                 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                            AT KNOXVILLE
                                   August 7, 2000 Session

        SHARON S. SARLI KELLY v. GEORGE LEROY EVANS, III

                     Appeal from the Juvenile Court for Sullivan County
                            No. J20687 Steven H. Jones, Judge

                                 FILED DECEMBER 27, 2000

                                 No. E1999-00417-COA-R3-CV


This is a suit initiated by Sharon S. Sarli (now Kelly) against George Leroy Evans, III, wherein she
sought a determination that he was the father of her child. After Mr. Evans stipulated that he was
indeed the father of the child, the Referee and the Juvenile Judge made various determinations
relative to custody, child support and the like. Mrs. Kelly, being dissatisfied with a number of the
determinations in the Referee’s last order which on appeal was in the main affirmed by the Juvenile
Judge, filed this appeal. We vacate the judgment of the Juvenile Court and remand the case for
further proceedings.


     Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Juvenile Court Vacated;
                                    Cause Remanded

HOUSTON M. GODDARD , P.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which HERSCHEL P. FRANKS and
D. Michael Swiney, JJ., joined.

John P. Chiles, Kingsport, Tennessee, and Thomas F. Bloom, Nashville, Tennessee, for Appellant
Sharon S. Sarli Kelly

David W. Blankenship, Kingsport, Tennessee, for Appellee George Leroy Evans, III



                                            OPINION

        Sharon S. Sarli (now Kelly), Petitioner-Appellant, appeals a judgment of the Juvenile Court
for Sullivan County, wherein the Trial Judge entered an order which essentially affirmed all the
determinations of the Referee, whose order was appealed to the Juvenile Court.
       Mrs.Kelly raises the following five issues:

           I.          WHETHER THE REFEREE ERRED IN ALLOWING FATHER TO
                       ASSERT CLAIMS FOR RELIEF WITHOUT GIVING MOTHER
                       NOTICE OF THOSE CLAIMS PRIOR TO TRIAL.

           II.         WHETHER THE JUVENILE COURT ERRED BY FAILING TO
                       GRANT MOTHER A FULL, EVIDENTIARY HEARING ON THE
                       ISSUES PRESENTED.

           III.        WHETHER THE LOWER COURTS ABUSED THEIR DISCRETION
                       IN SETTING THE VISITATION SCHEDULE.

           IV.         ASSUMING THAT THIS COURT REVERSES THE JUDGMENT OF
                       THE LOWER COURTS AND ADOPTS MOTHER’S PROPOSED
                       VISITATION SCHEDULE, WHETHER FATHER SHOULD BE
                       ORDERED TO PAY CHILD SUPPORT IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE
                       CHILD SUPPORT GUIDELINES.

           V.          IN THE ALTERNATIVE, WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ABUSED
                       ITS DISCRETION IN MAINTAINING A 20% DEVIATION FROM THE
                       CHILD SUPPORT GUIDELINES WHEN FATHER’S SALARY HAS
                       INCREASED BY $7,000 AND WHERE THE VISITATION
                       SCHEDULE, AS MODIFIED BY THE COURT, REDUCES FATHER’S
                       VISITATION TO THE RANGE ASSUMED BY THE CHILD SUPPORT
                       GUIDELINES.

       Our reading of the record and the briefs filed by the parties persuades us that issue two is
dispositive of this appeal.

                     T.C.A. 37-1-107(e), relative to appeals of a referee’s decision, provides the following:

             (e) Any party may, within five (5) days thereafter,1 excluding nonjudicial days,
           file a request with the court for a hearing by the judge of the juvenile court. The
           judge may, on the judge’s own motion, order a rehearing of any matter heard
           before a referee, and shall allow a hearing if a request for such hearing is filed as
           herein prescribed. Unless the judge orders otherwise, the recommendation of the
           referee shall be the decree of the court pending a rehearing.




       1
                After determination by the Referee.

                                                       -2-
        In this case the Juvenile Judge, on his own volition, determined to hear the matter on the
record made at the hearing before the Referee. Thus, the question is presented whether the Statute
contemplates a traditional hearing de novo as in an appeal from a general sessions court to a circuit
court, or a de novo hearing based upon the record of the hearing before the Referee.

         We have not found a case directly on point, but it seems to us that the language in the Statute,
“shall allow a hearing” contemplates a traditional de novo hearing. Our conviction in this regard is
buttressed by the cases of Jarrett v. Starkey, 1998 WL 202491 (Tenn.Ct.App.) and Hickerson v.
Finchum, 1997 WL 21189 (Tenn.Ct.App.), wherein, although the issue was not specifically raised,
it is clear that witnesses testified before the juvenile court on appeal.

        Our disposition of issue two renders moot the other issues raised by Mrs. Kelly.

      For the foregoing reasons the judgment of the Juvenile Court is vacated and the cause
remanded for a de novo trial in that Court. Costs of appeal are adjudged against Mr. Evans.



                                                _________________________________________
                                                HOUSTON M. GODDARD, PRESIDING JUDGE




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