Sherry Kay Hepler v. Donald Merle Hepler

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 25, 2005
DocketM2004-00530-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Sherry Kay Hepler v. Donald Merle Hepler (Sherry Kay Hepler v. Donald Merle Hepler) 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
Sherry Kay Hepler v. Donald Merle Hepler, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs July 13, 2005

SHERRY KAY HEPLER v. DONALD MERLE HEPLER

An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Davidson County No. 00D-1373 Muriel Robinson, Circuit Judge

No. M2004-00530-COA-R3-CV - Filed October 25, 2005

This is a petition to modify custody. When the parties divorced in 2000, the mother received primary custody of the parties’ three children. After the mother sought an increase in the father’s child support obligation, the father filed this petition to obtain primary custody of the children, alleging a material change in circumstances. The father later amended his petition to include allegations of physical abuse by the mother. The trial court declined to modify custody, finding the evidence insufficient to justify modification. We vacate the ruling of the trial court and remand for written findings on the abuse allegations, pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated Section 36-6-106(a)(8).

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

HOLLY M. KIRBY , J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which W. FRANK CRAWFORD , P.J., W.S. and ALAN E. HIGHERS, J., joined.

Clark Lee Shaw and Stephanie C. Hatchett, Nashville, TN, for the appellant, Donald Merle Hepler.

Pamela M. Spicer, Brentwood, TN, for the appellee, Sherry Kay Hepler.

OPINION

Petitioner/Appellee Sherry Kay Hepler (“Mother”) and Respondent/Appellant Donald Merle Hepler (“Father”) were divorced on September 13, 2000. A marital dissolution agreement, incorporated into the final decree, provided for joint custody of the couple’s three minor children and designated Mother as the primary custodial parent. Pursuant to that agreement, Father paid child support bi-weekly in the amount of $427.38.

On February 20, 2002, Mother filed a petition seeking an increase in Father’s child support obligation. In response, Father filed a counter petition which, in part, sought custody of the three children, alleging a material change in circumstances. Father’s counter petition cited his recent remarriage and asserted that he was able to provide a more stable home environment for the children, and also alleged problems regarding Mother’s care for the children. In an order dated May 10, 2002, the trial court found that the new child support guidelines mandated that Father pay increased child support. Consequently, Father’s child support obligation was increased to $555.69 bi-weekly. Two weeks later, Mother answered Father’s counter petition for a change of custody. Nothing further occurred until April 7, 2003, at which time Father filed a reply to Mother’s response asserting that a substantial and material change in the parties’ circumstances justified modification of the child custody arrangement.

Three days later, on April 10, 2003, Father filed a request for an order of protection on behalf of the children, asserting that Mother had struck one of the children in the face and caused an injury to the child’s nose that necessitated medical attention, and alleging other objectionable conduct by Mother. On April 22, 2003, pending a full hearing on the matter, the trial court entered a temporary restraining order, enjoining Mother from using any corporal punishment on the children. The matters were set to be heard on September 24, 2003.

On the appointed date, the trial court conducted the custody modification hearing. At the hearing, Father testified that Mother had been criminally charged with child abuse in connection with the incident in which the parties’ child was struck in the face. Father testified that Mother had not informed him of the incident and would not discuss it with him, and that her trial on the charges had not yet occurred. Father also asserted that Mother had been telling the parties’ children that his current wife was poisoning their food, and that as a consequence the children refused to eat food prepared by Father’s current wife when the children were at Father’s home. Father testified about other concerns as well, such as Mother having had a boyfriend living at her home with the children and Mother failing to obtain appropriate treatment for a child’s medical problem.

Mother was called to testify by Father’s counsel. Regarding the incident in which the child was struck, Mother testified that when she arrived after work at the home of the children’s babysitter, Francis Drennen (“Drennen”), Drennen accused Mothers’s ten-year-old daughter of unruly behavior and of lying. Mother and the ten-year-old had words, and Mother said she reached the point of not wanting to hear anything further from the child. Mother testified that she then “put my hand up and when I did I guess I put my hand too far on her face, and I hit her nose. . . . A few seconds later her nose started to bleed.” She said that the bleeding stopped before they left Drennen’s home, but started again that evening, so she took the child to the emergency room. Asked if she told her daughter that she hoped her nose was broken, Mother testified, “I might have in the moment of being upset” and asserted that she had apologized to the child for the remark. Mother denied telling the children that Father’s current wife was poisoning them, asserting that she had only commented to the children that they were “always sick” when they returned from Father’s house, and that she asked the children about the foods they ate while at Father’s home.

The trial court then heard testimony from the babysitter, Drennen, who lived in the same trailer park as Mother. When asked about the incident in which the ten-year-old’s nose was injured, Drennen said that when Mother arrived at Drennen’s home after work, she told Mother that she had disciplined the ten-year-old. Drennen testified that Mother “was mad and she hit [the child] in the nose and blood just started gushing.” She indicated that Mother struck the child with a closed fist.

-2- Drennen said that Mother then told the child, “I hope I broke your nose and I hope it bleeds.” Drennen said that Mother later admonished the children not to say anything to Father about the incident or they would probably end up living with Father and there would be less money for them. Drennen testified that on other occasions she had seen Mother strike another daughter in the face. Drennen asserted that she had heard discussions between Mother and the parties’ children in which Mother expressed the belief that Father’s current wife was poisoning them and in which Mother made disparaging remarks about Father.

Father’s current wife, Beula Evelyn Hepler (“Stepmother”) testified as well. Stepmother testified that, for a time, the children would not eat the foods she prepared. She said that the situation was remedied when she tasted the food in the children’s presence; after that, they would eat. Stepmother acknowledged knowing that the parties’ oldest daughter had allergies and asthma, and conceded that she and Father had a variety of pets. She also admitted that she and Father smoke, but maintained that they did not smoke inside their home while the children were there.

After the close of Father’s proof, the trial court found that the evidence was insufficient to grant Father’s petition to change custody. Elaborating, the trial judge stated that while “I understand Mr. Hepler’s concerns. . .the problem was he didn’t have a specific order really to have her, technically, in contempt to visitation order violation.” Although the trial judge strongly admonished Mother about striking the children and warned that the outcome of the custody proceeding would be different in the future if Mother were indicted and convicted of child abuse, the trial judge found that the proof was insufficient to change custody.

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Sherry Kay Hepler v. Donald Merle Hepler, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherry-kay-hepler-v-donald-merle-hepler-tennctapp-2005.