Victoria C. Jensen v. Tyler C. Jensen

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 4, 2024
DocketE2023-00315-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Victoria C. Jensen v. Tyler C. Jensen (Victoria C. Jensen v. Tyler C. Jensen) 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
Victoria C. Jensen v. Tyler C. Jensen, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

09/04/2024 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE April 10, 2024 Session

VICTORIA C. JENSEN v. TYLER C. JENSEN

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Hamilton County No. 21-0223 Pamela A. Fleenor, Chancellor

No. E2023-00315-COA-R3-CV

In this divorce action, the husband appeals the trial court’s (1) distribution of the marital estate; (2) award to the wife of modifiable transitional alimony; and (3) two awards to the wife of alimony in solido, one for half of what the court found to be assets dissipated by the husband and one for attorney’s fees incurred in prosecuting the divorce. The husband also appeals the trial court’s adoption of the wife’s proposed permanent parenting plan and a requirement that the husband attend in-person reunification therapy with the parties’ children in their home city of Chattanooga. Upon careful review, we determine that the trial court erred in failing to set a determinate time period for transitional alimony, and we accordingly modify the transitional alimony award to a five-year period. We affirm the trial court’s judgment in all other respects. Exercising our discretion, we deny the wife’s request for an award of attorney’s fees on appeal.

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

THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., and KRISTI M. DAVIS, J., joined.

Lisa Bowman, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the appellant, Tyler C. Jensen.

John P. Konvalinka and Lawson Konvalinka, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the appellee, Victoria C. Jensen.

OPINION

I. Factual and Procedural Background

The plaintiff, Victoria C. Jensen (“Wife”), and the defendant, Tyler C. Jensen (“Husband”), were married in February 2011 in California and had two children born of the marriage: a son born in July 2011 and a daughter born in October 2013 (collectively, “the Children”). The parties subsequently relocated from California to Chattanooga, Tennessee, where they purchased improved real property located on Glenview Avenue in the Lookout Mountain area (“the Marital Residence”). The parties separated on or about March 6, 2021. According to the final divorce decree, at the time of the separation, both parties were employed and were able to work remotely, Husband in online advertising and Wife in digital marketing. It is undisputed that after the separation, Husband resided primarily in Texas with his paramour, S.S., and her minor son. Husband testified at trial that he had leased a townhome in Chattanooga for one year beginning in May or June of 2021, but he acknowledged that he had only stayed in the townhome for “[m]aybe a month total.”

On April 1, 2021, Wife filed a complaint for divorce in the Hamilton County Chancery Court (“trial court”), alleging irreconcilable differences or, in the alternative, adultery and inappropriate marital conduct. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-4-101 (11), (14) (West July 1, 2007, to current). She requested awards of temporary and permanent spousal support and asked that the trial court set Husband’s child support obligation pursuant to the Tennessee Child Support Guidelines. Wife also requested an award of reasonable attorney’s fees and expenses. Wife concomitantly filed a proposed permanent parenting plan wherein she would be designated the primary residential parent with all major decision-making authority for the Children. Under this plan, Wife requested that Husband be responsible for child support and for the Children’s health insurance.

On April 30, 2021, Wife filed a motion to enforce the automatic statutory injunctions provided in Tennessee Code Annotated § 36-4-106(d)(1) and a motion for temporary child support. In support of both motions, Wife contemporaneously filed a declaration stating that on April 28, 2021, she learned that Husband had failed to make his routine monthly payment for a country club membership and that he had removed his bank account from the automatic payment for the membership.

Husband filed an answer and counter-complaint on May 13, 2021, admitting that irreconcilable differences existed between the parties while denying that he was guilty of inappropriate marital conduct. In his counter-complaint, Husband alleged irreconcilable differences or, in the alternative, Wife’s inappropriate marital conduct as a ground for divorce. In response to Wife’s request for spousal support, Husband denied that Wife needed or that he had the ability to pay alimony. He also requested an award of reasonable attorney’s fees and court costs. Husband attached a proposed temporary parenting plan wherein he requested designation as the primary residential parent with 183 days of annual co-parenting time and joint decision-making authority for the parties. He also requested that the trial court set a child support obligation for Wife pursuant to

-2- the Child Support Guidelines. Under Husband’s plan, Wife was to be responsible for maintaining the Children’s health insurance.

Wife filed a reply to Husband’s counter-complaint on May 17, 2021, denying that she was guilty of inappropriate marital conduct. On June 24, 2021, Husband filed a motion to allocate the parties’ expenses, requesting that Wife pay some of the parties’ expenses prior to trial because Husband was paying a “disproportionately high amount of the parties’ expenses” and “simply [could] not afford all the marital expenses as is.”

On July 30, 2021, the trial court entered an agreed order regarding Wife’s motions for temporary child support and to enforce the statutory injunction. The trial court ordered the parties to participate in mediation and “continue to make all normal payments for regular monthly bills” in a timely fashion. The court directed Husband to begin making monthly temporary child support payments in the amount of $1,486.00.

On August 17, 2021, Wife filed a motion to hold Husband in civil contempt, alleging that Husband had willfully violated the agreed order by failing to make regular monthly payments on the parties’ mortgage, Wife’s vehicle loan, and “charges associated with the parties’ memberships at certain country clubs including, but not limited to The Lookout Mountain Club, the parties’ streaming services, the parties’ food delivery account, and [Wife’s] gym membership.” Wife also alleged that Husband had harassed and threatened her, averring that on March 6, 2021, Husband had been arrested and charged with domestic assault in connection with an incident involving Wife at the Marital Residence, which the parties’ son witnessed.

Attached to Wife’s contempt motion was an order entered by the Hamilton County General Sessions Court (“general sessions court”), granting Husband’s bail upon issuance of an order of protection prohibiting him from contacting or coming around Wife. Wife also averred that Husband and S.S. had contacted Chattanooga police on July 29, 2021, and had accused Wife of harassment, resulting in Wife’s arrest on August 11, 2021, at the Marital Residence in front of the Children. Wife was subsequently released the same evening, and she maintained that the harassment accusation had been without cause.

Husband filed a response on August 31, 2021, opposing Wife’s contempt motion on the grounds that (1) all allegedly unpaid bills had been paid, (2) Wife was estopped from claiming purported violations of the no-contact order because the general sessions court had determined that Husband had not been in violation of the order, (3) Wife had harassed Husband by making death threats aimed at S.S., and (4) the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to enforce criminal court bond conditions.

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Bluebook (online)
Victoria C. Jensen v. Tyler C. Jensen, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/victoria-c-jensen-v-tyler-c-jensen-tennctapp-2024.