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Recent Cases Illustrate That Family Law Is Fascinating

BY Albert Momjian
November 15, 2011

While family law may not make the practitioner a multimillionaire, it certainly is fascinating. Sometimes the facts of the cases are more unusual than the fiction created by soap opera writers. Sometimes the issues are more interesting than the tests created by law school professors. Three recent cases, one in Tennessee and two in Florida, are illustrative. This article discusses these three cases for no reason other than that they are interesting.

Burnine v. Dauterive

The issue examined in the Court of Appeals of Tennessee's July 27 opinion in Burnine was whether a grandmother could collect retroactive child support from a father, even though the mother told the father the child was not his and then later told the father that the child was dead. Both the facts and the issue are interesting. The child lived with the maternal grandmother for a substantial period of time, and the grandmother had to provide for the actual financial needs of the child. Should the father be required to reimburse the grandmother or should the mother's lies to the father stand in the way of reimbursement? W2010-02611-COA-R3-JV (Tenn.App., July 27, 2011).

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