Dianna A. Gaddes v. Paul W. Gaddes, Jr. ( 2013 )


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  •                 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT NASHVILLE
    November 13, 2012 Session
    DIANNA A. GADDES v. PAUL W. GADDES, JR.
    Direct Appeal from the Chancery Court for Williamson County
    No. 26842     Donald P. Harris, Chancellor
    No. M2011-02656-COA-R3-CV - Filed February 1, 2013
    Mother petitioned for criminal contempt against Father due to his alleged failure to pay child
    support as required and she further sought reimbursement for one-half of the children’s
    optical and dental expenses. Father counter-petitioned for contempt against Mother. The
    trial court found Father in criminal contempt, but it declined to impose incarceration.
    However, the trial court denied Mother’s request for optical and dental reimbursement,
    finding Father was under no obligation to pay such. We affirm in part and we reverse in part.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed
    A LAN E. H IGHERS, P.J., W.S., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D AVID R. F ARMER,
    J., and H OLLY M. K IRBY, J., joined.
    Wm. Kenneth Burger, Murfreesboro, Tennessee, for the appellant, Dianna A. Gaddes
    Karla C. Hewitt, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Paul W. Gaddes, Jr.
    OPINION
    I.   F ACTS & P ROCEDURAL H ISTORY
    Dianna A. Gaddes (“Mother”) and Paul W. Gaddes, Jr. (“Father”) divorced in
    January 2001. The parties have two sons, ages seventeen and twelve at the time of the
    August 2011 hearing in this matter. Pursuant to the 2001 Final Decree of Divorce, Mother
    was named the children’s custodian from September through May, and Father was ordered
    to pay $1,622.00 in child support during these months.1 Father was named the children’s
    custodian from June through August, and Mother was ordered to pay $290.00 in child
    support during these months. However, according to Mother, the parties later verbally agreed
    that Mother’s support obligation would be subtracted from Father’s, thus, requiring Father
    to pay $1,174.002 per month, over twelve months.
    On December 7, 2010, Mother filed a “Petition for Criminal Contempt” against Father
    claiming that he owed $2,059.00 in child support, and that he had not yet paid his $1,622.00
    December 2010 child support payment.3 Mother’s petition alleged that since the parties’
    divorce, Father had paid child support “sporadically, irregularly, and in an untimely manner”
    and that she had been forced to file multiple contempt petitions against him based upon his
    failure to pay child support, his failure to pay alimony, and his “engaging in abusive and
    harassing conduct toward” Mother. As a sanction for his alleged criminal contempt, Mother
    sought to have Father incarcerated for ten days. Additionally, Mother sought to restrict
    Father’s visitation with the children pending mandatory counseling, as well as a judgment
    for one-half of the children’s “medical/dental bills[.]” 4
    1
    The Final Decree failed to require either party to pay support from September to December, but
    Mother claims that this was a clerical error. On appeal, Father does not dispute that he owed support during
    these months.
    2
    By our calculation, the monthly amount owed by Father would be $1,144.00. However, we will use
    the $1,174.00 figure agreed to by the parties.
    3
    The Petition for Contempt states “[Father] is presently in arrears in the amount of $2,059.00. The
    December payment has not yet been paid.” In her deposition, Mother seemed to state that the $2,059.00
    amount included the missed December payment.
    4
    Mother’s petition stated that it sought reimbursement for “one-half of the unpaid medical/dental
    bills which are attached.” However, only a $3,145.40 dental bill was attached. At trial, though, Mother also
    sought to recover one-half of both a $234.00 optical bill and a $2,400.00 dental bill. In total, Mother sought
    a judgment of $2,889.70 for optical and dental expenses (one half of 3 bills: $3,145.00, $234.00, and
    $2,400.00).
    -2-
    In response, Father filed a “Counter Petition to Modify Final Decree and for Criminal
    Contempt” seeking a reduction in his child support obligation due to his alleged decreased
    income and seeking to hold Mother in criminal contempt due to her alleged interference with
    his parenting time.
    A hearing was held on the parties’ competing motions on August 23, 2011.
    Thereafter, the trial court entered an Order finding Father guilty of criminal contempt due
    to his failure to pay his December 2010 child support obligation on or before December 1,
    2010. However, the trial court declined to order Father’s incarceration because it found that
    Father “had made effort [sic] to pay his child support, and he also paid the December, 2010
    [sic] child support prior to having been served with the instant Petition for Criminal
    Contempt which was filed on December 7, 2010 and served upon [Father] later in the
    month.” The court further awarded Mother a $7,583.105 judgment against Father for past
    due child support owed through May 31, 2011, to be paid at the rate of $500.00 per month.
    However, it declined to award Mother a judgment for the children’s dental and optical
    expenses, finding that Father was not obligated to pay such. In its Order, the trial court,
    among other things, reduced Father’s child support obligation to $789.00 per month,6 due and
    payable on the first day of each month, and it awarded Mother her attorney fees of
    $1,200.00.7 Mother timely appealed to this Court.
    II.   I SSUES P RESENTED
    Appellant Mother presents the following issues for review:
    1.      Was the trial court correct in its decision to decline the imposition of sanctions for Mr.
    Gaddes’ willful contempt, in view of the record of prior contempt findings in this
    case; and
    2.      Was the trial court correct in its failure to assess a judgment against Mr. Gaddes for
    one-half (½) of the unpaid medical expenses for the parties’ minor children?
    5
    It is unclear how this amount was calculated.
    6
    The trial court imputed a $7,250.00 per month income to Father finding that he “is still voluntarily
    underemployed[.]”
    7
    The Order states that it “is a final order as to the financial issues between the parties, there being
    no just reason for delay of entry of a final order as to those issues, but [that] all other claims for relief in the
    parties’ Petition and Counter Petition are specifically reserved, the parties having previously been ordered
    to attend mediation before setting those issues for hearing.” Thus, we find that the Order is final and
    appealable under Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure 54.02.
    -3-
    For the following reasons, we affirm in part and we reverse in part.
    III.   D ISCUSSION
    A. Criminal Contempt Sanctions
    Tennessee Code Annotated section 29-9-102(3) authorizes a court to exercise its
    contempt powers for, among other things, the “willful disobedience” of a court order. To
    find a party’s failure to pay child support contemptuous, “the court first must determine that
    [the obligor] had the ability to pay at the time the support was due and then determine that
    the failure to pay was wilful.” Ahern v. Ahern, 
    15 S.W.3d 73
    , 79 (Tenn. 2000).
    Contempt may be either criminal or civil in nature. State ex rel. Flowers v. Tenn.
    Trucking Ass’n Self Ins. Group Trust, 
    209 S.W.3d 602
    , 613 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006).
    Criminal contempt is designed to “‘preserve the power and vindicate the dignity and
    authority of the law’” and to “preserve the court ‘as an organ of society.’” Id. (quoting Black
    v. Blount, 
    938 S.W.2d 394
    , 398 (Tenn. 1996)). “Generally, sanctions for criminal contempt
    are designed to punish the contemnor and are unconditional in nature.” Id. (citing Black, 938
    S.W.2d at 398); see also Ahern, 15 S.W.3d at 79 (“A party who is in criminal contempt
    cannot be freed by eventual compliance.”) (citing Shiflet v. State, 
    400 S.W.2d 542
    , 543
    (Tenn. 1966)). “‘[Criminal contempt] is a punitive proceeding intended to impose a fixed
    punishment for past actions.’” State ex rel. Farris v. Bryant, No. E2008-02597-COA-R3,
    
    2011 WL 676162
    , at *5 (Tenn. Ct. App. Feb. 24, 2011) (quoting McLean v. McLean, No.
    E2008-02796-COA-R3-CV, 2010 210752, at *3 (Tenn. Ct. App. May 28, 2010)).
    In this case, Mother argues that the trial court, after finding Father in criminal
    contempt, erred in failing to order “some period of incarceration[.]” Father does not
    challenge the underlying finding of criminal contempt; instead, he argues only that the trial
    court did not err in failing to impose incarceration. We review the “trial court’s decision of
    whether to impose contempt sanctions using the more relaxed abuse of discretion standard
    of review.” Moody v. Hutchison, 
    159 S.W.3d 15
    , 25 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2004) (quoting Barber
    v. Chapman, No. M2003-00378-COA-R3-CV, 
    2004 WL 343799
    , at *8 (Tenn. Ct. App. Feb.
    23, 2004)). Under this standard, we will uphold the trial court’s determination, irrespective
    of our inclination to decide the issue differently, so long as the trial court’s decision is within
    the range of acceptable alternatives. See Tait v. Tait, 
    207 S.W.3d 270
    , 275 (Tenn. Ct. App.
    2006) (citing White v. Vanderbilt Univ., 
    21 S.W.3d 215
    , 223 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999)).
    In her appellate brief, Mother claims that Father has repeatedly disregarded the court’s
    orders for a decade, and therefore, she argues that incarceration–up to ten days–is necessary
    -4-
    to vindicate the sanctity of the court’s orders. In support of this argument, Mother cites her
    own testimony at the August 2011 hearing on the parties’ competing motions in which she
    stated that Father’s non-compliance with his child support obligation had been an “ongoing
    issue. . . . [for] about two years.”8 At the hearing, Mother also testified that throughout
    2010–prior to the filing of the instant contempt petition in December 2010–Father never paid
    child support in a timely manner, although the payments were “[e]ventually” made.9 She
    further claimed that since the filing of her petition in December 2010, Father had
    accumulated an arrearage for the months of January through May 2011.10
    At the hearing, Mother described her willingness to allow Father to extend his nine-
    month child support obligation over twelve months as well as her apparent willingness to
    allow Father to render payment on the fifteenth rather than the first day of each month.
    However, she stated that despite her accommodation efforts, Father had continued to delay
    or withhold payments and that when she asked for payment, he accused her of being “crazy.”
    In her December 7, 2010 Petition for Criminal Contempt, Mother alleged a child
    support arrearage of $2,059.00, apparently including his not-yet-paid December 2010
    payment of $1,174.00. However, at the hearing, Mother agreed that the arrearage alleged
    was incorrect as it did not take into account two $600.00 payments made by Father. Thus,
    as of the date of the petition’s execution on December 3, Father owed only December’s
    $1,174.00 payment, which Mother acknowledged Father paid via check dated December 15,
    prior to being served with Mother’s petition.
    As stated above, in its Order, the trial court found Father guilty of criminal contempt
    due to his failure to pay his December 2010 child support obligation on or before December
    8
    In her brief, Mother also states that “The couple was previously before the Court on the wife’s
    contempt petition for $20,000.00 in unpaid alimony in 2006.” The citation to the record provided, however,
    contains only statements by Mother’s counsel alluding to an appearance before Judge Bivins in 2006.
    9
    In her brief, Mother states that “Ms. Gaddes is emphatic in her testimony that, at no time (‘ever’)
    since the parties’ divorce has Mr. Gaddes ever paid his monthly child support in specific compliance with
    the order of the Court, although the delayed payments are ‘eventually’ cleared.” However, the citation
    provided to the record contains no testimony by Mother that Father has failed to comply with his child
    support obligation since the parties’ divorce.
    In her brief, Mother also states that following an arrearage accumulation Mother would “call to
    discuss the issue with Mr. Gaddes over a period of several weeks” and that Father would clear the arrearage
    and “pay regularly for a short time, before again slipping into a pattern of delayed payments or accumulated
    arrearages.” However, this statement is simply unsupported by the citations provided.
    10
    Father testified only with regard to child support, after the contempt charge was resolved.
    -5-
    1, 2010,11 but it declined to order him incarcerated because it found that Father “had made
    effort [sic] to pay his child support, and he also paid the December, 2010 [sic] child support
    prior to having been served with the instant Petition for Criminal Contempt which was filed
    on December 7, 2010 and served upon [Father] later in the month.” Finding scant evidence
    in the record to support Mother’s assertions of decade-long non-compliance, and giving due
    deference to the trial court, we find no basis for concluding that the trial court abused its
    discretion in declining to impose incarceration as a sanction for Father’s criminal contempt.
    B. Uncovered Expenses
    Mother next argues that the trial court erred in failing to assess a $2,889.70 judgment
    against Father for one-half of the children’s optical and dental expenses, because it found no
    order requiring Father to pay such. She claims that Father is obligated to pay for one-half
    of these expenses pursuant to the Final Decree of Divorce, which provides in relevant part:
    [Father] shall continue to maintain health insurance for the benefit of the
    parties’ two minor children, and the parties shall each pay one-half of any
    expenses not covered by insurance.
    Tennessee courts “have long recognized that orders and judgments should be
    construed like other written instruments, and that the interpretation of written instruments
    involves questions of law that are reviewed de novo without a presumption of correctness.”
    Konvalinka v. Chattanooga-Hamilton County Hosp. Authority, 
    249 S.W.3d 346
    , 356 n.19
    (Tenn. 2008) (citing Barnes v. Barnes, 
    193 S.W.3d 495
    , 498 (Tenn. 2006); State ex rel. Pope
    v. U.S. Fire Ins. Co., 
    145 S.W.3d 529
    , 533 (Tenn. 2004)) (internal citations omitted).
    On appeal, Mother argues that the “final decree’s reference to ‘medical expenses’”
    should be “reasonabl[y] interpret[ed]” to include the children’s optical and dental expenses.
    She further contends that Father should be judicially estopped from claiming that such
    expenses are not “medical expenses” because Father previously asserted a contempt claim
    against her due to her alleged failure to pay a portion of the children’s non-covered medical
    and dental expenses. Father, however, contends that “health insurance” covers only
    “medical” expenses–not optical and dental expenses–and therefore, that he is under no
    obligation to pay such.
    11
    In her brief, Mother states that the court found Father “to be in willful contempt based upon the
    history of delayed or missed payments, and specifically for not paying on the first of each month.” (Br. 7).
    However, the trial court’s Order indicates that its criminal contempt finding is based solely upon Father’s
    failure to timely remit the December 2010 payment.
    -6-
    We find Mother’s repeated references to “medical expenses” puzzling as the final
    decree does not use this term. Instead, it requires Father to maintain “health insurance” and
    it obligates the parties to split “any expenses not covered by insurance.” However, we find
    Father’s position on appeal untenable for several reasons. First, Father’s assertion that
    “health insurance” does not cover optical and dental expenses supports the conclusion that
    such expenses are to be split by the parties, as, under Father’s theory, they constitute
    “expenses not covered by insurance.”
    Moreover, we find that, due to his prior inconsistent position, Father is judicially
    estopped from claiming that the parties did not intend to split dental expenses. In 2005,
    Father filed a “Petition to Modify Alimony and Child Support and for Contempt” against
    Mother alleging that Mother had failed to comply with the Final Decree of Divorce, which
    he claimed, “required that the parties equally divide all non-covered medical and dental
    expenses on behalf of the minor children.” (Supp.). See In re Estate of Boote, 
    198 S.W.3d 699
    , 719 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2005) (citing Marcus v. Marcus, 
    993 S.W.2d 596
    , 602 (Tenn.
    1999)) (“Judicial estoppel is an equitable doctrine designed to prevent parties from ‘gaining
    an unfair advantage’ in judicial proceedings by making inconsistent statements on the same
    issue in different lawsuits.”). Although Father, in 2005, did not directly concede the division
    of optical expenses–as such were not at issue–we find no basis for treating these expenses
    differently from dental expenses.
    Finally, although not dispositive, the parties’ conduct further indicates their intent to
    share optical and dental expenses, as according to Mother and conceded by Father’s counsel
    at the hearing in this matter, the parties split these expenses “for some time.” See Barton v.
    Gilleland, No. E2004-01369-COA-R3-CV, 
    2005 WL 729174
    , at *11 (Tenn. Ct. App. Mar.
    30, 2005) (citing Hamblen Co. v. City of Morristown, 
    656 S.W.2d 331
    , 335 (Tenn. 1983))
    (“In interpreting a contract, it is appropriate, as a rule of practical construction, to consider
    the interpretation of a contract as evidenced by the parties' conduct and declarations.”). In
    sum, we interpret the Final Decree of Divorce to require each party to pay for one-half of the
    children’s optical and dental expenses not covered by insurance. Accordingly, we reverse
    the trial court’s denial of Mother’s reimbursement request, and we award Mother a judgment
    of $2,889.70.
    -7-
    IV.   C ONCLUSION
    For the aforementioned reasons, we affirm in part and we reverse in part. Costs of this
    appeal are taxed equally to Appellee, Paul W. Gaddes, Jr. and Appellant, Dianna A. Gaddes,
    and her surety, for which execution may issue if necessary.
    _________________________________
    ALAN E. HIGHERS, P.J., W.S.
    -8-