IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT NASHVILLE
October 8, 2001 Session
KARMEN DOLOROUS LANE v. RICHARD ROLAND LANE, III
A Direct Appeal from the Circuit Court of Davidson County
No. 98D-1571 The Honorable Muriel Robinson, Judge
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No. M2000-01135-COA-R3-CV - Filed November 30, 2001
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This appeal challenges an award of child support which did not include private school tuition
of the minor daughter, a division of property that did not take into account alleged dissipation
of assets by the husband, a child support award that did not deviate upwards from the
Guidelines because of lack of visitation, and a finding of criminal contempt. Also at issue
is whether the trial court erred in awarding alimony in futuro rather than rehabilitative
alimony. We affirm the judgment of the trial court with respect to all issues except to hold
that pursuant to the Tennessee Child Support Guidelines, private school tuition is an
“extraordinary educational expense” which husband obligor must pay.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Appeal as of Right: Judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed as
modified
JOHN A. TURNBULL, Sp. J., delivered the opinion of the court in which BEN H.
CANTRELL, J. and WILLIAM BRYAN CAIN, J., joined.
D. Scott Parsley, Joshua G. Strickland, Nashville, TN, for Appellant, Karmen Dolorous Lane
John J. Hollins, Nashville, TN, for Appellee, Richard Roland Lane, III
OPINION
This is a story of the wreck of a family; of a 28 year marriage run aground by the
unfaithful conduct of the husband; battered by waves of bitterness of the wife; and destroyed
by the involvement of a child in a maelstrom of recrimination.
I. Background
Karmen Dolores Lane (wife) and Richard Roland Lane, III, (husband) were married
on July 14, 1972. They have two daughters. The younger, Blair, was born February 8, 1983,
and was the only unemancipated child at the time of the divorce on April 28, 2000.
The husband’s extra-marital affair led to the separation of the parties in March, 1999.
The wife’s pain overflowed into bitterness and Blair, who previously had a close relationship
with her father, became estranged from him. The husband’s efforts to reapproach and
maintain contact with his daughter were rebuffed. When Mr. Lane was hospitalized for 3
days in June, 1999, for cancer surgery, neither wife nor daughters supported him. Instead,
the wife made inquiry about his life insurance. Shortly thereafter, Blair told her father that
she had prayed for him to die during his cancer surgery. The trial court found that the wife
had told Blair about her husband’s extramarital affair in order to alienate her daughter’s
affections from husband.
The husband’s dishonesty about his extra-marital affair was amply demonstrated at
trial, and the trial court found him not be a credible witness. The trial court did, however,
accept the husband’s testimony regarding his alleged dissipation of $90,000.00 of assets
during the separation of the parties. Wife failed to convince the trial judge that any
dissipation had occurred. After dividing the marital property equally, leaving each party with
assets having a value of $301,362.50, the trial judge ordered alimony in futuro in the amount
of $1,500.00 per month until death or remarriage. Child support, pursuant to the guidelines,
was set at $1,424.00 per month. Finally, the trial court ordered husband to pay $6,000.00
toward wife’s attorney fees. In a later contempt proceeding, wife was found guilty of
criminal contempt and sentenced to two days in jail for willfully refusing to obey the court’s
order giving the husband access to the home to retrieve his personal property. Wife was also
required to pay husband’s attorney fees of $1,500.00 associated with the contempt.
On this appeal the wife claims the trial court erred in:
1. Failing to order husband to continue to pay private school tuition;
2. Failing to find husband had dissipated assets;
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3. Failing to deviate upward from the child support guidelines as a result of husband
not visiting the child;
4. Failing to award all the attorney fees claimed by the wife; and
5. Finding the wife in willful criminal contempt of court, sentencing her to 2 days in
jail, and ordering wife to pay attorney fees associated with the contempt hearing.
Husband claims error in the award of alimony in futuro rather than rehabilitative
alimony.
II. Private School Tuition
The trial court declined to require the husband to pay the private school tuition of the
minor daughter who had, at the choice of the parents, attended David Lipscomb since
kindergarten. At the time of the divorce, the daughter had one year remaining before high
school graduation. The decision by the trial court was made prior to the publication of
Barnett v. Barnett, 27 SW3d 904 (Tenn. 2000) in which the Tennessee Supreme Court held
that private school tuition is an “extraordinary educational expense” under the Tennessee
Child Support Guidelines. The Court stated:
The guidelines’ use of the word “shall” leaves a trial court no
discretion in adding extraordinary educational expenses to the
obligor’s computed percentage ... We conclude that: [1] the
guidelines contemplate private school tuition to be an
‘extraordinary educational expense’ because the tuition exceeds
or departs from the cost of public schooling; and that [2] the
amount of the expense must be added to the obligor’s
percentage of child support computed under the guidelines.
Barnett, p. 907. [emphasis added]
The Barnett court further held that a trial court could only deviate from the guidelines
(e.g. percentage plus tuition) “in order to provide for the best interest of the child(ren) or the
equity between the parties” and were thus rendered unjust or inappropriate in a particular
case. Barnett, Id. p. 907, 908. The court did conclude, however, that to achieve equity
between the parties, . . . “it is appropriate to consider the income of the ‘custodial parent’ in
considering a downward deviation from the total child support award (percentage plus
extraordinary educational expense). . .” Here, the father’s projected income of $120,000.00
per year, the mother’s income of $24,000.00 to $25,000.00 per year, and the respective
disparity in ability to pay do not render the requirement to pay all the tuition financially
“unjust or inappropriate.”
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As unpalatable as it may seem to require the payment of private school tuition of a
child who prayed that her obligor father would die from his level III Clark melanoma, we see
no valid financial grounds for downward deviation in this case. The presumption that the
percentage amount of child support plus extraordinary educational expense is the correct
amount of child support has not been rebutted. The trial court’s order will be modified to
require payment of the tuition for the school year 2000-2001.
III. Upward Deviation Due to Lack of Visitation
Wife argues that the base amount of child support of $1,454.00 per month based on
the Tennessee Child Support Guidelines should be increased due to husband’s lack of
visitation with his child. The husband has made significant efforts toward improving the
relationship with his daughter. His efforts have been rebuffed by the daughter who has
chosen no visitation. The trial court judgment did not provide any residential parenting time
for the father. Since we have ordered the payment of private school tuition by the father, and
since the father’s desire for visitation has been rejected by his 17 year old daughter, we find
no justification for any further increase in child support.
IV. Dissipation of Assets
The determination of marital property and the value of a party’s interest in that
property are questions of fact. Cutsinger v. Cutsinger, 917 S.W.2d 238 (Tenn. Ct. App.
1995). The trial court examined the wife’s claims that husband had dissipated $90,000.00
of assets after the separation, and the husband’s explanation. The decision of the trial court
on this issue necessarily required a credibility judgment by the trial judge regarding the
husband’s explanation. Because the trial judge had found the husband lied about his
extramarital affair on the witness stand, wife argues that his testimony and explanation of the
dissipation of assets must also be disregarded. It is not necessarily so. The trial court, as the
finder of fact, often must determine the credibility of a witness. The fact that a witness lies
about one important fact may lead to the conclusion that the witness lied about all material
facts. Such a conclusion is not mandatory, and the finder of fact may decide that a witness
lied about some things, but told the truth about others. Tenn. Central R. Co. v. Morgan, 132
Tenn. 1, 175 S.W. 1148 (Tenn. 1915); T.P.I. 3 - Civil 2.22. We will not second-guess the
trial court’s fact and credibility driven decision on the dissipation issue. See, Manis v. Manis,
49 S.W.3d 295 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2001).
V. Alimony and Attorney Fees
Since the trial court’s decision on alimony and attorney fees are interrelated, we will
address these issues together. The trial court’s exercise of discretion on each issue will not
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be disturbed on appeal unless the evidence preponderates against the award. See, Burlew v.
Burlew, 40 S.W.3d 465 (Tenn. 2001); Koja v. Koja, 42 S.W.3d 94 (Tenn. Ct App. 2000). An
award of alimony in futuro has the purpose of aiding the disadvantaged spouse in becoming
and remaining self-sufficient and, when economic rehabilitation is not feasible, to mitigate
the harsh economic realities of divorce. The amount of alimony should not leave the party
obtaining the divorce in a worse financial condition than she was in before the opposite
party’s misconduct brought about the divorce. See Burlew, supra, p. 471. Since an award
of alimony in futuro lacks sum certainty, is subject to modification, and its duration may be
affected by contingencies, it is especially applicable to cases where, as here, the obligor’s
health may necessitate future modification. See Waddey v. Waddey, 6 S.W.3d 230, 232
(Tenn. 1999), Burlew, 40 S.W.3d 465, 471. The husband argues that an award of
rehabilitative alimony should have been made rather than alimony in futuro. However, the
trial court found that wife had reached her full earning potential, and there remained a great
disparity between her earning potential and that of husband. Considering the paramount
criteria of need and present ability to pay, we will not disturb the trial court’s exercise of
discretion. The award of $1,500.00 per month alimony until death or remarriage is affirmed.
Neither do we see any justification for altering the award of partial payment of wife’s
attorney fees.
VI. Contempt
The final issue involves the finding by the trial court of willful criminal contempt by
the wife in refusing to allow husband access to the residence to retrieve his personal property
and effects. Wife claims she did not understand the court’s order of access to include
husband’s right to enter the home. However, witnesses to the unhappy event quote the wife
as saying she did not care what Judge Robinson’s order said, Mr. Lane was not coming into
the house.
To find criminal contempt, a court must find the behavior, disobedience, resistance,
or interference to be willful. T.C.A. sec. 29-9-102. The finding must be based on proof
beyond a reasonable doubt, and the act must offend the court in its administration of justice.
See, Graham v. Williamson, 164 S.W. 781 (Tenn. 1914). Since the testimony of the
witnesses was in conflict, the trial court, of necessity, was required to make a credibility
finding. The witnesses who quoted the wife’s willful refusal to obey the court’s order were
believed by the trial judge. We are not in a position to re-weigh those credibility findings.
Accordingly, we affirm the finding of contempt, the two day jail sentence for the wife, and
the award of attorney’s fees occasioned by the contempt hearing.
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Conclusion
For the reasons discussed above, we affirm the trial court’s judgment on all issues
except for the failure of the trial court to require private school tuition to be paid by the
obligor father as now required by Barnett v. Barnett, 27 S.W.3d 904 (Tenn. 2000). The
cause is remanded to the Circuit Court for enforcement of the judgment as modified. Costs
on appeal assessed equally between the parties.
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John A. Turnbull, Sp. Judge
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