IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT NASHVILLE
August 3, 2004 Session
IN RE CONSERVATORSHIP OF
MICHAEL THOMAS JONES AND TIMOTHY ALAN JONES
BEVERLY ANNE JONES
v.
KEVIN THOMAS JONES
A Consolidated Appeal from the Circuit Court (Probate Division) for Davidson County
Nos. 95P-96, 95P-97, No. 01D-1666 Frank G. Clement, Jr., Judge
No. M2004-00173-COA-R3-CV - Filed December 22, 2004
This appeal involves the court’s authority to order a parent to pay support for an adult disabled child.
The parties were married with two severely disabled adult sons. In 1995, while the parties were still
married, the probate court established them as co-conservators for their sons. In June 2001, the
mother filed a petition for divorce in circuit court. Neither party informed the divorce court of the
conservatorships that had been established for their sons. The circuit court entered a final decree of
divorce which incorporated a parenting plan, submitted by the father, which provided for joint
custody of the sons. The divorce decree required the mother to pay child support to the father. The
divorce decree was not appealed. The mother later filed a motion requesting that the decree
requiring her to pay child support be vacated pursuant to Rule 60.02(3), asserting that the divorce
court did not have subject matter jurisdiction to require her to pay support for the adult sons. Rather
than rule on the mother’s motion, the divorce court transferred the case to the probate court, which
had before it the conservatorship actions. The father then filed a motion in the probate court asking
it to confirm the divorce decree entered by the divorce court. The probate court, in the same order,
denied the mother’s motion to vacate and granted the father’s motion to confirm the decree adopting
the parenting plan, determining that the divorce decree entered by the divorce court was valid. The
mother now appeals that order. We reverse, concluding that the divorce court did not have subject
matter jurisdiction to order the parent to pay support for the adult disabled children, but finding that
the probate court is permitted to consider requiring the parents to pay support in the context of the
conservatorship proceedings.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court is
Reversed and Remanded
HOLLY M. KIRBY , J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which ALAN E. HIGHERS, J., and DAVID
R. FARMER , J., joined.
Vicky V. Klein, Madison, Tennessee, for the appellant, Beverly Anne Jones.
Phillip Robinson, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Kevin Thomas Jones.
OPINION
Plaintiff/Appellant Beverly Anne Jones (“Mother”) and Defendant/Appellee Kevin Thomas
Jones (“Father”) were married in 1970.1 Two sons were born of the marriage, Michael Thomas
Jones, born in 1971, and Timothy Alan Jones, born in 1975. Both adult sons have an inherited
metabolic disorder with mental retardation and other disorders. Both are severely disabled and are
unable to care for themselves.
On January 17, 1995, Mother and Father filed petitions in the Seventh Circuit (Probate) Court
for Davidson County (“probate court”) to establish conservatorships for their adult sons. The cases
were filed under the probate court docket numbers 95P-96 (Timothy) and 95P-97 (Michael). In the
petitions, the parties alleged that Michael and Timothy, at that time ages twenty-three and nineteen
respectively, were completely unable to handle their own affairs, live on their own, or earn an
income. They averred that the only income available to each son was a social security payment of
$303 per month, an amount not sufficient to meet their financial needs. Therefore, the parties
proposed that they pay the sons’ excess expenses from “their own household income, since they are
the parents of [Michael and Timothy].” In light of those facts, the parties requested that they be
appointed as co-conservators of both sons. On February 17, 1995, the probate court appointed the
parties as co-conservators. The issue of support was not addressed in the order because the parties
had agreed to provide support.
Over the next several years, the parties continued as co-conservators of Michael and Timothy,
filing status reports on January 22, 2001, May 23, 2002, and April 1 2003. In all of the status
reports, the parties stated that the social security payments to the sons did not cover their expenses,
and that the parties had paid the balance of their sons’ expenses from their own resources.
On June 27, 2001, Mother filed a petition for divorce against Father in the Second Circuit
Court for Davidson County (“divorce court”). In her complaint, Mother listed Michael and Timothy
as “minor children” of the marriage, gave their birth dates, and stated that “[b]oth children are
mentally retarded and the parties are the legal guardians.” Mother told neither her attorney nor the
divorce court about the conservatorships established by the probate court for the parties’ sons.
On January 18, 2002, Father filed a motion in the divorce court for child support pending the
outcome of the divorce proceedings. On February 20, 2002, the divorce court ordered Mother to pay
Father $417 per month in child support pending the outcome of the case.
1
The parties apparently divorced in 1984 and remarried in 1986.
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On February 15, 2002, Father filed an answer in the divorce court to Mother’s divorce
complaint and counterclaimed for divorce, as well. In his answer and counterclaim, Father stated
that the parties were the parents of two “adult, but severely disabled children,” who would never be
self-sufficient and would require continued financial support by the parties. Father’s counterclaim
noted that the parties had, by agreement, shared custody “of the children with each of the parties
having both children for a one week period of time, and thereafter, alternating the children week to
week.” Like Mother, however, Father notified neither his attorney nor the divorce court about the
conservatorships established by the probate court.
On June 3, 2002, the divorce case was tried, and on June 24, 2002, the divorce court entered
a final decree of divorce. As part of the decree, the divorce court approved a Permanent Parenting
Plan (“the Parenting Plan”) that had previously been proposed by Father. The Plan stated that
Michael and Timothy were “severely handicapped and will require continued support by the parties
after their majority.” It stated that the parties would share equally the rights and responsibilities of
caring for Michael and Timothy, and that they would continue their arrangement of allowing the sons
to stay together with each parent having custody of both every other week. The Plan designated
Mother as the custodian for Timothy and Father as the custodian for Michael for purposes of state
and federal statutes that require such designations. It further provided that Mother would pay $783
per month to Father in child support.2 Mother did not appeal the final decree.
On March 28, 2003, Mother filed a motion in the divorce court to set aside the final decree
of divorce pursuant to Rule 60.02(3) of the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure.3 In the motion,
Mother alleged that the decree was void to the extent that it adjudicated matters regarding Michael
and Timothy. She argued that, because Michael and Timothy had reached the age of majority when
the matter was tried, the divorce court “was without subject matter jurisdiction to make any orders
regarding said children, including, but not limited to, those pertaining to custody and child support.”
Because it was void ab initio, Mother argued, the divorce court’s order should be vacated and Father
should be required to return to her the $6,315 that she had paid in child support to date. Father filed
his response to Mother’s motion on June 2, 2003, arguing that the divorce court had jurisdiction to
2
Mother’s annual salary was $90,000 per year, and Father’s salary was $44,200 per year plus bonuses. The
Plan calculated Mother’s obligation by determining the difference between Mother’s obligation for one son ($1,673)
and Father’s obligation for one son ($890 per month), which is $783 per month.
3
Rule 60.02 provides in part:
On motion and upon such terms as are just, the court may relieve a party or the party’s
legal representative from a final judgment, order or proceeding for the following reasons: (1)
mistake, inadvertence, surprise or excusable neglect; (2) fraud (whether heretofore denominated
intrinsic or extrinsic), misrepresentation, or other misconduct of an adverse party; (3) the judgment
is void; (4) the judgment has been satisfied, released or discharged, . . . ; or (5) any other reason
justifying relief from the operation of the judgment. . . .
Tenn. R. Civ. P. 60.02.
-3-
order support for a severely disabled child past the age of majority pursuant to Tennessee Code
Annotated § 36-5-101(p). That statute provides:
(p)(1) Except as provided in subdivision (p)(2), the court may continue child
support beyond a child’s minority for the benefit of a child who is handicapped or
disabled, as defined by the Americans with Disabilities Act, until such child reaches
twenty-one (21) years of age.
(2) Provided, that such age limitation shall not apply if such child is severely
disabled and living under the care and supervision of a parent and the court
determines that it is in the child’s best interest to remain under such care and
supervision and the obligor is financially able to continue to pay child support. In
such cases, the court may require the obligor to continue to pay child support for such
period as it deems in the best interest of the child.
(3) In so doing, the court may use the child support guidelines.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-5-101(p) (2001 & Supp. 2003). It is undisputed that Michael and Timothy
are both “severely disabled” as that term is used in subsection (p)(2).
On July 7, 2003, the divorce court issued an order on Mother’s motion. The divorce court
agreed with Mother’s contention “that it in fact had no jurisdiction over the persons of the children,
as to parental responsibility and residential time due to the conservatorship order.” Rather than
granting or denying her request to set aside the divorce decree, the divorce court transferred the case
to the probate court “so that any further orders may be consistent with the conservatorship in that
court.” The divorce court’s order provided that all other orders, particularly the child support orders,
would remain in effect “[u]ntil the Seventh Circuit [Probate] Court makes any further orders.” Thus,
the divorce case was transferred to the probate division of the circuit court and was assigned to the
same trial judge who was presiding over the conservatorship cases. The divorce case, however, was
not consolidated with the conservatorship cases.
After the divorce case was transferred, Father filed a motion in the conservatorship cases to
approve and confirm the Parenting Plan entered in the divorce case as the management plan for
Michael and Timothy. Mother objected, arguing that the probate court had no authority to approve
or confirm a void order entered by another court. She argued further that the probate court did not
have jurisdiction to enter a “parenting plan” for Michael and Timothy, because such parenting plans
were applicable only to minor children. On July 25, 2003, the probate court heard arguments on
Mother’s motion in the divorce action to set aside the divorce decree, as well as Father’s motion in
the conservatorship actions to approve the Parenting Plan. The matter was taken under advisement.
On December 31, 2003, the probate court entered identical orders in the divorce case and in
the conservatorship cases, denying Mother’s motion to set aside the final divorce decree and granting
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Father’s motion to approve and confirm the Parenting Plan entered by the divorce court. The probate
court held:
The co-conservators/parents of the children and their respective counsel participated
in the formation of the Parenting Plan and they voluntarily agreed to the Plan. The
[divorce court] judge . . . approved the Parenting Plan that had been agreed upon by
the parties. This Court finds nothing irregular in the Parenting Plan or the procedure
by which it was adopted by the parties or the trial judge. Moreover, this Court finds
nothing in the Plan that is adverse to the rights and privileges of the wards of the
conservatorships. Further, this Court finds no basis under Rule 60, Tenn. R. Civ. P.,
to justify relief from the agreed Parenting Plan or the order approving the plan.
Therefore, based on its understanding that the parties had voluntarily agreed to the Parenting Plan,4
the probate court determined that there was no basis for relief under Rule 60 from the divorce court’s
decree and confirmed the Parenting Plan. From that order, Mother now appeals.5
On appeal, Mother argues that the probate court erred in refusing to set aside the final decree
of divorce insofar as it addressed issues pertaining to Michael and Timothy, particularly the
provision ordering her to pay child support. Mother maintains that the divorce court lacked subject
matter jurisdiction to adjudicate matters pertaining to the parties’ adult children. She asserts that
there was no agreement between the parties regarding child support, and argues that there is no
statutory authority for ordering her to pay child support for adult children. Mother contends that
section 36-5-101(p) did not give the divorce court authority for the child support award in this case.
She also argues that Tennessee’s conservatorship statutes provide no statutory authority for the
probate court to enter a “Parenting Plan” as a management plan for Michael and Timothy in the
conservatorship cases. Moreover, Mother argues, there is no need for such a Plan. On the contrary,
Mother points out, the status reports filed by the parties as joint conservators indicate that the parties
work amicably together as co-conservators. Therefore, she claims, the probate court’s confirmation
and approval of the divorce court’s order was nothing more than an attempt to breathe life into an
otherwise void and unnecessary order.
The facts in this case are not disputed, and only questions of law are involved. Therefore,
we review the issues in this appeal de novo, with no presumption of correctness. Northland Ins. Co.
v. State, 33 S.W.3d 727, 729 (Tenn. 2000) (stating that questions of subject matter jurisdiction are
issues of law); see Southwest Williamson County Cmty. Ass’n v. Saltsman, 66 S.W.3d 872, 876
(Tenn. Ct. App. 2001) (same).
4
The divorce court adopted the plan proposed by Father, and the record does not indicate that the parties in
fact agreed on the Parenting Plan.
5
A copy of the December 31, 2003 order was entered on the record in all three cases – the divorce case and
each of the conservatorship cases. Mother filed separate notices of appeal in all three cases, and the appeals were
consolidated by this Court sua sponte.
-5-
We first address Mother’s argument that the divorce court lacked subject matter jurisdiction
to order her to pay child support for her adult disabled children. Father argues that section 36-5-
101(p) provides such authority. Issues of statutory interpretation are questions of law, which we
review de novo. Kilby v. Kilby, No. 03A01-9712-CH-00549, 1999 WL 76065, at *3 (Tenn. Ct. App.
Jan. 28, 1999). “Our role in construing statutes is to ascertain and give effect to the legislative intent
without unduly restricting or expanding a statute’s coverage beyond its intended scope.” Id. In
interpreting a statute, we must first look to the plain and ordinary meaning of the language in the
statute “without forced or subtle construction that would limit or extend the meaning of the
language.” Id. If the meaning of the statute is plain, there is no need to inquire into the legislative
intent, because the legislature will be presumed to intend what the statute says. Carson Creek
Vacation Resorts, Inc. v. State, 865 S.W.2d 1, 2 (Tenn. 1993). If, however, the language of the
statute is ambiguous, we must attempt to discern the legislature’s intent from the statutory scheme
as a whole, as well as the legislative history. State ex rel. Pope v. U.S. Fire Ins. Co., 145 S.W.3d
529, 535 (Tenn. 2004).
Applying this familiar standard, we look first to the language of the statute under scrutiny.
Section (p), quoted in full above, provides that, for a severely disabled child, “the court may continue
child support beyond a child’s minority” so long as continuing that support is in the best interest of
the child.6 Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-5-101(p)(1), (2) (emphasis added). In this case, of course, there
was no child support order in place when the parties’ sons reached majority, and therefore there was
no child support order to “continue.” We must determine, then, whether the statute authorizes a trial
court in a divorce case to order support for a child who turned eighteen years old before the divorce
action was filed.
A review of the law regarding the duty to support adult disabled children is helpful to an
understanding of the parties’ arguments on appeal. In England and in early American common law,
the duty of a parent to support his or her children, regardless of age, was a moral obligation, not a
legal one. Thus, in many jurisdictions, there was no legal obligation to support children absent a
statute imposing such an obligation. See M. C. Dransfield, Annotation, Parent’s Obligation to
Support Adult Child, 1 A.L.R.2d 910, § 2 (1948); Comment, The Parental Duty to Support Disabled
Adult Children, 9 DePaul L. Rev. 45 (1960). Over time, it became generally accepted in most
jurisdictions that, under the common law, a parent has a legal obligation to support his minor child,
but has no obligation to support a child past the age of majority. See Noralyn Harlow, J. D.,
Annotation, Postmajority Disability as Reviving Parental Duty to Support Child, 48 A.L.R.4th 919,
at § 2 (1986); Dransfield, supra, 1 A.L.R.2d 910, at § 3. Many jurisdictions, however, recognize an
exception to this general rule, either by common law or by statute, and require a parent to support
his or her child beyond majority if the child is mentally or physically incapacitated or otherwise
unable to care for him or her self. Harlow, supra, 48 A.L.R.4th 919, at § 2; Dransfield, supra, 1
6
In addition, for the support to extend past the age of 21, the child must be “living under the care and
supervision of a parent and the court [must] determine[] that it is in the child’s best interest to remain under such
care and supervision and the obligor is financially able to continue to pay child support.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-5-
101(p)(2) (2001 & Supp. 2003).
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A.L.R.2d 919, at § 5. This exception is generally based on the theory that a disabled child is
prevented from being emancipated from his parents and, thus, is still a minor in the eyes of the law.
Harlow, supra, 48 at A.L.R.4th 919, at § 2.
In Sayne v. Sayne, 284 S.W.2d 309 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1955), Tennessee joined the majority
of jurisdictions in recognizing a common law duty of parents to support their adult disabled child.
In Sayne, a divorce case, the parties’ twenty-seven year-old daughter had been disabled since
childhood. The trial court awarded custody of the daughter to the mother and ordered the father to
pay child support. The father appealed, arguing that he had no duty to support his daughter because
she was past the age of majority. See Sayne, 284 S.W.2d at 310. The appellate court rejected the
father’s position and held that the trial court had the authority to order the father to pay child support
for his adult disabled child. Id. at 311-12.
The Sayne court recognized a split in authority on the subject of whether, absent a statute
imposing such an obligation, a parent can be required to support an adult disabled child. It noted that
a minority of jurisdictions had held that, “in the absence of a statute imposing liability, the parent,
even though able to provide support, is under no obligation to support an adult child unable to
support and care for itself.” Id. at 311. The Sayne court observed, however, that the majority of
jurisdictions demonstrated “a growing tendency” to require such support, even in the absence of a
statute, calling it the “humanitarian rule.” Id. The reasoning, the court stated, was that a disabled
child cannot care for himself, and would have the same need for support, care, and maintenance both
before and after he becomes an adult. Id. (citing Wells v. Wells, 44 S.E.2d 31, 34 (N.C. 1947)). The
Sayne court cited with approval Crain v. Mallone, 113 S.W. 67, 68 (Ky. Ct. App. 1908), in which
the court opined, “[W]e see no difference in the principle between the duty imposed upon the parent
to support the infant and the obligation to care for the adult, who is equally, if not more, dependent
upon the parent.” Id. at 312. The Sayne court stated that the child support statute did not limit the
power of the court to award child support only to minor children. Thus, the court adopted the
“humanitarian rule” and held that a parent’s obligation to pay child support may extend past the
child’s age of majority when the child is disabled. Id.
Until 1999, the holding in Sayne was cited as the basis for the proposition that Tennessee
recognized the common law rule that parents have a duty to continue to support a disabled child past
the age of majority.7 See, e.g., Sandusky v. Sandusky, No. M2000-00288-COA-R3-CV, 2001 WL
327898, at *4 (Tenn. Ct. App. Apr. 5, 2001); Howard v. Howard, 991 S.W.2d 251, 256 (Tenn. Ct.
App. 1999); Smith v. Smith, No. 03A01-9410-GS-00391, 1995 WL 140763, at *1 (Tenn. Ct. App.
Mar. 31, 1995); Mingle v. Mingle, No. 01-A01-9305-CH-00197, 1993 WL 377609, at *2 (Tenn.
Ct. App. Sept. 24, 1993); Burks v. Burks, No. 6, 1991 WL 12846, at *4 n.2 (Tenn. Ct. App. Feb.
8, 1991); Barnhill v. Barnhill, 826 S.W.2d 443, 451 n.4 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1991); Stevens v.
Raymond, 773 S.W.2d 935, 938 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1989); Hodge v. Hodge, No. 753, 1988 WL 55729,
7
Some courts limited the exception to cases in which the child acquired his or her disability during minority.
See, e.g., Howard v. Howard, 991 S.W .2d 251, 256 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999); see generally Noralyn O. Harlow, J.D.,
Annotation, Postmajority Disability as Reviving Parental Duty to Support Child, 48 A.L.R.4th 919 (1986).
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at *1 (Tenn. Ct. App. June 2, 1988); see also Sanders v. Sanders, 902 P.2d 310, 315 (Ala. 1995)
(relying on Sayne as persuasive authority for establishing that a parent has a continuing duty to
support adult dependent children); Riggs v. Riggs, 578 S.E.2d 3, 5 & n.1 (S.C. 2003) (identifying
Sayne as authority for the proposition that Tennessee recognizes a common law duty of parental
support for an adult disabled child); 59 Am. Jur. 2d Parent and Child § 78 & n.1 (citing Sayne for
proposition that parents’ duty to support child remains unchanged after majority for a child “of weak
body or mind, and unable to care for himself after coming of age”).
In early 1999, however, a trilogy of Court of Appeals cases were decided that appeared to
reverse the holding in Sayne. See Day v. Gatewood, No. 02A01-9805-CV-00141, 1999 WL 269928
(Tenn. Ct. App. Apr. 30, 1999); Scott v. Scott, No. 03A01-9708-CH-00305, 1999 WL 39506 (Tenn.
Ct. App. Jan. 29, 1999); Kilby v. Kilby, No. 03A01-9712-CH-00549, 1999 WL 76065 (Tenn. Ct.
App. Jan. 28, 1999).8 In Kilby, the parties were divorced at a time when their disabled daughter was
a minor. In the divorce decree, the parties were awarded joint custody of the child, but no provision
was made for child support. Kilby, 1999 WL 76065, at *1. Later, just after the daughter turned
eighteen years old, the mother filed a petition for primary physical custody. The father objected,
arguing that the divorce court no longer had jurisdiction over custody matters because the daughter
had become an adult. Id. at *2. The trial court rejected that argument and awarded primary physical
custody to the mother. The trial court further ordered the father to pay the mother child support and
to pay for hospitalization insurance for the child. Id. at *2.
On appeal, the father again argued that the divorce court had no jurisdiction to consider the
matter of custody and financial support for an adult child. The appellate court agreed, reasoning that
Tennessee Code Annotated § 36-6-101, which gives a trial court authority to award custody and
child support in a divorce case, applies only to “minor children.” That statute reads in part:
(a)(1) In a suit for annulment, divorce or separate maintenance, where the custody of
a minor child or minor children is a question, the court may, notwithstanding a decree
for annulment, divorce or separate maintenance is denied, award the care, custody
and control of such child or children to either of the parties to the suit or to both
parties in the instance of joint custody or shared parenting, or to some suitable
person, as the welfare and interest of the child or children may demand, and the court
may decree that suitable support be made by the natural parents or those who stand
in the place of the natural parents by adoption. Such decree shall remain within the
control of the court and be subject to such changes or modification as the exigencies
of the case may require.
***
(b) Notwithstanding any provision of this section to the contrary, the party, or parties,
or other person awarded custody and control of such child or children shall be
8
Both Kilby and Scott were decided by the same court one day apart from one another.
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entitled to enforce the provisions of the court’s decree concerning the suitable
support of such child or children in the appropriate court of any county in this state
in which such child or children reside; provided, that such court shall have divorce
jurisdiction, if service of process is effectuated upon the obligor within this state.
Jurisdiction to modify or alter such decree shall remain in the exclusive control of the
court which issued such decree.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-6-101(a)(1) & (b) (2001 & Supp. 2004). The Kilby court determined that
“minor” means “any person who has not attained 18 years of age.” Kilby, 1999 WL 76065, at *3.
The court acknowledged the Sayne decision, which held that a trial court could, in the context of
divorce proceedings, order a parent to pay support for an adult disabled child. It noted, however, that
since Sayne was decided, legislation had been enacted specifically addressing mentally ill and
mentally retarded persons. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 33-1-101 (2001). Id. at *4-*5. Moreover, the
Kilby court observed that the conservatorship statutes, Tennessee Code Annotated § 34-11-101, et
seq., and § 34-13-101, et seq., were enacted in 1993. Those statutes defined “minor” as “any person
who has not attained eighteen (18) years of age and who has not otherwise been emancipated,” while
“disabled person” was defined as “any person eighteen (18) years of age or older determined to be
in need of partial or full supervision, protection, and assistance” because of his disability. Id. at *5.
In light of this legislation, the Kilby court held, it was “clear that the meaning of the word minor in
the Tennessee Code designates a person under the age of 18,” and that section 36-6-101, therefore,
was not a basis on which the trial court had jurisdiction to modify custody. Id. at 5. The appellate
court observed that the procedures outlined in the conservatorship statutes should have been
followed, and commented that a “conservator would have the authority to seek a decree requiring
the parents to contribute” to the support of the parties’ adult disabled child. Id. at *5-*6.
In Scott, as in Kilby, the parties were divorced when their disabled daughter was a minor.
In the divorce decree, the paternal grandparents were awarded custody of the parties’ child. Scott,
1999 WL 39506, at *1. After the daughter reached the age of majority, the mother filed a petition
in the divorce court for primary custody of her daughter. The father and the grandparents objected
to the mother’s petition. In the same proceeding, the father and his parents filed a petition to
establish a conservatorship for the adult disabled child, requesting that the court appoint the
grandparents as co-conservators. The trial court dismissed the mother’s petition for custody and
granted the conservatorship petition. The trial court stated that the mother’s petition for custody
pursuant to the divorce statutes was “the inappropriate avenue through which to address the present,
special needs of [the daughter],” and that “the proper proceeding is an action for conservatorship.
. . .” Id. Accordingly, the trial court in Scott concluded that the daughter’s best interest was served
by appointing the grandparents as her co-conservators. Id. The mother appealed.
The appellate court in Scott determined, as in Kilby, that the term “minor” in section 36-6-
101 means any person who has not reached age eighteen. Id. at *2-*3. Because section 36-6-101
authorized the trial court’s jurisdiction only over cases involving minor children, the appellate court
reasoned, the trial court properly dismissed the mother’s petition for custody under that statute. Id.
at *4. The mother argued that, under Sayne, the trial court retained jurisdiction over matters
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involving adult children who were disabled, even absent statutory authority. The appellate court
rejected that argument and distinguished Sayne, because that case did not address the issue of
custody of the adult disabled child. Id. at *3. The appellate court in Scott held that the trial court
had properly adjudicated the conservatorship petition, stating that “T.C.A. 34-11-121 conveys
plenary powers to the court in conservatorship actions,” and that “the state has the constitutional
power to act for incompetents and for partial incompetents to the extent of the partial incompetency.”
Id. (footnote omitted). Thus, the Scott court held that the trial court properly adjudicated the issue
of the adult disabled child’s custody pursuant to the conservatorship statutes and not the divorce
statutes. Id. at *4.
A few months later, the Court of Appeals decided a similar issue in Day v. Gatewood, No.
02A01-9805-CV-00141, 1999 WL 269928 (Tenn. Ct. App. Apr. 30, 1999). In that case, the parties
divorced when their son, who was not disabled, was a minor. The mother was granted custody of
the child, and the father was ordered to pay child support. Day, 1999 WL 269928, at *1. A few
months after the son’s eighteenth birthday, but one month before he had graduated from high school,
the son was involved in a car accident that left him disabled. The mother obtained custody of the
parties’ son. When the son was twenty-four years old, the mother filed a petition in the divorce court
seeking an order requiring the father to continue to pay child support based on the son’s severe
disability. A consent order was later entered, in which the father agreed to continue to pay child
support. Id. When the son was twenty-eight years old, the father filed a petition to terminate his
child support obligation, asserting that the son was no longer completely disabled. The petition was
denied.
On appeal, the father in Day asserted that the trial court did not have subject matter
jurisdiction to entertain the mother’s petition for continued support and that, consequently, the
consent order requiring him to pay support was void and unenforceable. Id. The appellate court
agreed. The Day court acknowledged the holding in Sayne, but noted that Sayne had been premised
on the fact that there was, at that time, no statutory authority expressly or implicitly limiting the trial
court’s authority to award support for adult children. Relying on Kilby and Scott, the Day court
concluded that the Tennessee divorce statutes applied only to “minor” children and, therefore, did
not authorize the court to exercise continuing jurisdiction pursuant to the divorce statutes after the
child had turned eighteen. Like the Kilby and Scott courts, the Day court commented that
“Tennessee’s conservatorship statutes provide an appropriate avenue for addressing the needs of the
parties’ adult child.” Id. at *5 (footnote omitted). It remarked that, if a conservator were appointed
for the son, then “the individual appointed as his conservator may then request an order requiring
[the father] and/or [the mother] to contribute to [the son’s] support.” Id.
Effective May 26, 1999, about a month after Day was decided, the Tennessee General
Assembly, obviously in response to Day, amended section 36-5-101(p) to include subsection (p)(2),
quoted above. Subsection (p)(2) “requires (as did the common law) continuing support of a severely
disabled child, subject to findings of the child’s best interest and the obligor[’s] ability to pay.” State
ex rel. Holtsinger v. Elrod, No. E2001-00257-COA-R3-CV, 2002 WL 62984, at *1 (Tenn. Ct. App.
Jan. 17, 2002).
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In the instant case, Father acknowledges that Kilby, Scott, and Day reversed the holding in
Sayne by concluding that a trial court has no authority under the divorce statutes to award child
support with respect to a child beyond the age of majority. He argues, however, that by enacting
subsection (p)(2), the Legislature indicated clearly that it intended to reject the Kilby-Scott-Day cases
and “enshrine” Sayne as the applicable law. Furthermore, he claims, the phrase “continues child
support” in subsection (p)(1) should be interpreted to apply to parties who have been providing
support for their disabled adult child continuously before and after the child reached majority and
who should be required to continue to pay such support, even if the support was not paid pursuant
to a court order. To hold otherwise, he argues, would impose an irrational distinction between
severely disabled children whose parents divorce before they turn eighteen, and those whose parents
divorce after they turn eighteen.
Mother argues that, under the circumstances of this case, the amendment to the divorce
statutes does not alter the application of Kilby, Scott, and Day. Mother contends that the addition
of subsection (p)(2) to section 36-5-101 authorizes a trial court to “continue” a child support order
indefinitely for a severely disabled child, but only if there is an existing support order to “continue”
that was entered when the child was a minor. Mother maintains that the divorce statutes do not
authorize a trial court to order support for an adult disabled child if no child support order was
entered during the child’s minority.
In support, Mother notes that the Kilby, Scott, and Day cases were cited with approval in a
case with facts similar to those in the instant case and decided after the effective date of the statute,
Mora v. Mora, No. W1999-02483-COA-R3-CV, 2001 WL 609567 (Tenn. Ct. App. June 4, 2001).
In Mora, the parties had an adult disabled daughter. They divorced in 1991. In post-divorce
proceedings, the divorce court granted the mother’s petition for custody of the parties’ 45-year-old
disabled daughter and ordered the father to pay child support. The appellate court reversed, citing
the Kilby, Scott, and Day cases and holding that the trial court did not have subject matter
jurisdiction to appoint a guardian or to order the father to pay support for the parties’ adult disabled
child. Mora, 2001 WL 609567, at *4-*6. It observed that the conservatorship statutes would be “an
appropriate avenue” to address the disabled daughter’s needs. Therefore, Mother relies on Mora as
a case decided after the amendment to section 36-5-101(p) that reaffirms the holding in Kilby, Scott,
and Day.
Mora v. Mora, supra, however, did not address the issue of whether the enactment of section
36-5-101(p)(2) conferred jurisdiction in the context of divorce proceedings for a court to pay child
support for an adult disabled child, where no such order was entered while the disabled child was
a minor. The appellate court does not mention the statute, and it appears that the trial court’s order
predated the amendment. In any event, the issue presented here was not addressed in Mora. Indeed,
we have found no controlling Tennessee decision. Therefore, it appears that whether section 36-5-
101(p)(2) provides the statutory authority necessary for a divorce court to enter an order requiring
a noncustodial parent to pay child support indefinitely for an adult disabled child , where there was
no child support order entered during the child’s minority, is an issue of first impression in
Tennessee.
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Section 36-5-101(p) states that it confers jurisdiction on a trial court to “continue child
support” for a severely disabled child beyond the child’s minority. This language indicates that the
trial court is authorized to do so only where there was in existence a child support order that was
entered when the child was a minor, or as a modification of a child support order that was valid when
it was entered. We note that prior to the addition of subsection (p)(2), section (p) included the same
language as in the current subsection (a), which allowed a trial court to “continue child support” for
a handicapped or disabled child, but the provision limited the continuation of that support to “until
such child reaches twenty-one (21) years of age.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-5-101(p). The legislature’s
addition of subsection (p)(2) merely eliminated the twenty-one-year-old age limitation in the case
of a child that is severely disabled “subject to findings of the child’s best interest and the obligor’s
ability to pay.” Holtsinger, 2002 WL 62984, at *1.
Father argues that this interpretation leads to an absurd result, because it creates two classes
of severely disabled children – those whose parents divorce before they turn eighteen and children
whose parents divorce after they turn eighteen. He contends that the only sensible interpretation of
the amended statute is that the trial court may order support payments for an adult disabled child
where the parent has continuously provided support prior to the petition, regardless of whether the
support was paid pursuant to a court order. Father maintains that this would be an order
“continuing” child support within the meaning of the amended statute.
Father argues that the legislative history of Section 36-5-101(p)(2) supports his position that
the legislature intended to reverse by statute the holdings in the Kilby-Scott-Day line of cases.9 The
legislative debates over the 1999 amendment in fact reflect that the main goal in enacting the new
provision was to eliminate the age limitation applicable to “handicapped or disabled” children in
situations in which the child is severely disabled and residing with a parent. It indicates that the
word “continue” was not included casually in the amendment; indeed, its inclusion was important
to its passage. Concern was expressed that the statute as amended might be overly broad. In the
March 23, 1999 House of Representatives debate, Representative Carol Chumney asked a question
about whether the statute would apply in a hypothetical situation in which a healthy forty-year-old
child of divorced parents suddenly became disabled and it was necessary for the adult disabled child
to live with one of the parents. Representative L. Mike Williams stated that “after age 21 there is
no custodial parent” unless that parent wants to continue care. In such a case, the Representative
stated, the non-custodial parent should be obligated to help. Representative Chumney then expressed
her opinion that “the word ‘continue’ is important to be in there.” In the Senate debates, the new
provision was described as merely “a housekeeping clarification bill” eliminating the twenty-one
year old age limitation for support of severely, as opposed to mildly, disabled children. Overall, the
legislative debate regarding this provision does not reflect an intent to reinstate the holding in Sayne
as the law in Tennessee.
9
On August 16, 2004, in response to the Court’s request at oral argument, Father submitted a transcript of
the legislative history of Tennessee Code Annotated 36-5-101(p).
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Since there are no controlling Tennessee decisions and the legislative intent is not clearly
indicated in the legislative history, we look to other jurisdictions for persuasive authority. A similar
Texas statute was interpreted in Red v. Red, 552 S.W.2d 90 (Tex. 1977). In that case, the parties
were divorced in 1963, and the mother was awarded custody of the parties’ fourteen-year-old
disabled daughter. The father was ordered to pay child support until the daughter reached age
eighteen. The father, however, voluntarily continued to provide support for the daughter until she
became twenty-six years old in 1975. Red, 552 S.W.2d at 91. In May 1975, after the father stopped
making his voluntary payments, the mother filed a petition in the divorce court to modify the 1963
divorce decree to provide that the father had a continuing duty to pay support for the disabled
daughter. The applicable Texas statute provided that a divorce court had the authority to order that
child support payments for a disabled child “be continued after the 18th birthday and extended for
an indefinite period.” Id. at 92 (quoting Tex. Fam. Code § 14.05 (1974)). The Red court held that
the trial court was only authorized to require child support payments to “be continued” past majority
if the request for continuation of such support were made before the child turned eighteen. The court
determined that the original divorce decree was a final order, that the father’s duties thereunder had
been fully performed and discharged, and that “[s]ubsequent thereto the divorce court ceased to have
jurisdiction over the subject matter.” Id.; see also In re Jacobson, 842 A.2d 77, 79 (N.H. 2004)
(holding that a statute allowing a court to extend support beyond the time of majority presupposes
that an existing child support order was entered before the child reached the age of majority).
Therefore, in Red, the divorce court’s jurisdiction to “continue” the original child support order
ended when the original child support obligation expired because the child reached majority.
In the instant case, there was no child support order entered while Michael and Timothy were
minors; the divorce petition was not filed until well after they were eighteen. Father makes a cogent
argument that it does not make sense to distinguish between adult disabled children whose parents
divorce before the child turns eighteen and those whose parents divorce afterward, provided the child
was disabled and receiving financial support prior to reaching majority. Nevertheless, the language
of the Texas statute in Red and the language of the Tennessee statute in the instant case is similar
in that both statutes permit a divorce court to “continue” support payments indefinitely for adult
disabled children. Under the reasoning in Red, and in view of the legislature’s emphasis on the word
“continue” in the legislative history, we must conclude that the word “continue” in the amended
statute refers to the continuation of a valid child support order. Neither the language of the statute
nor the legislative history supports Father’s argument that the addition of subsection (p)(2) was
meant to reaffirm or “enshrine” the holding in Sayne
Therefore, in applying section 36-5-101(p)(2), we must conclude that a trial court has the
authority to “continue child support” for a severely disabled child only where an order awarding
support was entered when the child was a minor, or as a modification of any other valid child support
order. In this case, where the parties’ disabled sons had turned eighteen before the divorce petition
was filed, the trial court was without jurisdiction to order Father to pay child support. See Day, 1999
WL 269928, at *2 (“[T]he express language of the [applicable divorce statutes] suggests that the
divorce court’s authority to order child support is limited to cases in which the parties’ child or
children are under the age of eighteen.”). For these reasons, we conclude that section 36-5-101(p)(2)
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did not provide authority for the divorce court’s award of child support for Michael and Timothy in
the instant case.
Of course, the parties can agree to obligate the non-custodial parent to provide support for
such a disabled adult child in a marital dissolution agreement or otherwise. “These agreements are
enforceable as contractual obligations even after they have been incorporated into a divorce decree.”
Sandusky, 2001 WL 327898, at *4; see Penland v. Penland, 521 S.W.2d 222, at 224-25 (Tenn.
1975) (enforcing provision in the parties’ property settlement agreement requiring the father to pay
college expenses for adult children); In re Lovelace (Lovelace v. Lovelace), No. M2003-01274-
COA-R3-CV, 2004 WL 1459409, at *3 (Tenn. Ct. App. June 28, 2004) (in a conservatorship case,
enforcing the father’s obligation to provide child support for his adult disabled son, where the father
had agreed to provide such support in the parties’ marital dissolution agreement).
In the instant case, the trial court found that the parties agreed on the Parenting Plan in the
divorce case and apparently determined that it had the authority to order Mother to pay child support
on that basis. The record in this case, however, includes no indication of any agreement between the
parties regarding Mother’s obligation to provide support. To the contrary, it appears that Father
proposed the Parenting Plan, and the divorce court adopted it. Under these circumstances, we find
that the Probate Court erred in asserting jurisdiction over the child support issues on the basis of an
agreement between the parties.
In summary, in the context of the divorce proceedings, the divorce court was without
jurisdiction, either by statute or by agreement of the parties, to enter a child support order for
Michael and Timothy. Consequently, any order entered by the divorce court regarding the care and
support of Michael and Timothy was “a nullity and is therefore unenforceable.” Day, 1999 WL
269928, at *1. We must now consider whether the Probate Court had jurisdiction to approve the
provisions in the Parenting Plan in the context of the conservatorship proceedings.
Mother argues that, because the divorce court’s order was null and void, then the Probate
Court’s decision to approve the order was a futile attempt to breathe life into a void order. She
claims that there is no authority for a court in conservatorship proceedings to adopt a divorce
Parenting Plan as a management plan for adult wards. In response, Father argues, that the cases on
which Mother relied in support of her other arguments on appeal – Kilby, Scott, Day, and Mora –
all indicate that the conservatorship statutes are the appropriate avenue for addressing the needs of
an adult disabled child. He notes that under Tennessee Code Annotated §§ 34-1-121 and 34-3-101,
courts are given broad discretion to require additional actions in conservatorship cases. Father
maintains that these statutes authorized the probate court to enter any such orders that would be
necessary for the support of Michael and Timothy in this case.
Father is correct in his assertion that Kilby, Scott, Day, and Mora imply that the probate court
in a conservatorship proceeding has the authority to require a parent to pay support for an adult
disabled child if such support is needed. In Scott, the court specifically approved of the trial court’s
action in adjudicating the conservatorship petition to establish the proper custody arrangement for
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the adult disabled child. Scott, 1999 WL 39506, at *3. In doing so, the court stated that “T.C.A. 34-
11-121 conveys plenary powers to the court in conservatorship actions. Moreover, the state has the
constitutional power to act for incompetents . . . .” Id. Section 34-11-121, which is now codified
at 34-1-121, provides:
The court has broad discretion to require additional actions not specified in the
provisions of this chapter, and chapters 2 and 3 of this title as the court deems in the
best interests of the minor or disabled person and the minor’s or disabled person’s
property. The court also has discretion to waive requirements specified in the
provisions of this chapter, and chapters 2 and 3 of this title if the court finds it is in
the best interests of the minor or disabled person to waive such requirements,
particularly in those instances where strict compliance would be too costly or place
an undue burden on the fiduciary or the minor or the disabled person.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 34-1-121(a) (2001). In addition, the courts in Kilby, Day, and Mora indicated,
albeit in dicta, that a conservator in a conservatorship proceeding “would have the authority to seek
a decree requiring the parents to contribute” to the support of the adult disabled child. Kilby, 1999
WL 76065, at *6; see Mora, 2001 WL 609567, at *5; Day, 1999 WL 269928, at *5.
Nonetheless, in the case at bar, the Probate Court did not simply order the payment of support
for Michael and Timothy pursuant to the conservatorship statutes. While the Probate Court stated
that it considered “the rights and privileges of the wards of the conservatorships,” it approved the
order entered in the divorce court because it deemed the order to have been valid, and it confirmed
the Parenting Plan set forth in the order of the divorce court. Since the order of the divorce court was
void for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, the order of the probate court denying Mother Rule 60
relief from the order must be reversed. In the context of the conservatorship proceedings, however,
the probate court clearly had jurisdiction to consider the substantive issue, namely, the financial
support of the parties’ two disabled adult sons. Therefore, we remand the cause to the probate court
for consideration of the issue of financial support for Michael and Timothy. On remand, the probate
court is not precluded from considering the Parenting Plan proposed by Father. However, in the
conservatorship proceeding, the trial court is not bound by the child support guidelines in
determining the amount of any award that might be necessary. See Mingle v. Mingle, No. 01-A01-
9305-CH-00197, 1993 WL 377609, at *3 (Tenn. Ct. App. Sept. 24, 1993) (concluding that the
guidelines do not apply to cases “involving a parent’s continuing obligation to support a disabled
adult child”); see also Feinburg v. Diamant, 389 N.E.2d 998, 1002 (Mass. 1979) (reversing support
order for adult disabled child entered in divorce case, but giving the probate court the opportunity
to determine whether the order was reasonable in light of all the relevant factors).
Accordingly, we reverse the probate court’s decision to confirm the order entered in the
divorce proceedings, and remand for reconsideration of the issue of financial support for Timothy
and Michael, as well as any other pertinent issues, in the discretion of the probate court.
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The decision of the trial court is reversed and the cause is remanded for further proceedings
not inconsistent with this Opinion. Costs on appeal are to be taxed to Appellee Kevin Thomas Jones,
for which execution may issue, if necessary.
________________________________________
HOLLY M. KIRBY, JUDGE
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