OPINION
delivered the opinion of the court,
This appeal involves a custody and visitation dispute arising more than a decade after the parents were divorced. The original divorce decree provided that the three children, then between two and seven years of age, would reside with their mother during the school year and with their father during the summer. Because of the children’s growing dissatisfaction with this arrangement, their mother filed a petition in the Circuit Court for Davidson County
I.
On December 22,1995, the Circuit Court for Davidson County entered a decree of divorce ending the marriage of Charles William Heimermann and Cynthia Stat-ham Heimermann. The decree provided that the parties would “share custody” of their three minor children — then between two and seven years of age. The children would reside with their mother “during the nine (9) month school year” and with their father “during the three (3) summer months.” Throughout the year, the parents were given visitation on alternating weekends, and the parent with whom the children were not residing was given one day of mid-week visitation.
Both parties remarried. Ms. Heimer-mann married Kirk Boyer in 1998 and moved to Spring Hill. 1 Mr. Heimermann married Joy Heimermann in 2000 and moved to Franklin. The Heimermanns have had a child of their own, and the current Ms. Heimermann has a daughter from a prior marriage who is approximately the same age as the parties’ two older children.
Mr. Boyer earns a good income, and that has enabled Ms. Boyer to work sparingly and to devote a significant amount of time to the parties’ children. She home-schooled the children from 2001 through 2003. Ms. Boyer participates in many of the children’s extracurricular activities and chauffeurs them to their sports events, driving tests, and doctor’s visits. She also has frequent telephone conversations with them during the summer when they are residing with Mr. Heimermann. The parties’ youngest daughter regards Ms. Boyer as her best friend.
Mr. Heimermann is a self-employed carpenter. His work requires him to leave home early in the morning while the children are still asleep and to return home late. He works on the weekends when business requires. His regular routine when he comes home from work includes a nap and a shower and then dinner with the family around 8:30 or 9:00 p.m. Mr. Heim-ermann retires shortly after dinner.
Following the divorce in 1995, Mr. Heimermann has insisted on a rigid demarcation between the time the children spend with him during the summer and the time they reside with Ms. Boyer. He has cancelled the children’s appointments with doctors if Ms. Boyer made then on “his time,” and he has refused to make appointments for the children during the summer. He has also refused to permit Ms. Boyer to see the children during the summer months except for the periods prescribed in the divorce decree.
The children’s summer routine is vastly different from their routine during the school year, even though Mr. Heimer-manris home is only twenty minutes away from Ms. Boyer’s home. They are essentially house-bound. Mr. Heimermann does not permit them to see their friends or
Mr. Heimermann also expects absolute obedience from his children during the summer and is a strict disciplinarian. After his older daughter stayed out too late, he forbade her from attending her regular church and insisted that she attend church with him. When his daughter defied him and went to her own church with her brother, Mr. Heimermann went to the church and physically removed the children during the service. Following an argument in the parking lot, Mr. Heimer-mann called the police and charged his daughter with unruly conduct. 2
As the years went on, the children became increasingly hesitant about spending the entire summer with Mr. Heimermann. While they loved and respected him, they did not relish the prospect of spending the summer months with no contact with their friends, no activities or summer jobs, and with little to do other than staying at home watching television and listening to music. Ms. Boyer encouraged the children to cooperate with their father and also urged Mr. Heimermann to spend more time with the children and to provide them with more activities. Mr. Heimermann ignored her suggestions.
Eventually, in response to the children’s reluctance to continue to spend the entire summer with their father, Ms. Boyer filed a petition in the Circuit Court for Davidson County in May 2005 requesting a modification in summer visitation, an increase in child support, and to hold Mr. Heimer-mann in contempt for failing to pay child support and his share of the premiums for the children’s health insurance. Mr. Heimermann moved to dismiss the request to modify the summer visitation on the ground that no material change of circumstances had occurred since the entry of the divorce decree. He also sought to have Ms. Boyer held in criminal contempt for interfering with his visitation.
On September 26, 2005, Ms. Boyer requested the trial court to transfer the case to the Chancery Court for Williamson County pursuant to TenmCode Ann. §§ 36-5-3001 through -3009 (2005 & Supp. 2006) because both parties and the children resided in Williamson County rather than Davidson County. Mr. Heimermann objected to the motion on the ground that it was “nothing other than an attempt at forum shopping.” He also filed a second petition to hold Ms. Boyer in criminal contempt for twenty incidents that he viewed as “conduct designed to undermine his parental authority.” On November 1, 2005, the trial court entered an order denying Ms. Boyer’s motion to transfer the case, stating that it “will not allow this matter to be transferred to the Williamson County Court.”
The parties’ various petitions and motions were heard on May 30, 2006. Ms. Boyer and the three children testified about the summer visitations with Mr. Heimermann. Mr. Heimermann moved for a directed verdict at the close of Ms. Boyer’s case-in-chief. The trial court granted the motion based on its conclusion
II.
The STANDARD of Review
The trial court disposed of this case by granting Mr. Heimermann’s Tenn. R. Civ. P. 50.01 motion for a directed verdict. This was, of course, an improper motion because motions for directed verdicts have no place in bench trials. 3 The proper motion would have been a motion for an involuntary dismissal at the conclusion of the plaintiffs proof in accordance with Tenn. R. Civ. P. 41.02. Accordingly, we will construe the trial court’s order as if it were an order granting a Tenn. R. Civ. P. 41.02 dismissal. 4
When a motion for involuntary dismissal is made at the conclusion of the plaintiffs proof in a bench trial, “the trial court must impartially weigh the evidence as though it were making findings of fact and conclusions of law after all the evidence has been presented.”
Building Materials Corp. v. Britt,
The standard of review of a trial court’s decision to grant a Rule 41.02 involuntary dismissal is governed by Rule 13(d) of the Tennessee Rules of Appellate Procedure.
Building Materials Corp. v. Britt,
Making determinations on issues related to custody and visitation are among the most important decisions confronting courts.
In re Zaylen R.,
No. M2003-00367-COA-R3-JV,
III.
The Existence of Material Changes in Circumstances 5
Ms. Boyer asserts that the trial court erred by concluding that she had failed to establish that material changes in the parties’ and the children’s circumstances had occurred during the ten-year period between the entry of the parties’ divorce decree and the filing of her petition to modify the existing custody arrangement. She insists that her testimony, coupled with the testimony of the parties’ three children, permit no conclusion other than that a material change of circumstances has occurred. We have determined that Ms. Boyer has made a prima facie showing that a material change in circumstances has occurred.
A.
The threshold issue in every case involving a modification in an existing custody or visitation arrangement is whether a material change in circumstances has occurred.
Kendrick v. Shoemake,
The evolution of the “material change in circumstances” standard has focused on the criteria for determining whether a particular change in circumstances is “material” enough to require reconsideration of an existing custody or visitation arrangement. In 2002 and 2003, the Tennessee Supreme Court handed down three decisions that clarified the principles associated with the “material change in circumstances” standard.
6
The court emphasized that there are no bright-line rules for determining whether a material change in circumstances has occurred.
Cranston v. Combs,
In 2004, the Tennessee General Assembly enacted legislation directed specifically at the “material change in circumstances” standard. 8 Tenn.Code Ann. § 36-6-101(a)(2)(C) provides:
If the issue before the court is a modification of the court’s prior decree pertaining to a residential parenting schedule, then the petitioner must prove by a preponderance of the evidence a material change of circumstances affecting the child’s best interest. A material change of circumstances does not require a showing of a substantial risk of harm to the child. A material change of circumstances for purposes of modification of a residential parenting schedule may include, but is not limited to, significant changes in the needs of the child over time, which may include changes relating to age; significant changes in the parent’s living or working condition that significantly affect parenting, failure to adhere to the parenting plan; or other circumstances making a change in residential parenting time in the best interest of the child.
Tenn.Code Ann. § 36-6-101(a)(2)(C) is significant in at least two ways. First, it reflects the General Assembly’s agreement with the Tennessee Supreme Court’s rejection of the earlier decisions by this court
9
that the “material change in circumstances” standard required a showing of substantial risk of harm to the child.
Cranston v. Combs,
Whether a particular change in circumstances could reasonably have been anticipated at the time of the entry of the original decree is only one of many factors to consider. It has never been outcome-determinative. Indeed, the courts and the General Assembly have recognized that material changes in circumstances can arise solely by the passage of time because children’s needs change as they grow older. The House sponsor of Tenn.Code Ann. § 36-6-101(a)(2)(C) drove this point home when he explained that the purpose of the legislation was “mainly to ... deal with age appropriate modification” of parenting schedules. 10 Likewise, the Senate sponsor of the legislation explained that the common-law “material change in circumstances” standard was “pretty strict” and that the legislation would “give the court a few things to consider.” 11 He also explained that the bill “add[s] factors to be considered for a modification as the needs of the child changed over time” and that the bill would enable the courts “to adjust to the changes of life over time and allow modifications to occur more easily when certain changes in life occur.” 12
Not every change in the circumstances of either a child or a parent will qualify as a material change in circumstances. The change must be “significant” before it will be considered material. However, this court has noted that Tenn.Code Ann. § 36-6-101 (a)(2)(C) sets “a very low threshold for establishing a material change of circumstances.”
Rose v. Lashlee,
No. M2005-00361-COAR3-CV,
B.
Using the standards required by Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-6-101(a)(2)(C), it is difficult to reach any conclusion other than that Ms. Boyer and her children have established that a material change in the children’s circumstances has occurred. More than a decade has passed since the entry of the divorce decree, and during that time, the children have grown older and have developed new interests and focuses for their lives.
13
They have become
Based on the evidence in this record, the children have not been permitted to pursue their interests, take jobs, or spend time with their friends during the summer when they are living with their father. According to the children, their activities are mostly limited to sitting around the house and doing little other than watching television and listening to music all day, every day. Mr. Heimermann works extremely hard at an exhausting job that leaves him too tired and with too little energy to spend much time with his children. He has been unable or unwilling to accommodate the children’s outside activities or interests while he is working, and this lack of flexibility has clearly caused considerable strain on his relationship with his children. 16 As a result, the children no longer desire to spend the entire summer with their father.
The parties’ oldest child, who has now turned eighteen years of age, is no longer required to abide by the visitation arrangements of the divorce decree. 17 He has indicated that although he loves his father, he does not wish to spend the entire summer with him. Assuming that the young man does not change his mind, his two sisters will not spend much if any of the summer with him, despite the fact that they are quite close.
The trial court erred by focusing solely on the foreseeability that the children would grow older and that their needs and interests would change over time. Following the enactment of Tenn. Code Ann. § 36 — 6—101(a)(2)(C), the court should have considered whether the changes that have occurred in the children’s lives are significant. The salient consideration is not the change of age
By enacting Tenn.Code Ann. § 36-6-101(a)(2)(C), the General Assembly has made a policy decision to make it easier to establish that a material change in circumstances has occurred. The courts must adhere to this policy, even if it establishes a lower threshold than heretofore existed in Tennessee or that currently exists in other states. Tenn.Code Ann. § 36-6-101(a)(2)(C) establishes that significant changes in the needs of children as they grow older constitute a material change of circumstance. That is precisely what has transpired in this case.
Based on the evidence in this record, it cannot be reasonably questioned that the children’s interests, involvements, and capabilities have changed significantly since the entry of their parents’ divorce decree. They are no longer the young children they were in 1995. 18 Thus, a custody and visitation arrangement that was satisfactory when they were ages two, five, and seven may not, and probably does not, serve their current needs. At this stage, the unrebutted testimony of Ms. Boyer and the parties’ children make out a prima facie case that a material change in circumstances has occurred. Accordingly, we find that the evidence does not support the trial court’s conclusion that Ms. Boyer has failed to prove the existence of a material change in circumstances.
IV.
The Children’s Best Interests
Concluding that Ms. Boyer made a prima facie showing that there has been a material change in the children’s circumstances during the past ten years does not end the matter. The existing custody and visitation arrangement should not be modified unless it is in the children’s best interests to do so. The trial court’s hasty decision to dismiss the case following Ms. Boyer’s case short-circuited the inquiry into whether altering the existing custody arrangement would be in the two remaining minor children’s best interests.
Tennessee’s courts are statutorily authorized to alter custody arrangements as required by intervening circumstances. TenmCode Ann. § 36-6-101(a)(1). Addressing petitions to modify custody or visitation is a two-step process. The threshold question is whether a material change in circumstances has occurred since the entry of the prior order.
Krupp v. Cunningham-Grogan,
No. M2005-01098-COA-R3-CV,
These two questions — the existence of a material change in circumstances and the child’s best interests— have the unfortunate tendency to not only shade the other, as is inevitable and appropriate, but to bleed to become indistinguishable. Despite this tendency, the proper inquiry into whether there has been a material change in circumstances is actually not directly tied to the substantive question regarding the best custody and visitation arrangement under the present circumstances.
Krupp v. Cunningham-Grogan,
Mr. Heimermann was not afforded an opportunity to present evidence of his own because of the trial court’s peremptory dismissal of Ms. Boyer’s case. It would be unfair to Mr. Heimermann to rule on the merits of Ms. Boyer’s petition to change custody and visitation until he has been given a full and fair opportunity to present evidence refuting the evidence already in the record that a material change in circumstances has occurred or establishing that the children’s interests would be best served by leaving the current custody and visitation arrangement intact. Accordingly, this appeal does not present an appropriate occasion to decide what the best interests of the children are. This decision should be made only after Mr. Heimermann has been given an opportunity to present his evidence.
Y.
The Proper Forum for Further Proceedings
A significant portion of Ms. Boyer’s appellate brief is devoted to her assertion that the trial court’s decision was tainted by bias and prejudice against her and the children. Appellate courts take arguments of this sort very seriously because all litigants are entitled to the cold neutrality of an impartial court.
Davis v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
By the time the trial court conducted the hearing in this case, neither Mr. Heim-ermann, nor Ms. Boyer, nor the children resided in Davidson County. In fact, both the parents and the children had been residing in Williamson County for at least fourteen months. This change in the parties’ residence had prompted Ms. Boyer to request in September 2005 that the case be transferred to Williamson County. On November 1, 2005, after Mr. Heimermann complained that the request amounted to forum shopping, the trial court declined to transfer the case despite the mandatory statutory requirements.
Ms. Boyer did not raise the denial of her motion to transfer the case on appeal. However, because Tenn. R.App. P. 13(b) empowers this court to exercise its discretion to consider issues not raised by the parties, we invited both Mr. Heimermann and Ms. Boyer to file supplemental briefs addressing the application of the inter-county transfer statutes to this case. Both parties concede that they have long since moved away from Davidson County and that the children have resided in Williamson County for more than six months. However, they both assert that the inter-county transfer statutes should have no application to this case because this court should decide the summer parenting arrangement and Mr. Heimermann’s child support obligation once and for all based on the present record. 22 This we cannot do. We have already pointed out that the decisions regarding the modification of the summer parenting arrangement and the amount of Mr. Heimermann’s child support obligation cannot be decided on appeal because Mr. Heimermann has not been provided an opportunity to present evidence on either issue. Basing a decision at this juncture solely on Ms. Boyer’s evidence would effectively deprive Mr. Heim-ermann of his day in court.
Even though Ms. Boyer has effectively waived her opportunity to take issue with the trial court’s denial on November 1, 2005 of her motion to transfer the case to Williamson County, 23 we must still address the application of the inter-county transfer statutes to this case. There is no escaping the fact that once this case is remanded for further proceedings, the court in Davidson County will have no real connection with the parties or their children other than the fact that it had originally granted the parties’ divorce in December 1995.
In 1997, the Tennessee General Assembly enacted inter-county transfer statutes pertaining to post-divorce proceedings involving the enforcement or modification of
In 2000, the General Assembly determined that inter-county transfers should be mandatory if two factual conditions are met. 26 These two conditions are (1) that the child has been residing in the county to which the case will be transferred for at least six months and (2) that neither the child nor the parents continue to reside in the county where the original decree was entered. Tenn.Code Ann. § 36-5-3003(b). The only grounds for objecting to the transfer of a case to another county in Tennessee are (1) that the child has not resided in the “transferee county” for at least six months, 27 or (2) that the child or one of the parties continue to reside in the “transferor county.” 28
As we interpret Ms. Boyer’s supplemental brief, she has stated that she intends to invoke the inter-county transfer statutes for any future litigation in this case “concerning custody, visitation, child support or any other matter affecting their three ... children or any of them.” Therefore, once this case is remanded to the trial court for further hearings regarding her requests for modification of the parenting arrangements during the summer and for increased child support, it is apparent that Ms. Boyer will file another motion to transfer the case to Williamson County. In light of the undisputed evidence in this record regarding the current residence of Mr. Heimermann, Ms. Boyer, and the children, this petition, if filed, must be granted and the case must be transferred to a court of competent jurisdiction in Williamson County.
VI.
Ms. BoyeR’s Request for Additional Child Support
Ms. Boyer also asserts that the trial court erred by failing to increase Mr. Heimermann’s child support payments from $341.00 per month to $959.00 per month and to require him to pay $723.97 in expenses related to the children’s healthcare. We have determined that these issues are better addressed on remand. Mr. Heimermann’s prospective child support obligation will be influenced by the fact that the parties’ oldest child has now reached the age of majority and by any change that might be made in the custody and visitation arrangements. The trial court will also be better able to address Mr. Heimermann’s child support obligations accruing after the filing of Ms.
VII.
The trial court’s November 1, 2005 and June 22, 2006 orders denying Ms. Boyer’s request to transfer the case to Williamson County, to modify the custody and visitation arrangement, and to increase her child support are reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We tax the costs of this appeal to Mr. Heimermann for which execution, if necessary, may issue.
Notes
. Ms. Heimermann changed her surname to "Boyer” following her marriage to Mr. Boyer. We will refer to her as "Ms. Boyer” for the remainder of the opinion.
. The child did not contest the unruly conduct charge, and the juvenile court sentenced her to perform sixteen hours of community service work. The child was also required to take a drug test, even though there was no indication that she abused alcohol or drugs.
. Tenn. R. Civ. P. 50.01 motions are inapplicable to bench trials just as Tenn. R. Civ. P. 41.02(2) motions are inapplicable in jury trials.
Burton v. Warren Farmers Coop.,
.
Thompson v. Hensley,
. The courts and the Tennessee General Assembly use the phrases "material change in circumstances” and "material change of circumstances” interchangeably. While both phrases refer to the same concept, we will use the phrase "material change in circumstances” in this opinion in conformity with the Tennessee Supreme Court’s customary usage.
.
Cranston v. Combs,
.
Solima v. Solima,
. Act of May 6, 2004, ch. 759, § 2, 2004 Tenn. Pub. Acts 1737, codified at Tenn.Code Ann. § 36-6-101 (a)(2)(C) (2005).
.
See, e.g., Wall v. Wall,
. Rep. Russell Johnson, House Children and Family Affairs Committee, Apr. 6, 2004. Representative Johnson also noted that "maybe the child is four or five years older than when ... [the court] first dealt with the issue and that may be a reason to make a modification.”
. Sen. Jeff Miller, Senate Judiciary Committee, Mar. 2, 2004.
. Sen. Jeff Miller, Senate Judiciary Committee, Mar. 2, 2004.
. One court concluded that a material change in circumstances had occurred based on evidence that a boy had grown older and that his father desired to spend more time with him playing basketball and catch, fishing and camping, and teaching his son his trade.
Ahrens v. Conley,
.
In re Marriage of Kurth,
.
Taylor v. Taylor,
No. CA 89-312,
. Parenting teenagers requires flexibility because their schedules and lives often do not fit neatly into the confines of court-ordered visitation periods.
Rudich v. Bezahler,
No. FA970401394S,
. With certain exceptions not relevant here, persons who are eighteen years of age have the same rights, duties, and responsibilities as persons who are twenty-one years of age. Tenn.Code Ann. § 1-3-113(a) (2003). This statute "completely emancipated those over eighteen years of age from the control of their parents.”
Nichols v. Atnip
. Hollinger v. Hollinger,
.
See also McEvoy v. Brewer,
No. M2001-02054-COA-R3-CV,
.
Maynor v. Nelson,
No. M2005-02362-COA-R3-CV,
.
See also In re
. In her supplemental brief, Ms. Boyer recognizes the mandatory nature of the inter-county transfer statutes but insists that they are inapplicable at this stage of the proceeding. She argues that "in the future, but only after the conclusion of this appellate process ... either party who wishes to take legal action concerning custody, visitation, child support or any other matter affecting their three ... children or any of them, will have to file in Williamson County, where the parties and their children have lived for many years.”
. Surprisingly, Ms. Boyer concedes in her supplemental brief that she was, in fact, forum shopping when she filed her motion to transfer the case in September 2005 and that she waited too long to file her motion. While these concessions may reflect on the differences in the strategy of Ms. Boyer’s current lawyer and the lawyer who was representing her in September 2005, they do not prevent us from considering the prospective application of the inter-county transfer statutes to future proceedings in this case.
. Act of May 30, 1997, ch. 551, § 5, 1997 Tenn. Pub. Acts. 1012, 1036-1039, codified as amended at Tenn.Code Ann. §§ 36-5-3001 through-3009 (2005 & Supp.2006).
. Tenn.Code Ann. § 36-5-3003(b) as originally enacted in 1997 provided that "[a] case may be transferred to any court of competent jurisdiction if all of the following apply ...” The General Assembly included the same permissive language in its 1998 amendment to Tenn.Code Ann. § 36-5-3003(b). Act of Apr. 29, 1998, ch. 1098, § 50, 1998 Tenn. Pub. Acts 1113, 1125.
. Act of June 7, 2000, ch. 922, § 31, 2000 Tenn. Pub. Acts 2725, 2734. As amended Tenn.Code Ann. § 36-5-3003(b) now provides that ‘‘[u]pon receipt of a request, the case must be transferred by the clerk of the issuing court, without order of the court, to a court of competent jurisdiction in the county where the child or children reside ...”
. Tenn.Code Ann. § 36-5-3007(b)(2).
. Tenn.Code Ann. § 36-5-3007(b)(l).
