Tera Danielle Ward v. John Patrick Ward

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 20, 2013
DocketM2012-01184-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Tera Danielle Ward v. John Patrick Ward (Tera Danielle Ward v. John Patrick Ward) 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
Tera Danielle Ward v. John Patrick Ward, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE March 27, 2013 Session

TERA DANIELLE WARD v. JOHN PATRICK WARD

An Appeal from the Chancery Court for Montgomery County No. MC CH CV D1-10-257 Laurence M. McMillan, Jr., Chancellor

No. M2012-01184-COA-R3-CV - Filed June 20, 2013

In this divorce case, the father appeals the trial court’s designation of the mother as the primary residential parent of the parties’ daughter. The child was born after the parties separated; at the time, the father lived in New Jersey and the mother lived in Tennessee. Divorce proceedings were initiated in Tennessee when the child was six months old; both parents asked to be designated as the child’s primary residential parent. After a trial, the trial court declared the parties divorced and designated the mother as the child’s primary residential parent; the father was granted parenting time for one week per month. The father now appeals, challenging the trial court’s decision to declare the parties divorced and to designate the mother as the child’s primary residential parent. After a careful review of the evidence, we affirm the trial court’s decision to declare the parties divorced, and reverse the designation of the mother as the primary residential parent of the child. We vacate the parenting plan approved by the trial court and remand the cause for entry of an order and parenting plan designating the father as the child’s primary residential parent, with appropriate alternate parenting time for the mother.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court is Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part, Vacated in Part, and Remanded

H OLLY M. K IRBY, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which A LAN E. H IGHERS, P.J., W.S., and J. S TEVEN S TAFFORD, J., joined.

Carrie W. Gasaway, Clarksville, Tennessee, for the Defendant/Appellant, John Patrick Ward

Mary Frances Parker, Murfreesboro, Tennessee, for the Plaintiff/Appellee, Tera Danielle Ward OPINION

F ACTS AND P ROCEEDINGS B ELOW

In February 2008, Plaintiff/Appellee Tera Danielle Ward (“Mother”) and Defendant/Appellant John Patrick Ward (“Father”) met at a bar in Nashville, Tennessee. At the time, Father lived in New Jersey, and Mother lived in Clarksville, Tennessee, with her eight-year-old son from a previous marriage, “J.R.” Within a day or two after they met, the parties became intimate. They then went their separate ways.

The parties did not see each other again until August or September 2008, when Mother flew to New Jersey to see Father. They embarked on a long-distance romantic relationship.

In May 2009, the parties were married in Clarksville. At the time, Mother was pregnant with the parties’ daughter, the child at issue in this appeal. After the wedding, Father returned to New Jersey. Father has a large extended family in New Jersey and worked in a business owned by a family member. After about three weeks, Mother and J.R. moved to New Jersey to live with Father.

The parties’ marriage proved tumultuous from the beginning. After eight weeks of discord, in mid-August 2009, Mother left the parties’ home to stay with a friend. When Mother returned home, she found Father moving her personal belongings into a U-Haul. Mother went back to stay at her friend’s house.

A few days later, Father called Mother and told her that he was on the road driving to Tennessee with the loaded U-Haul; he said he would fly her from New Jersey to Tennessee to meet him. According to Mother, Father led her to believe that the two of them would eventually live together in Tennessee. That did not prove to be the case. Father moved Mother into an apartment in Tennessee, but stayed there with her only four or five days before returning to New Jersey. At some point during this time, J.R. was sent to stay with his father. The parties never reconciled, so Father remained a resident of New Jersey and Mother lived in Tennessee.

In December 2009, Mother gave birth to the parties’ daughter, “S.W.” Father traveled to Tennessee and was at the hospital for the birth of the child. He stayed in Tennessee for about ten days after the child was born, and then he went back to New Jersey.

In March 2010, Father brought his brother, James Ward, and his friend Jana Collins to Tennessee to visit for five days. According to Father, he had planned to stay in the apartment with Mother and S.W. for the five-day visit. Once he arrived, however, Mother changed her

-2- mind and told him he “couldn’t come near the apartment.” Mother asked Father to have his friend Ms. Collins pick up infant S.W. from Mother for the child’s visit with Father. When Ms. Collins arrived to pick up S.W., Mother admonished Ms. Collins that Father had better return the child to Mother within one hour or she would call the police. The child was returned to Mother within the hour, as demanded, and Father did not see S.W. any further on that trip.

In May 2010, Mother flew to New Jersey with S.W. She and S.W. stayed in New Jersey for two or three days for the child to visit with Father. Father had no more parenting time with the child before the divorce proceedings were initiated.

On June 14, 2010, when S.W. was about six months old, Mother filed a complaint for divorce in the Chancery Court for Montgomery County, Tennessee. As grounds, Mother alleged irreconcilable differences and inappropriate marital conduct. Mother asked the trial court to designate her as S.W.’s primary residential parent, and to award her child support, temporary spousal support, and attorney fees.

In July 2010, before Father filed his answer to the complaint for divorce, Mother brought infant S.W. to New Jersey. For reasons that do not appear in the record, Mother did not tell Father in advance that she was going to visit New Jersey or bring the child. Evidence in the record indicates that, at about 11:30 a.m. on July 10, 2010, the day Mother left Tennessee, she began sending text messages to Father, telling him that she wanted for her and S.W. to spend the weekend with Father. At the time, Father was at his family beach house with his mother, sisters, several young nieces, and other family members, and he did not reply to Mother’s text messages. After several of her text messages to Father went unanswered, Mother sent him text messages that included “a lot of foul things,” saying that if he did not respond to her texts, she would come straight to his family’s beach house.

As indicated in her text messages, around 9:00 p.m. that evening, Mother arrived at Father’s family beach house with S.W. in her vehicle. When she arrived, she began pounding on the door to the beach house, shouting expletives and demanding that someone open the door. In view of Mother’s behavior, Father and his family did not open the door, and instead called the police. When the police officers arrived, they observed Mother “banging and kicking the back door” and “yelling and cursing for someone to open the door.” Father did not allow the police to enter his house, and instead he went outside. When Father came out, he saw S.W. in the back of Mother’s car, so he took the child out of the car and brought her into the house. Father refused to return the child to Mother that evening. Mother was not taken into police custody, but she agreed to allow S.W. to stay overnight with Father. The next day, Father still refused to return the child to Mother.

-3- The day after that, on July 12, 2010, Mother filed a motion with the Tennessee trial court, asking the trial court to issue an order requiring Father to return S.W. to her. At the same time, Mother filed a petition in a New Jersey state court, asking for the same relief. The New Jersey court ordered Father to return S.W. to Mother.

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