IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT KNOXVILLE
August 23, 2002 Session
AARON DEL SHANNON v. DARLA JEAN SHANNON
Appeal from the Chancery Court for Morgan County
No. 96-28 Michael A. Davis, Judge
FILED OCTOBER 29, 2002
No. E2002-00518-COA-R3-CV
In this post-divorce case, Aaron Del Shannon (“Father”) filed a petition against his former
wife, Darla Jean Shannon (“Mother”), seeking to modify the parties’ divorce judgment, which
judgment, inter alia, had awarded Mother custody of the parties’ two minor children. In his petition,
Father sought a change of custody and asked to be named primary residential parent of the children.
The trial court found a substantial and material change of circumstances and granted Father’s
petition. We reverse.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court
Reversed; Case Remanded
CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which HERSCHEL P. FRANKS and
D. MICHAEL SWINEY, JJ., joined.
Rebecca A. Bell, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Darla Jean Shannon.
D. Vance Martin, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Aaron Del Shannon.
OPINION
I.
The parties were divorced by judgment entered February 24, 1997. Mother was designated
as the primary residential parent of Dallas Rhiann Shannon (DOB: May 8, 1993) and Luke Finley
Shannon (DOB: March 6, 1995), and Father was granted reasonable visitation rights. Both parties
have now remarried. Father and his new wife have one child.
Prior to the matter now on appeal, the parties had been before the trial court on two occasions
since the entry of the divorce decree – on October 8, 1998, and May 8, 2000. In both cases, the
issues addressed by the court related to co-parenting matters.
In the summer of 2001, Mother, the children, and Mother’s new husband, Daniel Knighten
(“Stepfather”), were living in the Union County home of Stepfather’s parents. In early August, 2001,
they moved to a rental house in the Mechanicsville area of Knoxville. Once Mother advised Father
of the location of the house to which she planned to move, Father drove to the neighborhood to
investigate the location. He photographed the rental house and surrounding houses, as well as
Maynard Elementary School, the school for which the children would be zoned. The children had
previously been zoned for and attended Pleasant Ridge Elementary School.
After looking at the neighborhood, Father was not pleased. On August 7, 2001, he filed a
petition to modify the custody arrangement,1 contending that Mother’s “lifestyle and uncooperative
attitude and poor decisions constitutes [sic] a material and substantial change of circumstances”
warranting a modification of the custody arrangement. Father asked for temporary custody of the
children and requested that he be designated as the primary residential parent. On the same date, at
an ex parte hearing, the trial court granted Father temporary custody of the children and adopted his
temporary parenting plan.
A final hearing was held on February 6, 2002. At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial
court made the following findings:
[T]he Court finds that there has been a material and substantial
change of circumstances for these children since the last custody
order that was put in place.
The Court finds these two loving parents but yet again, the Court is
placed in a position of deciding where these children should be
placed. The material change in circumstances the Court finds is
based upon simply – and I believe [Mother] has placed herself in an
instable [sic] situation by not moving, per se, but moving with the
frequency she’s moved, moving into a downward decline in an area,
not moving to improve her environment or moving to improve her
children’s environment but moving and consequentially placing these
children in a difficult, not a better, not a better environment for them.
One month later, the court entered an order, incorporating the aforesaid remarks. The order also
adopted Father’s proposed permanent parenting plan. In addition, the court ordered Mother to pay
child support and awarded Father a judgment against Mother for past-due support. From this
judgment, Mother appeals.
1
Mother was not immediately served with process because she was out of the country in connection with her
service in the National Guard.
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II.
In this non-jury case, our review of the trial court’s factual findings is de novo on the record
from the proceedings below; however, the case comes to us accompanied by a presumption that
those findings are correct – a presumption we must honor unless the evidence preponderates against
the trial court’s factual findings. Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d); Musselman v. Acuff, 826 S.W.2d 920, 922
(Tenn. Ct. App. 1991).
III.
An initial award of custody is “subject to such changes or modification as the exigencies of
the case may require.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-6-101(a)(1) (2001). This court has noted that the
initial judgment awarding custody “is res judicata and is conclusive in a subsequent application to
change custody unless some new fact has occurred which has altered the circumstances in a material
way so that the welfare of the child requires a change of custody.” Griffin v. Stone, 834 S.W.2d 300,
301-02 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1992). Thus, the crucial question is whether there has been a “material
change” warranting a change of custody. Hoalcraft v. Smithson, 19 S.W.3d 822, 828 (Tenn. Ct.
App. 1999). To constitute a material and substantial change of circumstances warranting
modification of a custody decree, a change “must occur after the entry of the order sought to be
modified and the change cannot be one that was known or reasonably anticipated when the order was
entered.” Id. at 829.
A trial court has broad discretion in determining matters of custody, Parker v. Parker, 986
S.W.2d 557, 563 (Tenn. 1999), and “we will not tamper with that discretion unless the facts
demonstrate that the trier of fact has abused his or her discretion.” Brumit v. Brumit, 948 S.W.2d
739, 740 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1997). Such determinations are factually driven and involve consideration
of several factors. Adelsperger v. Adelsperger, 970 S.W.2d 482, 485 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1997). The
best interest of the child is the paramount consideration. Suttles v. Suttles, 748 S.W.2d 427, 429
(Tenn. 1988). A custody decision must not be motivated by a desire to reward or punish a parent.
Adelsperger, 970 S.W.2d at 485. The burden to prove a material and substantial change of
circumstances rests upon the party seeking a modification of the prior order. Hoalcraft, 19 S.W.3d
at 830.
Mother argues that the trial court erred in finding that a material and substantial change of
circumstances existed, justifying a modification of the custody arrangement. We agree.
Essentially, the trial court based its finding of the requisite change of circumstances on the
number of moves that Mother had made with the children, as well as the “downward decline” in the
areas to which she moved. We will begin by addressing the frequency of Mother’s moves.
In Father’s initial petition for modification, he listed eight different locations where Mother
and the children had lived since the spring of 1996. At trial, Father again testified to a number of
moves that Mother had made within the past six years. However, for the purpose of determining
whether a material and substantial change of circumstances exists, courts are constrained to consider
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only those changes which have occurred since the last hearing. See Hoalcraft, 19 S.W.3d at 829.
The parties were last before the court on May 8, 2000. Therefore, the material moves are those that
have occurred since May 8, 2000.
In May, 2000, Mother, Stepfather and the children were living in an apartment on Pleasant
Ridge Road in Knoxville. That fall, they moved to an apartment on Western Avenue in Knoxville.
In early May, 2001, the family moved to a house in Halls, a suburb of Knoxville, where they had
planned to spend the summer house-sitting for one of Mother’s friends. However, as a result of a
disagreement Mother had with the friend one week after moving in, the family moved into the home
of Stepfather’s parents in Union County for the summer.
Mother testified that, throughout the summer, she and Stepfather were looking at residences
in Knoxville, with an eye toward purchasing a house. They eventually found one on Springdale
Avenue. However, the owners of the Springdale house were in the process of building a house and,
consequently, Mother and Stepfather could not move into the Springdale house in time for the
children to start school in the fall. In order to keep the children in the Knox County school system,
they decided to rent a house in Knoxville temporarily. Mother explained at trial that they did not
want to rent an apartment since that would involve signing a lease, and they did not want to be forced
to break their lease when the Springdale house was ready. Consequently, they found a rental house
for the family on Tulip Road, which is in the Mechanicsville area of Knoxville. Mother, Stepfather
and the children moved into the Tulip Road house in early August. Mother testified that she did not
expect to be in the Tulip Road house for more than a few weeks, at which time she and her family
planned to move into the Springdale house.
We do not believe these four moves constitute a material and substantial change of
circumstances. Indeed, the move to Union County would not have been necessary had it not been
for Mother’s disagreement with her friend; and if the house on Springdale had been ready for the
family by the end of the summer, there would have been no reason for the family to move to the
house on Tulip Road. It appears that Mother was doing everything she could to get her family into
a stable and permanent home, and that she was doing so in the most cost-efficient manner.
We are a transient society. The reality of life is that the circumstances of families change,
for various and sundry reasons, and these changes sometimes necessitate that families move to new
homes, new neighborhoods, and new cities. While Mother did move frequently in 2000 and 2001,
she had reasonable explanations for each of the moves and, based upon her testimony, the ultimate
goal was to purchase a home. The moves were simply a means of accomplishing that end. At the
time of trial, Mother and Stepfather were living in the Springdale house. While they had not yet
been able to purchase it, they were making improvements to the house because they still planned to
buy it.
Turning to the issue of the locations to which Mother has moved, the majority of the trial
testimony centered on Mother’s move to the Tulip Road rental house. Father testified that the house
is located in a high-crime area where there is “high drug traffic.” However, the record is devoid of
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any credible evidence of crime statistics in the area surrounding Tulip Road. In fact, the trial court
recognized this lack of evidence and stated “there’s no proof that it’s a high crime area ....” In spite
of that statement, the trial court, in issuing its ruling from the bench, referred to Mother moving “into
a home in that particular type of area which the Court’s aware of ....” While we are not sure of what
the court was “aware of,” the nature of a neighborhood is not typically something about which a
court can take judicial notice. See Tenn. R. Evid. 201(b). Certainly, there is nothing in this case to
indicate that the neighborhood in question is generally known in the community as an undesirable,
high-crime area.
Based upon the photographs of the rental house and surrounding houses introduced at trial,
it certainly does not appear that the Tulip Road property is located in one of Knoxville’s best
neighborhoods. However, the house was never intended to be anything other than a temporary
residence, and we certainly cannot fault Mother for moving into a lower-income neighborhood.
Further, there was absolutely no credible proof offered at trial that the number of moves or the
locations to which the family moved in any way adversely affected the children. There was no
evidence introduced at trial that Mother had failed to provide the children with food, clothing,
medical care, and education. There was no evidence at trial that Mother or Stepfather had abused
the children. Based upon the report cards of the children that were introduced at trial, both children
have made consistently excellent grades, and the parties’ daughter is in the talented and gifted
program at school. Dr. Michelle Jester, the marital and family therapist who interviewed the children
in anticipation of trial, testified that the children were “doing very well and have been for a long
time.” Dr. Jester further testified as follows:
Well, these children are remarkable. They really have a lot of
strengths. When I talked to them they’re happy. Their interaction
with their mother, they’re very comfortable. They were friendly.
They weren’t scared to meet me, you know, they just waltzed right in
and wanted to play and talk about their lives. And they’re just very
happy well adjusted children. I would expect to see more hesitancy
and more insecurity if they have been negatively affected by a move
or it they felt their living situation was unstable. But they don’t seem
that way to me.
When asked if this sort of behavior could have been developed since custody was changed to Father,
Dr. Jester responded that, “[m]y feeling is it’s lifelong. You don’t get that kind of healthy, emotional
development in a child in a few months.”
There has been no showing that these moves and changes in locations have caused harm of
any kind to the children in the instant case. Accordingly, we find that the evidence preponderates
against the trial court’s finding that Mother’s moves constitute a material and substantial change of
circumstances. We therefore find that the trial court abused its discretion when it changed custody
in this case.
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IV.
Mother seeks her attorney’s fees incurred on this appeal. The award of attorney’s fees in a
post-divorce proceeding such as the one now before us is governed by Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-5-103,
which states, in pertinent part, as follows:
The plaintiff spouse may recover from the defendant spouse, and the
spouse or other person to whom the custody of the child, or children,
is awarded may recover from the other spouse reasonable attorney
fees incurred in enforcing any decree for alimony and/or child
support, or in regard to any suit or action concerning the
adjudication of the custody or the change of custody of any child, or
children, of the parties, both upon the original divorce hearing and
at any subsequent hearing, which fees may be fixed and allowed by
the court, before whom such action or proceeding is pending, in the
discretion of such court.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-5-103(c) (2001) (emphasis added). We find that an award to Mother of
attorney’s fees incurred in this appeal is appropriate, and we therefore remand this case to the trial
court for a determination of a reasonable fee. See D v. K, 917 S.W.2d 682, 686-87 (Tenn. Ct. App.
1995).
V.
The judgment of the trial court is reversed. The previous order of the trial court awarding
custody to Mother subject to Father’s visitation rights as specified in that order is hereby reinstated.
Father will deliver the children to Mother no later than five o’clock p.m. on October 30, 2002. Costs
on appeal are taxed to the appellee, Aaron Del Shannon.
_______________________________
CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., JUDGE
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