Wife’s Relationship With Expert Witness Did Not Warrant New Trial
Tennessee case summary on classification of debentures in divorce. Jill St. John-Parker v. Virgil Duane Parker The husband and wife in this Tennessee case were married in 1990 and had one child, who was over 18 at the time of their divorce. The husband was an attorney and the wife was a certified public accountant. […]
Read More»No Change in Parenting Plan for Happy Well Adjusted TN Child
Tennessee child custody case summary on changing custody after divorce. Matthew Lee Wheeler v. Alethia Danielle Wheeler The mother and father in this Tennessee case were divorced in 2009, and had one daughter, who was born in 2005. The mother was named the primary residential parent, and each parent was awarded 182.5 days of parenting time […]
Read More»Adultery Divorce Laws in Tennessee
- At November 30, 2016
- By Miles Mason
- In Alimony, Child Custody, Divorce
- 0
In Tennessee law, evidence of adultery is presented in court rather matter-of-factly, just as it should be with all statutory grounds for divorce. Without contrived intrigue and lust passing for high drama. That is not to say, however, that adultery cases are passionless divorces, devoid of interesting facts and circumstances. Far from it! During divorce […]
Read More»Modification of Child Support Based on Social Security Disability
Tennessee child support case summary on social security and interest. Roy Leonard Sewell v. Diane Holland Sewell The husband and wife in this case were divorced in 1997, and in 2013, the divorce was registered in Hamilton County, Tennessee. The Georgia court had named the mother as the primary residential parent of their infant son, […]
Read More»Mom Can Relocate, Dad Failed to File to Object Before Deadline
Tennessee child custody case summary on parental relocation. Jon R. Ross v. Anna L. Rosswoods The mother and father in this Tennessee parental location case were the parents of a son born in 2002. The parenting plan entered after their 2005 divorce named the mother as the primary residential parent, but gave both parents roughly equal […]
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