Steven Jameson v. Katrina Redmund

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 20, 2002
DocketM2001-01108-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Steven Jameson v. Katrina Redmund (Steven Jameson v. Katrina Redmund) 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
Steven Jameson v. Katrina Redmund, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE March 20, 2002 Session

STEVEN ALLEN JAMESON v. KATRINA LINN REDMUND

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Rutherford County No. 97DR-453 Robert F. Corlew III, Chancellor

No. M2001-01108-COA-R3-CV - Filed August 28, 2002

This is an appeal from the trial court’s final order denying appellant’s petition for a change of the sole care, custody and control of the parties’ three minor children and the trial court’s order denying appellant’s alternative petition for an increase in visitation. We hold that the trial court properly denied a change of the sole care, custody and control and properly denied appellant’s alternative petition for increased visitation. Counsel for the appellee has petitioned this court for attorney’s fees assessed for the hearings in the trial court and for attorney’s fees in the immediate appellate case contending that the appeal is frivolous. We decline to award attorney’s fees.

Tenn. R. P. 3 Appeal as a Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed; Motion for Attorney's Fees Denied.

HAMILTON V. GAYDEN , Sp. J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which BEN H. CANTRELL , P.J., M.S. and PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, J., joined.

Charles G. Blackard III, Brentwood, Tennessee, for Appellant, Katrina Linn Redmund.

James Robin McKinney, Jr., Nashville, Tennessee, for Appellee, Steven Allen Jameson.

OPINION

BACKGROUND

This is an appeal of the trial court’s April 5, 2001 order dismissing the appellant’s petition for change of the exclusive care, custody and control of the parties’ three minor sons and the trial court’s dismissal of appellant’s alternative petition seeking an increase in visitation with the parties’ minor sons. The April 5, 2001 final order was the latest of several previous trial court decrees following numerous bitter and hostile custody and visitation disputes between the parties. In this last court proceeding, the trial judge conducted a two day hearing and found that there was not a sufficient change of circumstances to warrant a change of the exclusive care, custody and control to the appellant; the trial judge also dismissed appellant’s alternative motion for increased visitation rights. The trial judge rendered findings of fact and conclusion of law.

After numerous previous hearings involving disputes over custody and visitation issues, including one series of hearings lasting over thirty hours, the court issued extensive, multiple findings of facts and conclusions of law. The first findings of fact and conclusions of law were submitted in September 1998 after the first contested custody and visitation proceeding.

In the 1998 findings of fact and conclusions of law, the court found that the appellee/father was the better fit parent to be awarded sole care, custody and control of the parties’ minor children with liberal visitation rights to the appellant/mother.

In the first findings of fact and conclusions of law, the court considered the ten prong factors set out in Tenn.Code Ann § 36-6-106 (1996). After considering the multitude of factors, most of which were cited by the trial judge as negatives directed respectively to both parties, the court granted the sole care custody and control to the appellee/father subject to liberal visitation rights with the appellant/mother. Among other considerations, the trial judge specifically referred to the physical health and mental health shortcomings of the appellant. In addition, poignantly, during the 1998 hearings the court also interviewed the parties’ minor sons and considered their preferences as to who they wished to be the primary custodial parent.

As a result of this original custody decision, the court awarded the appellant liberal visitation rights including visitation periods tantamount to one half the summer and equal holiday visitation, every other weekend and other special times. The trial court’s original findings of fact and visitation order were based on the premise that the visitation should be liberal, but circumscribed by the fact that the appellant had moved her residence to Michigan.

In the original findings of fact and conclusions of law the trial court also ordered that the appellant should be granted liberal visitation including “evenings during the week” should she return to the Murfreesboro area. The original final order was not appealed by either party.

After the original custody and visitation order was entered, disputes between the parties arose when in 2000 the appellant moved her residence back to the Murfreesboro area from Michigan.

The extent of “evening visitation during the week” became the primary focus for the first round of disagreements. Following a hearing in February 2000, the trial court ostensibly clarified the meaning and intent of the provision “evenings during the week” that was ordered in the original decree governing custody and visitation.

-2- In the 2000 hearing, the trial court interpreted the original decree stating, “Now, frankly, evenings during the week, with all due respect, I don’t think would mean every evening.”

However, at that point the trial judge did not enter a formal ruling on the issue of what was intended by the proviso “evening visitation during the week”, but instead ordered the parties to mediation. The mediation was unsuccessful.

The court has ordered mediation over issues of custody and visitation on several occasions in this litigious case. All of the attempts to mediate the parties differences over visitation and custody have failed.

The record is replete with court appearances and hearings and reflects the inability of the parties to agree on much of anything in reference to rearing their three sons. For instance, during another hearing in March 2000, the court received the insightful testimony of a psychotherapist, Katherine Rebecca Hill Taylor, who counsels with the three minor children particularly the two oldest sons. The expert testified in part:

It is my opinion that the parents . . . . need joint therapy to help them to put aside their hostilities for the sake of the children and assist them in working together to co-parent the children that they brought into this world. If something like this cannot be worked out and it could require the children to be placed temporarily in a neutral residence in order for them to be out of harm’s way, I would support such. The kids need a break. I sincerely hope that things may be resolved so that harassment and loyalty ploys will be halted and the boys can enjoy, very simply, childhood.

On April 3, 2000, the court entered its own parenting plan. The parenting plan provided appellant with a one evening visitation, but not overnight. The trial court filed another findings of fact and conclusions of law after this particular hearing.

Later, after another contested hearing on custody and visitation issues, the trial court entered an order which for the second time slightly modified the earlier parenting plan, providing the appellant with greater visitation rights, with the exception of the ongoing “evenings during the week” controversy. That order further refined and defined schedules including the physical transfer of the children, the parties not even being able to agree on how and where to transfer the three minor sons.

Still, another hearing on visitation ensued and the trial court again slightly modified the details of the visitation and associated matters.

In December 2000 and early 2001 the appellant, in a responsive pleadings to motions filed by the appellee, cross-petitioned the court for a change in the exclusive care, control and custody of the three minor sons, or alternatively for increased visitation rights.

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Bluebook (online)
Steven Jameson v. Katrina Redmund, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steven-jameson-v-katrina-redmund-tennctapp-2002.