary schedule whereby Perrin resided with each party for alternating two-week periods. Father said that his parents would normally accompany him to Nashville to get Perrin, but that a couple of times, his mother had gone to pick up Perrin without him.

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Bluebook (online)
Shawn Farien v. Regina Farien, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shawn-farien-v-regina-farien-tennctapp-2001.