IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT JACKSON
October 27, 2009 Session
DAVID M. SHARP v. DEBBIE F. STEVENSON, ET AL.
Direct Appeal from the Chancery Court for Obion County
No. 24,758 W. Michael Maloan, Chancellor
No. W2009-00096-COA-R3-CV - Filed March 10, 2010
DISSENT
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HOLLY M. KIRBY, JUDGE, dissenting:
I must respectfully dissent in this case. Unfortunately, I find that I disagree with both
the majority opinion and the concurrence.
First, I believe that the finding of the trial court below was necessarily based, at least
in part, on its assessment of Mr. Sharp’s credibility. Mr. Sharp claimed in his testimony that
he was either uninformed or misled about whether the permanent parenting plan was an
award of permanent custody to the Stevensons. The trial court found that he was neither.
The majority states that Mr. Sharp’s testimony was undisputed, but “the trier of fact is free
to believe or disbelieve all or part or none of a witness’[s] testimony, even where the
testimony is uncontradicted.” Cornell v. State of Tennessee, 118 S.W.3d 374, 378 (Tenn.
Ct. App. 2003). The trial court’s determination of a witness’s credibility is “binding on the
appellate court unless from other real evidence the appellate court is compelled to conclude
to the contrary.” Wright Med. Tech., Inc. v. Grisoni, 135 S.W.3d 561, 585 (Tenn. Ct. App.
2001) (quoting Hudson v. Capps, 651 S.W.2d 243, 246 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1983)) (comparing
witness’s transcribed courtroom testimony with transcribed recorded conversation). The
majority reverses the trial court’s determination of Mr. Sharp’s credibility, but cites no “real
evidence” contradicting the trial court’s finding.
Indeed, the record includes ample support for the trial court’s finding that Mr. Sharp’s
claim was not believable. Prior to the dispute with the Stevensons, Mr. Sharp was involved
in divorce proceedings with the children’s mother. As a result, Mr. Sharp was named as the
children’s “primary residential parent” in their marital dissolution agreement. Certainly he
would have understood from this experience that he had custody of his children. After Mr.
Sharp’s conduct resulted in an award of temporary custody to the Stevensons in 2005, Mr.
Sharp testified that two years of legal wrangling ensued, including attempts at mediation,
letters back and forth, and numerous discussions. Mr. Sharp was represented by counsel
during these lengthy negotiations, which resulted in his consent to the permanent parenting
plan. Against this backdrop, Mr. Sharp asked the trial court to believe that he did not
understand that the product of the mediation, letters and negotiations involved “custody.”
The trial court did not believe his assertion and the record supports its credibility
determination.
Further, Mr. Sharp’s testimony shows that he understood the effect of the permanent
parenting plan. Referring to the permanent parenting plan, Mr. Sharp complained that “the
Court order says that they [the Stevensons] have complete control,” which is, of course, the
effect of an award of custody. He understood that the permanent parenting plan was
“binding.” Mr. Sharp acknowledged that, before agreeing to the permanent parenting plan,
he was advised that he could only ask the court to change the parenting order “based on a
modification of circumstances.” This is, in effect, the legal consequence of a valid order
transferring custody to a non-parent: custody can be modified only when “a material change
in circumstances has occurred.” Blair v. Badenhope, 77 S.W.3d 137, 148 (Tenn. 2002).
Thus, despite Mr. Sharp’s protestations, his own testimony shows that he was fully advised
about the consequences of his choice.1
The majority is troubled by the fact that Mr. Sharp and the Stevensons used a standard
form for a permanent parenting plan for two divorced parents that had been modified to name
the Stevensons, the grandparents, as the “primary residential parents.” The concerns raised
by the majority appear to be (1) the permanent parenting plan uses terminology such as
“primary residential parent” and “parenting time” instead of more traditional terms, like
“custodian” and “visitation”; (2) Mr. Sharp retained input into parenting decisions and
parenting responsibilities when the children were with him; and (3) the permanent parenting
plan does not state that Mr. Sharp waives his superior parental rights.
First, the language in the permanent parenting plan. Tennessee’s legislature has
recognized that the terminology used in family law cases, referring to “custody” of children,
“custodial” and “non-custodial” parents, and the non-custodial parent’s “visitation,” was
divisive, freighted with “negative win/lose connotations,” and was ultimately not descriptive
of the allocation of parenting responsibilities in a divorce. See J ANET L. R ICHARDS,
RICHARDS ON T ENNESSEE F AMILY L AW (2 D ED.) § 8-2(e) at 184, and 2007 Cum. Supp. At §
8-2(e); Don L. Ash, Bridge Over Troubled Water: Changing the Custody Law in Tennessee,
1
The fact that Mr. Sharp’s motivation in agreeing to the parenting plan was to get more visitation
with his children does not affect this conclusion.
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27 U. M EM. L. R EV.769, 804 (Summer 1997). Consequently, the legislature indicated that
courts are to replace “custody” orders with “parenting plans,” using language that is less
divisive and more accurate in describing the roles of divorced parents. T.C.A. § 36-6-404
(2005). A parent who formerly would have been “awarded custody” would now be
“designated as the child’s primary residential parent.” The former “non-custodial parent” is
now the “alternate residential parent.” “Visitation” is now “residential parenting time.” This
nomenclature recognizes that the “alternate residential parent” still retains parental rights and
responsibilities, particularly when the child is in his care, and that the child has a second
home with the alternate residential parent and is not just a “visitor.”
Our appellate courts have been somewhat uneven in using the current terminology in
opinions. For example, the court in Blair v. Badenhope used the term “custody” repeatedly
in its decision. This uneven usage does not change the legal import of the language used in
family law orders. A “permanent parenting plan” that “designates” the “primary residential
parent” is still the equivalent of an order awarding permanent primary custody of the child.
The majority states: “A parenting plan is simply not the equivalent of a valid order
awarding custody to a non-parent.” Because the majority did not find that the order
incorporating the parenting plan was invalid or void, I assume that this statement reflects
concern that usage of “parenting plan” terminology in the context of an order with a non-
parent, instead of between parents, may have confused Mr. Sharp.2 The majority even goes
so far as to state that “[t]here is nothing in the plan to suggest that Mr. Sharp agreed . . . to
grant the Stevensons permanent custody.” But the permanent parenting plan clearly
designates the Stevensons as the primary residential parents. Mr. Sharp had had the same
designation in a previous order with the children’s mother and thus had to understand that
the “primary residential parent” meant custody, and Mr. Sharp has not asserted that he did
not understand the word “permanent.”
The majority also notes that, under the permanent parenting plan, Mr. Sharp retained
some parenting rights and responsibilities, such as the right to make decisions regarding the
children’s day-to-day care while they are with him, the right to discuss major decisions with
the Stevensons, and the standard statutory rights. It notes that, under current standard
parenting plans, the alternate residential parent
2
I am concerned that the majority’s reliance on the “parenting plan” terminology to support its
decision will serve to destabilize existing agreed permanent parenting plans between parents. The
majority’s reasoning could certainly be relied upon by countless “alternative residential parents” to claim
that they did not understand that the permanent parenting plan to which they agreed was in fact a custody
order.
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. . . is not relegated to a less-than-parent status. On the contrary, the current
parenting plans, which are designed to fully describe each parent’s rights and
responsibilities as a full parent, preserve each parent’s superior parental rights
with respect to any claims which might be asserted by a non-parent.
That is certainly true. But the same can be said of the old-time “custody” order. Even the
most one-sided “custody” order between a child’s parents has never affected either parent’s
ability to assert his superior parental rights as against a non-parent.
Finally, the majority states: “There is nothing in the [permanent parenting] plan to
suggest that Mr. Sharp agreed to relinquish his superior parental rights to the children.” This
portion of the majority’s reasoning seems to coincide with Judge Stafford’s concurrence, in
that this prong of the majority’s decision implies that there must be an express written waiver
relinquishing the parent’s superior parental right to custody of his child. Therefore, I will
address this part of the majority decision at the same time that I respond to the concurrence.
In Blair v. Badenhope, 77 S.W.3d 137 (Tenn. 2002), the Court held:
Presuming that a parent is afforded the opportunity to assert superior parental
rights in the initial custody proceeding, then the parent’s voluntary transfer of
custody to a non-parent, with knowledge of the consequences of that transfer,
effectively operates as a waiver of these fundamental parental rights. Under
these circumstances, the Constitution does not again entitle the natural parents
to assert superior parental rights to modify a valid custody order, even if no
court has previously found the natural parent to be unfit.
Id. at 147-48 (footnote omitted) (emphasis added). The Blair court did not indicate what was
meant by “knowledge of the consequences” of voluntarily transferring custody to a non-
parent.
In reaching its decision, the Blair court surveyed the law in other states regarding
proceedings filed by a biological parent to modify a prior custody award to a nonparent. It
was persuaded by the majority view in other states that “the voluntary relinquishment of
indefinite custody to a non-parent” is “conduct that [is] inconsistent with the parent’s
constitutionally protected rights.” Blair, 77 S.W.3d at 146. The majority of other states saw
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such a decision as a “forfeiture” of the parent’s superior right to custody.3 Id. at 147. The
Blair court emphasized:
Having once protected the parent’s rights to custody, at the risk of sacrificing
the child’s best interests, we should not then sacrifice the child’s need for
stability in its care and living arrangements by modifying those arrangements
more readily than in a parent-parent case.
Id. at 145 (quoting C.R.B. v. C.C., P.2d 375, 380 (Alaska 1998) (emphasis by Blair court)).
Thus, the Blair court carefully balanced protection of the parent’s superior right to custody
against the child’s need for nurturing and stable care.
The Supreme Court applied Blair in In re: A.M.H., 215 S.W.3d 793 (Tenn. 2007).
In A.M.H., the Court stated that it was required to address the consent order transferring
custody to non-parents because, “[u]nless we conclude that the consent order is
unenforceable, the parents of A.M.H. have no superior rights to the custody of A.M.H.” Id.
at 811. The A.M.H. Court then stated that it was applying and interpreting the phrase in
Blair that the majority interprets in the instant case:
Recognizing the possibility that in the informal setting of juvenile court
unrepresented parents could enter into a formal order without understanding
the actual effect of transferring custody, we have explained that it is only a
parent’s “voluntary transfer of custody to a non-parent, with knowledge of the
consequences of that transfer,” that will defeat a parent’s claim to superior
rights of custody. [Blair, 77 S.W.3d] at 147 (emphasis added).
Id. (emphasis in A.M.H.). The A.M.H. Court also quoted the language in Blair, relied upon
by the majority herein:
As we stated in Blair:
Where a natural parent voluntarily relinquishes custody without
knowledge of the effect of that act, then it cannot be said that
these rights [to the care and custody of one’s child] were
3
The Blair court chose not to follow other states that apply the parental preference in all custody
proceedings, whether they are initial proceedings or proceedings to modify, and also eschewed the small
minority of courts that apply a best interest test in all circumstances, including an initial custody
proceeding between a parent and a non-parent. See Guinta v. Doxtator, 20 A.D.3d 47, 52, 794 N.Y.2d
516, 520 (N.Y. App. 2005).
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accorded the protection demanded by the Constitution. As such,
application of the superior rights doctrine in a subsequent
modification proceeding would be justified.
Blair, 77 S.W.3d at 148 n.3.
Id. at 812 (bracketed language added in A.M.H.). Applying Blair, the A.M.H. Court then
considered the biological parents’ evidence that, at the time of the initial custody order, they
were told that the order was temporary and that their later request for return of custody would
be refused only if they engaged in misconduct such as substance abuse. Id. The A.M.H.
Court found that this evidence established that the parents’ transfer of custody was not done
“with knowledge of the consequences.” Id.
Thus, the A.M.H. Court initially recognized that, unless the consent custody order was
unenforceable, the parents would be deemed to have waived their superior right to custody
of their child. Id. at 811. At no point did the Supreme Court in A.M.H. indicate that the
burden was on the petitioner Bakers to show that the biological parents were informed of
their superior parental rights or that they expressly waived them in executing the consent
order on custody. This is consistent with the Blair court’s description of a parent’s voluntary
relinquishment of permanent custody to a non-parent as a “forfeiture” of the parent’s superior
right to custody. Blair, 77 S.W.3d at 147. The act itself is “conduct that [is] inconsistent
with” a parent’s assertion that he intended to retain the superior right to custody in the future.
Id. at 146. Thus, the order transferring custody to the non-parent need not go on to state
expressly that the parents agree to relinquish their superior rights to custody of their children.
As shown in A.M.H., however, the biological parent is not foreclosed from asserting
his superior right to custody if he can show that he entered into the consent order transferring
custody without “knowledge of the consequences of that transfer.” A.M.H., 215 S.W.3d at
811 (quoting Blair, 77 S.W.3d at 147). In A.M.H., the biological parents submitted
affirmative evidence that, despite the language in the consent order transferring custody, they
were told that the transfer of custody was temporary and that, absent misconduct on their
part, they could regain custody in the future if they chose to do so. This evidence from the
parents showed that their voluntary relinquishment of custody was done without “knowledge
of the consequences.” Thus, they were permitted to assert their superior right to custody in
the subsequent modification proceedings. Id. at 811-12.
Consistent with the Supreme Court’s application of Blair in A.M.H., I would hold
that, absent other evidence, once biological parents agree to a valid consent order transferring
custody of the child to a non-parent, thereafter, the parents “have no superior rights to the
custody of” their child. A.M.H., 215 S.W.3d at 811. The parents, however, have the
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opportunity to show that, when they agreed to relinquish custody, they did not have
knowledge of the consequences of their decision. If they can carry the burden of proving that
they did not have such knowledge, then they can assert their superior right to custody in the
modification proceedings. Id. at 811-12. This can be done, as in A.M.H., by showing that
the parents were told that the order was temporary, or that they were told that they would not
have to show a material change in circumstances in order to regain custody.
In the instant case, the majority does not disagree with the trial court’s holding that
the permanent parenting plan under which the Stevensons received custody is a valid custody
order. The concurrence states explicitly that it is a valid, final order. Despite Mr. Sharp’s
assertions to the contrary, the trial court found that the order clearly shows that the order is
not temporary, but is a final, permanent award of custody to the Stevensons, and that Mr.
Sharp, represented by counsel at the time, knew that the order was final and permanent when
he consented to it.
Moreover, there is no indication that Mr. Sharp’s superior right to custody was not
fully protected in the initial custody proceeding. Mr. Sharp does not contend that, at the time
he entered into the consent order, he was not aware that he, as the child’s biological parent,
had a superior right to custody of his child. Knowing that he had a superior right to custody,
Mr. Sharp voluntarily forfeited custody to the Stevensons – not temporary custody,
permanent custody. This act is inherently inconsistent with Mr. Sharp’s claim that he
believed he was retaining his superior right to custody in the future.
As in A.M.H., Mr. Sharp had the opportunity to produce evidence that he was told
something contrary to the plain language of the initial custody order, i.e., he was told that the
order was temporary or that he would be permitted to assert his superior right to custody in
the future. He did not do so. Thus, Mr. Sharp produced no evidence that he did not have
“knowledge of the consequences of [the] transfer” of custody to the Stevensons. Blair, 77
S.W.3d at 147. Under A.M.H., then, Mr. Sharp no longer has superior rights to the custody
of the child.
The concurrence in this case would go even further from the Supreme Court’s
holdings in Blair and A.M.H. The concurrence would hold that a non-parent who has
permanent custody of a child pursuant to a valid consent order, when faced with a petition
to modify custody, must prove by clear and convincing evidence that, when the biological
parent entered into the consent order, he specifically waived his right to assert his superior
right to custody in future proceedings. This is clearly an extension of Blair.
The only cases cited by the concurrence in support of its approach are two Kentucky
cases whose facts are so different from the case at bar that they must be considered
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inapposite. In Greathouse v. Shreve, 891 S.W.2d 387 (Ky. 1995), the child’s parents never
married and initially lived with the child’s maternal grandmother. While the child was still
an infant, the father moved out, and later the mother departed as well, leaving the child in the
grandmother’s care. Id. at 388.
After several years, the father established his paternity. The grandmother then filed
an action to adopt the child and terminate the parental rights of both parents. This claim was
later dropped, and the maternal grandmother joined forces with the mother in filing a petition
for joint custody, to the exclusion of the father. Id. However, the mother lived out of state,
and it became apparent that she was merely a shill, a device to permit the grandmother to
obtain legal custody and exclude the father. Id. at 388, 390. Nevertheless, because the
mother sought custody jointly with the grandmother, the trial court employed a “best
interests” analysis and granted the request for joint custody to the mother and grandmother.
Id. at 389.
The father appealed to the intermediate appellate court. The intermediate appellate
court affirmed the award of custody, without addressing the portion of the order that awarded
joint custody to the mother. Id. Instead, it found that the father, by leaving the child in the
grandmother’s care, had waived his superior parental right to custody because he
“surrendered the care and custody of the child to another” and “acquiesced in the child’s
remaining there for an extended period of time.” Id. at 389. The intermediate appellate court
then applied a best interests analysis and affirmed the award of custody to the grandmother.
Id.
The father appealed again. The Kentucky Supreme Court found that joining the
mother in the grandmother’s petition for custody as a basis for applying the best interests test
“was a purely technical device, a method for evading the natural father’s superior claim to
custody.” Id. at 390. It also disagreed with the intermediate appellate court’s application of
the waiver principle. It noted the father’s assertion that, for several years, “he did not realize
he had any right to his son because of the fact that he and the child’s mother were never
married.” Id. The Kentucky Supreme Court said that, under the facts of that case, the trial
court needed to make factual findings on the issue of waiver, observing that the father’s long
term acquiescence in the living arrangement was a factor to be considered, but was not
conclusive. Id. Therefore, the Greathouse Court remanded the case to the trial court for
factual findings.4
4
In its analysis, the Greathouse Court cites Boatwright v. Walker, 715 S.W.2d 237 (Ky. Ct. App.
1986); Greathouse, 891 S.W.2d at 391. In Boatwright, the Court noted that a parent’s superior right to
the care and custody of his child can be “contracted away” by executing “an agreement of a permanent
(continued...)
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Greathouse, then, is distinguishable from the case at bar in numerous important
respects. Unlike the instant case, Greathouse involved the first proceeding regarding the
custody of the child. Moreover, the proceedings in Greathouse were complicated by the
mother’s participation in the grandmother’s petition for custody. In contrast to the instant
case, the Kentucky intermediate appellate court did not find waiver of the father’s superior
right from his voluntary consent to an order awarding permanent custody, but rather from the
father’s act of leaving the child in the grandmother’s care at a time when the father did not
have legal counsel and was not aware of his superior parental right. Thus, Greathouse
involves the protection of the parent’s superior right in the first instance. Of course, “parents
in the initial proceedings enjoy a strong presumption that they are entitled to the physical
custody of their children.” Blair, 77 S.W.3d at 146. In the instant case, Mr. Sharp’s superior
parental rights were fully protected in the first proceeding. Unlike Greathouse, Mr. Sharp
now seeks to modify the permanent custody order to which he consented, with full benefit
of counsel. Clearly, Greathouse is wholly inapplicable.
As to the second Kentucky case cited by the concurrence, although it indeed cites
Greathouse, it does not support the approach advocated by the concurrence. In Mullins v.
Picklesimer, 2010 WL 246063 (Ky. 2010), a biological mother and her same-sex partner
executed a consent order awarding the non-biological parent custody rights. After the
partners ceased living together, legal proceedings regarding the child’s custody ensued. Id.
at *2. The prior agreed custody order was invalidated on the basis of fraud. Id. at *6. The
Mullins Court held that, even though the child was never separated from the biological
parent, and even though the biological parent was not represented by counsel when she
executed the now-invalidated consent custody order, her execution of the consent order was
“as absolute waiver of part of her superior custody rights as the natural parent of the child.”
Id. at *8, *10. In so holding, the Mullins Court relied on a North Carolina case that
“couched its analysis in terms of whether the natural parent had acted in a manner
inconsistent with her constitutionally protected status as a natural parent.” Id at *9 (citing
Heatzig v. MacLean, 664 S.E.2sd 347, 350-51 (N.D. Ct. App. 2008)). The Mullins Court
found that the biological parent’s act of setting up a family unit with the partner and
executing a custody agreement constituted “clear and convincing evidence” that she “waived
her superior custody rights” to the child. Id. at *10.
Indeed, neither Kentucky case indicates that the biological parent must have expressly
waived his or her superior parental right in order to make a factual finding of waiver. Rather,
4
(...continued)
nature,” such as a consent for adoption. In such a case, once such a contract has been executed, even if
consent is later withdrawn, “the natural parent has waived its superior right, and the best interests of the
child take precedence.” Boatwright, 715 S.W.2d at 244.
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both of the Kentucky cases focus on whether the biological parent’s actions were inconsistent
with his or her protected status. Thus, the Kentucky cases cited by the concurrence do not
support the approach advocated in the concurrence. The concurrence points to no other case
in any jurisdiction that goes so far.
The concurrence claims that, under the standard it advocates, “no formal or written
waiver is required.” This is wishful thinking. Absent a “formal or written waiver,” how can
the child’s custodian prove the parent’s knowledge at the time of the initial custody order?
The evidence proffered by Mr. Sharp in this case is a prime example. The information Mr.
Sharp says that he was given at the time he entered into the agreed permanent parenting plan
was correct.5 He seeks to now vitiate the agreed permanent parenting plan based only on his
claimed presumption, articulated to no one at the time, that he would retain his superior right
to custody. As found by the trial court, the understanding now claimed by Mr. Sharp is at
odds with the language in the agreed permanent parenting plan and with his unequivocal act
of relinquishing permanent custody.
Under the standard advocated by the concurrence, even if the biological parent’s
superior right to custody is fully protected in the initial proceeding and the order giving
custody to a non-parent is valid, final and permanent, the child’s custodian must in effect
prove by clear and convincing evidence that the parent made an additional promise not to
assert his superior right to custody in the future. This holding effectively transforms
Tennessee into a jurisdiction in which “the parental preference [is applied] in all custody
proceedings, whether they are initial proceedings or proceedings to modify prior orders.”
Guinta v. Doxtator, 20 A.D.3d 47, 52, 794 N.Y.2d 516, 520 (N.Y. App. 2005). This
approach was specifically rejected in Blair, inasmuch as it “would effectively render existing
orders of custody to non-parents practically worthless.” Blair, 77 S.W.3d at 149.
The Supreme Court in Blair carefully balanced protection of the parent’s superior
right to custody against the child’s need for permanency and stability. Mr. Sharp’s
constitutional superior right to custody of his child was fully protected in all of the
proceedings leading up to the permanent order, and he nevertheless chose to relinquish
custody permanently. As emphasized in Blair, at this point we should protect “the interests
of the child in a stable and secure environment.” Blair, 77 S.W.3d at 149.
5
Mr. Sharp claims that his attorney at the time assured him that he was not giving up his parental
rights. This is, of course, correct. Mr. Sharp to this day retains his parental rights. His parental rights
are separate and distinct from his superior right to custody of his child.
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I would affirm the decision of the trial court. Therefore, I respectfully dissent.
_______________________________________
HOLLY M. KIRBY, JUDGE
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