Court Opinion

ID: 1051387
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-08 20:19:52.027047+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:52:11.654314
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                              AT JACKSON
                             Submitted on Briefs June 11, 2008

                      RHONDA LYNN G. (PICKLE) WHEELER
                                     v.
                           JACKIE DAVID PICKLE

                 Appeal from the General Sessions Court for McNairy County
                            No. 3488   Van D. McMahan, Judge

                  No. W2007-02731-COA-R3-CV - Filed December 17, 2008

This appeal involves child support in the form of funds to be deposited into a savings account. The
parties had two children and divorced. The mother was the primary residential parent. The father
was ordered to pay some child support, below the guideline amount, directly to the mother. In
addition, he was ordered to open and fund a savings account to be used to pay the children’s
uninsured medical expenses. The order also stated that, once the children reached majority, any
amounts left in the savings account were to be disbursed to the children. The father never opened
or funded the savings account. The mother sought an award for the amounts that were supposed to
have been deposited in the savings account. The trial court granted such an award in favor of the
mother, and the father appeals. He argues that the amount that he was ordered to deposit into a
savings account for uninsured medical expenses could not have been considered child support
because the unused funds were to be disbursed to the children after they reached majority. He also
argues that child support payments he made after the children reached majority should have been
credited against any arrearage related to the savings account. We affirm, finding that the amounts
ordered to have been placed in the savings account were part of the father’s child support obligation,
and that the trial court did not err in declining to grant the father credit against the award based on
child support paid after the children reached majority.

 Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the General Sessions Court Affirmed

HOLLY M. KIRBY , J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which ALAN E. HIGHERS, P.J., W.S., and
DAVID R. FARMER , J., joined.

G. Michael Casey, Jackson, Tennessee, for the Defendant/Appellant Jackie David Pickle

Terry L. Wood, Corinth, Mississippi, for the Plaintiff/Appellee Rhonda Lynn G. (Pickle) Wheeler
                                            OPINION

        Plaintiff/Appellee Rhonda Lynn G. (Pickle) Wheeler (“Mother”) and Defendant/Appellant
Jackie David Pickle (“Father”) were married in Selmer, McNairy County, Tennessee on April 9,
1977. They had two children, born November 22, 1985 and April 27, 1988. In 1992, Mother filed
a complaint for divorce. The parties entered into a marital dissolution agreement that provided for
equal parenting time and required Father to pay $200 per month in child support. The marital
dissolution agreement was confirmed by the General Sessions Court of McNairy County, and the
parties were declared divorced.

       Soon thereafter, Mother filed a petition to change the residential parenting arrangement.
After mediation, the parties agreed that Mother would be the children’s primary residential parent
and that Father would have alternate residential parenting time.

       In February 1999, Mother filed a motion seeking an increase in child support. On October
14, 1999, an agreed order was entered on Mother’s motion. The General Sessions order stated in
part:

       Effective November 1, 1999, [Father] shall not be required to keep medical insurance
       on the children of the parties because [Mother] has major medical insurance on the
       children. Instead, [Father] shall open a savings account and deposit $150.00 into said
       savings account each month until both children have been emancipated or otherwise
       reach the age of majority so that child support obligations are not legally required.
       No monies shall be withdrawn from said account except to pay for medical bills of
       either of the children during their minority, which are not covered by insurance.
       ...
       At the point in time when both children have reached the age of majority and any
       unpaid medical bills of the children have been satisfied, then [Father] shall disburse
       the complete balance of this account equally between the children of the parties.

Thus, the order required Father to make payments each month into a savings account to cover the
children’s uninsured medical expenses. At the children’s majority, any leftover monies in the
account would be distributed to them. In addition, the trial court increased Father’s child support
obligation to $450 per month, but added, “By agreement of the parties, this amount is less than the
guidelines dictated by the Department of Children’s Services.” The savings account apparently was
never set up or funded.

        The parties’ youngest child reached the age of majority on April 27, 2006 and graduated from
high school in May 2006. On May 1, 2006, Father filed a motion to terminate his child support
obligation as of May 31, 2006. However, for several months after the youngest child reached
majority, Father continued to send Mother $450 per month.

                                                -2-
        Mother’s response to Father’s motion admitted that their youngest child had turned eighteen
and would soon graduate from high school. She characterized Father’s motion as frivolous because
his “obligation to pay support automatically terminated and no litigation was necessary.” She added,
“[Father] has elected, in spite of [Mother’s] specific admonition to cease, to send monies in the
amount of $450.00 monthly to the [Mother]. The [Mother] has assumed that this is the [Father’s]
way of offering to assist with the various and sundry expenses of the parties’ children . . . .”

       Mother’s response to Father’s motion also included a counterclaim, seeking an award of the
amounts that Father had been ordered to place in a savings account for the children’s uninsured
medical expenses. Mother alleged that Father had previously told her that he did not intend to obey
the order. She asserted that there were no outstanding medical bills for the children, and therefore
sought a judgment against Father in the amount of $11,850 plus interest. The trial court set a hearing
on Father’s motion to terminate his child support obligation and Mother’s counterclaim for the
monies that were ordered to be deposited in a savings account.

        At the hearings, it was undisputed that the requirement in the October 14, 1999 order that
Father set up and fund the savings account came about as a result of a compromise between Mother
and Father. Specifically, Mother agreed to accept monthly child support payments below the amount
that otherwise would have been required under the child support guidelines, in return for Father’s
agreement to set up the savings account to cover uninsured medical expenses. Father maintained,
however, that the savings account requirement should have been viewed as a contractual obligation
rather than a child support obligation.

       At the hearings, Father also argued that he should have been given credit for overpaying his
monthly child support obligation. He conceded that he had failed to set up or fund the savings
account, but claimed that he paid considerably more in monthly child support than the amount
required by the October 14, 1999 order. In his memorandum submitted to the trial court in
preparation for the hearings, Father stated, “Assuming that the children incurred no uncovered
medical expenses during minority, [Father] had a duty to pay them a total of $11,850.00 when the
younger child graduated from high school in May 2006.” He alleged that he had “paid some
$37,834.00 in post-majority benefits for the children—over three times the amount he agreed to in
the October 14, 1999 order.”1

        The General Sessions Court issued its order on October 5, 2007. It first found that Father’s
child support obligation automatically terminated at the end of May 2006. Next, it rejected Father’s
contention that he be credited for amounts allegedly paid to support the children after they reached
majority. Last, the trial court then awarded Mother a judgment in the amount of $13,272.17, which
represented the accumulated amounts that Father was ordered to have deposited in a savings account
for the children, plus interest. From this order, Father now appeals.

        1
         Father refers to the “Defendant’s Calculation of Payments” to verify the amount of his alleged overpayment.
The appellate record, however, does not include such a “calculation of payments.”

                                                        -3-
        On appeal, Father argues that the trial court erred by characterizing his obligation to fund a
savings account for the children’s uninsured medical expenditures as a child support obligation
instead of treating it as a contractual obligation. He also contends that the trial court erred by not
giving Father credit for post-majority payments made to Mother and post-majority payments made
either to the parties’ children or on their behalf.

        The trial court’s findings of fact are reviewed de novo on the record with a presumption that
the findings are correct “unless the preponderance of the evidence is otherwise.” Tenn. R. App. P.
13(d); Campbell v. Fla. Steel Corp., 919 S.W.2d 26, 35 (Tenn. 1996). Conclusions of law are
reviewed de novo with no presumption of correctness. Campbell, 919 S.W.2d at 35.

        On appeal, it is undisputed that Father never funded the savings account referred to in the
trial court’s October 14, 1999 order. Because there are no factual issues, Father’s argument that the
trial court mischaracterized his obligation presents a legal issue. Father argues that any agreement
between parents to extend child support beyond a child’s minority is governed by rules of contract
interpretation rather than our child support guidelines. He notes that the October 14, 1999 order
contemplated disbursement to the children of any unused proceeds in the savings account after the
children reached majority—that is, after Father’s duty of support had expired. From this, Father
argues that, as to the savings account, the order created a contractual obligation, not a child support
obligation.2

           Father cites Kesser v. Kesser, 201 S.W.3d 636 (Tenn. 2006), in which the Tennessee
Supreme Court observed, “If the parties agree to extend child support beyond the child’s minority,
. . . that portion of the agreement is not merged into the final decree of divorce, retains its contractual
nature, and is subject to the general rules of contract interpretation.” Id. at 642 (citing Penland v.
Penland, 521 S.W.2d 222, 224–25 (Tenn. 1975)). Generally, a parent cannot be ordered by the
courts to pay support for a child who has reached majority. Bryan v. Leach, 85 S.W.3d 136, 151
(Tenn. Ct. App. 2001) (citations omitted). However, a party to a divorce may choose to obligate
himself or herself beyond the support duties imposed by law. Id. Such a provision in a marital
dissolution agreement retains its contractual nature even if it is incorporated into the final decree of
divorce. Id. (citations omitted). Based on this authority, Father argues that any agreement to provide
for his children after minority cannot be considered a child support obligation because he was under
no legal duty to provide such support.

       Mother maintains that the savings account was part of Father’s child support obligation, even
though the order called for the unused proceeds to be paid to the children after the youngest reached
majority. She cites Nash v. Mulle, 846 S.W.2d 803 (Tenn. 1993), in support of her contention. In

         2
            In his brief on appeal, Father omits a statement of the precise relief he is seeking. See Tenn. R. App. P.
27(a)(7), (8) (requiring the appellant to include in his argument section the reasons why appellate relief is required, and
to state in his conclusion the precise relief sought). He also fails to explain the prejudicial effect of the lower court’s
alleged error. See Tenn. R. App. P. 36(b) (prohibiting an appellate court from setting aside a final judgment unless the
alleged error was prejudicial).

                                                           -4-
Nash, the father was ordered to pay child support during his child’s minority, with part of the child
support deposited into a trust fund established in order to provide for the child’s college education.
Id. at 804. The father argued on appeal that this order was incompatible with Tennessee law because
“it unlawfully require[d] post-minority support.” Id. at 806.

        The Tennessee Supreme Court rejected the father’s contention. Concluding that the trust
fund was not incompatible with holdings from cases such as Garey v. Garey, 482 S.W.2d 133, 135
(Tenn. 1972), the Court stated, “Although child support payments may not extend beyond the child’s
minority . . ., the benefits from such payments can.” Nash, 846 S.W.2d at 806 (emphasis added).
The Court went on to hold that “funds ordered to be accumulated during a child’s minority that are
in excess of the amount needed to supply basic support may be used to the child’s advantage past
the age of minority.” Id.

        Although the facts and circumstances in Nash are not identical to those in the case at bar,
Nash is, nevertheless, instructive. As in Nash, the funds in this case were to be deposited by Father
into the savings account during the children’s minority. The fact that unused amounts in the savings
account were to be paid to the children after they reached majority does not transform the nature of
the funds into something other than child support.

        In this case, the trial court did not explicitly find that the monies that Father was required to
deposit into the savings account constituted child support. However, even assuming that the trial
court implicitly found these amounts to be child support, we find no error in this. Likewise, we find
no error in the award to Mother of funds ordered to have been maintained in a savings account for
the children.3

        For his second issue on appeal, Father asserts that he should have received credit for
payments made to Mother for the children, or payments made to the children or on their behalf after
the children reached majority. He contends that these payments should have been used to offset the
amounts awarded to Mother for Father’s failure to maintain the savings account. Although Mother
does not dispute that Father made some post-majority payments, the record contains no evidence of
the amounts paid, or when or to whom they were paid.

        Father cites no authority in support of his position, and we have found none. There is nothing
to indicate that these payments were made, or received, as payment of Father’s arrearage, i.e., the
funds that should have been deposited into the savings account pursuant to the October 1999 order.
Under these circumstances, we cannot conclude that the trial court erred in declining to credit Father
for these amounts.

         3
          At any rate, despite the parties’ agreement that Mother would accept less than the Guideline amount of child
support, Father would, nevertheless, be obligated to pay the Guideline amount. See Lichtenwalter v. Lichtenwalter, 229
S.W .3d 690 (Tenn. 2007); Lichtenwalter v. Lichtenwalter, No. M2003-03115-COA-R3-CV, 2006 W L 236945 (Tenn.
Ct. App. Jan. 30, 2006).

                                                         -5-
       The decision of the trial court is affirmed. Costs on appeal are to be taxed to the Appellant,
Jackie David Pickle, and his surety, for which execution may issue if necessary.

                                                      ___________________________________
                                                      HOLLY M. KIRBY, JUDGE

                                                -6-