Sheila Byrd v. David Buhl

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 12, 2001
DocketM2001-00070-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Sheila Byrd v. David Buhl (Sheila Byrd v. David Buhl) 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
Sheila Byrd v. David Buhl, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE ASSIGNED ON BRIEFS JUNE 6, 2001

SHEILA SUE BYRD v. DAVID BUHL

Direct Appeal from the Chancery Court for Montgomery County No. 94-76-212; The Honorable Carol Catalano, Chancellor

No. M2001-00070-COA-R3-CV - Filed October 12, 2001

This appeal involves a custody and visitation dispute brought by divorced parents having joint custody of their child. After the mother of the child moved out of state, the child’s father petitioned the court for change of custody. The mother then counter-petitioned the court for an increase in child support. After a hearing on the matter, the court altered the previous visitation agreement, increased child support, granted the father the right to claim the child as a dependent for income tax purposes, and refused to grant the mother attorney’s fees. This appeal followed and for the following reasons, we affirm.

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

ALAN E. HIGHERS, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which DAVID R. FARMER , J., and HOLLY KIRBY LILLARD, J., joined.

Carrie W. Kersh, Clarksville, TN, for Appellant

David Buhl, Clarksville, TN, pro se

OPINION

Facts and Procedural History

Sheila Buhl Byrd1 (Appellant) and David Buhl (Appellee) divorced in December 1994 after two years of marriage and the birth of a child (Child). The divorce decree incorporated a Marital Dissolution Agreement (the MDA), which vested the parties with joint custody of Child. Pursuant to the MDA, Appellant retained primary physical custody of Child and Appellee acquired visitation rights. The MDA also provided for monthly child support payments in the amount of $290.00 to be

1 It appears from the record that Sheila B uhl Byrd is now know n as Mrs. S heila Pow ell. For simplic ity, she shall be referred to as “App ellant.” paid by Appellee to Appellant. Further, the parties were to alternate claiming Child as a deduction for income tax purposes year to year.

Appellee’s visitation under the MDA included two months per year during the summer until Child reached the age of three. However, upon Child reaching the age of three, Appellee’s visitation extended to every other weekend, one week every other month in conjunction with the weekend visitations, four weeks during the summer, alternating holidays, and every other Wednesday evening.

Approximately one month after the divorce decree was entered, the parties began having difficulties with one another regarding visitation and phone contact with Child. These difficulties soon culminated in a melee of petitions, counter-petitions, and allegations of wrongdoing that have continued up until this appeal. As a result of the legal feud, several orders were entered by the trial court specifically defining the rights of each party. In December 1995, the trial court issued an order that again set out the visitation rights of the parties; this time in very specific detail. However, the problems between the parties continued and the allegations of misdeeds and transgressions committed by the parties increased.

The most recent dispute, now before this Court on appeal, began in November 1998 with Appellee’s filing of a motion for change of custody. In his motion, Appellee, a member of the United States Army, claimed he obtained a reassignment from Korea to Fort Campbell in Clarksville, Tennessee upon learning certain facts that demonstrated a need for change of custody of Child. Appellee alleged that Appellant had moved with Child to Ste. Genevieve, Missouri and that this move would hinder the visitation rights previously granted to him by the trial court. Appellee further alleged that the home environment provided by Appellant for Child warranted a change of custody in favor of Appellee.2

In Appellant’s answer to Appellee’s motion for change of custody, Appellant denied the allegations and petitioned the court for an increase in child support. Appellant asserted that Appellee’s income had increased at least fifteen percent and, thus, she was entitled to a greater award of child support. Subsequent to further filings by each party, on April 15, 1999, the trial court entered an order stating that Appellant would be unlikely to follow the visitation agreement and granted extended visitation to Appellee until a hearing could be held on Appellee’s motion for custody of Child.

The April 15 order was quickly challenged by Appellant and another rash of motions broke out among the parties. Appellant filed motions to amend the court’s order, terminate extended visitation, appoint a guardian ad litem, grant additional visitation, require psychological evaluation

2 Specifically, Appellee asserted in his motion that Child’s “home environment is bazaar [sic], immoral, and dangero usly detrimental to [Child’s] moral and mental health in that [Appellant] . . . is a call girl, participates in a pornog raphic lifestyle on the Internet, and has had numerous sexual encounters in the home with [Child] present in the home.” Appellee also noted that “the information he obtained against the mother of his son is so o verwhelmin gly devoid of morality and is so bazaar [sic] that it is inappropriate to describe such behavior in a [p]etition to change c ustody. . . .”

-2- of Child, and establish a date to return Child to school. Appellant’s motion to establish a date to return Child to school was granted on August 13, 1999 and ended the extended visitation previously granted to Appellee.

On August 29, 2000, the trial court conducted a hearing on Appellee’s original motion to change custody. Following the hearing, the trial court entered an order outlining its findings of fact and altering the rights of the parties. The trial court found that Appellee’s allegations regarding Appellant’s lifestyle, even when taken as true, showed no disparate effects on Child. However, Appellant’s move to Ste. Genevieve, Missouri, constituted a material change of circumstances requiring reconsideration of the visitation arrangements. The trial court held the fact that the parties now lived in different states rendered the previous visitation agreement unworkable. To reflect the change of circumstances, the trial court ordered that Appellant retain primary physical custody of Child and granted the following visitation to Appellee: one weekend per month (on three day weekends when available), the entire summer, and one week during Child’s spring break. In addition, the parties would continue to alternate holidays with the child.

With regard to child support, Appellee was ordered to increase his monthly payment from $290.00 to $485.00. However, because Appellee would now have custody of Child during the summer, no child support would be paid during the months of June and July. Together, the net effect of the trial court’s ruling increased child support by $1,370.00 per year.

The trial court additionally ordered that Appellee provide military insurance for Child and cover any associated costs for healthcare, so long as Appellant took child to military facilities when possible. Further, apparently to lessen the burden of the increased expenses for Appellee, Appellee was granted the right to claim Child as a deduction for income tax purposes every year as opposed to every other year. Finally, the trial court refused to tax Appellant’s attorney’s fees to Appellee.

Issues

Appellant brings the following issues before this Court on appeal:

1. Whether the trial court erred by granting Appellee the right to claim Child as a dependant for income tax purposes even though such relief was neither requested in the motion for change of custody nor litigated by the parties;

2.

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Bluebook (online)
Sheila Byrd v. David Buhl, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheila-byrd-v-david-buhl-tennctapp-2001.