IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
MIDDLE SECTION AT NASHVILLE
BRIDGET C. RASMUSSEN, )
)
Plaintiff/Appellant, )
) Montgomery Chancery
) No. 95-07-0128
VS. )
)
) Appeal No.
LEIF C. RASMUSSEN, ) 01A01-9705-CH-00211
)
Defendant/Appellee. )
FILED
December 12, 1997
DISSENTING OPINION
Cecil W. Crowson
Appellate Court Clerk
I concur that the visitation arrangements in the trial court’s November 7, 1996
order should be re-examined. I cannot, however, concur that these parties should be
put to the time and expense of re-litigating the custody issue. In light of the record
before us, I find no colorable basis for concluding that the trial court erred by
granting these parties joint custody with primary physical custody going to the father.
This case involves a marriage that lasted less than two years. Captain Lief C.
Rasmussen is a career officer in the United States Army, and Bridget C. Rasmussen
is the daughter of a career serviceman. The parties’ only child, a son, was born in
September 1994, and the parties separated less than one year later. Following a full
trial in January 1996, during which the parties and twelve other witnesses testified,
the trial court determined that the parties should be granted joint custody of their son
but that Captain Rasmussen should have primary physical custody. Because the
parties continued to live in close proximity to each other, the trial court also granted
Ms. Rasmussen liberal visitation rights similar to the pendente lite visitation
arrangements.
After the January 1996 trial, Captain Rasmussen informed the trial court that
the Army had transferred him to Fort Huachuca, Arizona and requested the trial court
to modify the visitation arrangement to provide Ms. Rasmussen with extended
holiday and summer visitation. Ms. Rasmussen responded with three proposals of
her own. First, she suggested that she should have custody of the child for the first
six months after Captain Rasmussen’s transfer because his military schooling would
prevent him from caring for the child. Second, she proposed an alternating split
custody arrangement which would require the child to fly between Arizona and
Tennessee every two weeks. Third, she proposed granting her sole custody so that
she and the child could move to Virginia to live with her parents.
The trial court conducted another hearing in November 1996 to consider
visitation arrangements in light of Captain Rasmussen’s transfer to Arizona and Ms.
Rasmussen’s stated intention to move to Virginia. After considering the testimony
of the parties and five other witnesses, the trial court devised a visitation plan that
required the parties to exchange the child twice in 1997 and five times between
January and April 1997. The visitation arrangements thereafter are not entirely clear.
It is this very lack of clarity that prompts me to concur that Ms. Rasmussen’s
visitation rights should be reconsidered and defined more precisely.
The court has gone farther, however, and has directed the trial court to reopen
the custody issue as well. The court’s opinion offers little insight into the basis for
its decision other than the cryptic comment that “the best interests of the child do not
appear to have been fully developed.” I confess to being at a loss to understand what
this observation means. What particular aspect of the child’s best interests was not
adequately developed? Was it the fact that Captain Rasmussen is a career officer?
Surely the court does not mean to imply that military personnel should not be
awarded custody of their children. Was it the court’s disagreement with the trial
court’s findings concerning Ms. Rasmussen’s parenting skills? If it was, surely the
court could point to the evidence in the record preponderating against the trial court’s
findings.
A best interests analysis requires a careful consideration of many factors. See
Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-6-106 (1996); Holloway v. Bradley, 190 Tenn. 565, 571, 230
S.W.2d 1003, 1006 (1950); Bah v. Bah, 668 S.W.2d 663, 666 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1983).
Because trial courts have the advantage of observing the demeanor of the witnesses,
we should be reluctant to second-guess their custody decisions. See Gilliam v.
Gilliam, 776 S.W.2d 81, 84 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1988). When we must reverse or vacate
a custody decision, we have an obligation to the parties and to the trial court to
explain how the proof was deficient. When we provide an explanation, we avoid the
-2-
appearance of being arbitrary, and we enable the parties to focus their efforts during
the subsequent hearings.
This case now returns to the trial court for another trial in which the custody
of this three-year-old child again hangs in the balance. Neither Captain Rasmussen
nor Ms. Rasmussen reside in this state. They will have been gone for approximately
two years by the time this hearing occurs. Tennessee is no longer the home state of
either of these parents or their son. Thus, after this case is remanded, the trial court
and the parties should carefully consider whether the Chancery Court of Montgomery
County is the proper forum for litigating custody and visitation issues.
_______________________________
WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., JUDGE
-3-