20230112_C359226_33_359226.Opn.Pdf

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 12, 2023
Docket20230112
StatusUnpublished

This text of 20230112_C359226_33_359226.Opn.Pdf (20230112_C359226_33_359226.Opn.Pdf) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
20230112_C359226_33_359226.Opn.Pdf, (Mich. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

SHANA BRENDEL, formerly known as SHANA FOR PUBLICATION MORRIS, January 12, 2023 9:00 a.m. Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 359226 Livingston Circuit Court BRIAN MORRIS, LC No. 19-054406-DM

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: GLEICHER, C.J., and K. F. KELLY and LETICA, JJ.

GLEICHER, C.J.

Courts are permitted to modify child support orders whenever changed circumstances demand, even if the child support award was negotiated as part of a consent judgment of divorce. Here, the parties agreed to a one-time lump-sum child support payment in the consent judgment of divorce. Before the payment could be made, the recipient stopped exercising most of his parenting time. This change of circumstances warranted review of the child support award. The circuit court agreed with this principle but cited other grounds for granting the relief requested. We affirm for the reasons stated in this opinion.

I. BACKGROUND

Shana and Brian Morris entered a consent judgment of divorce in July 2020. At that time, the parties’ two children were 16 and 14 years old.1 The consent judgment provided for equal parenting time. Under the Michigan Child Support Formula (MCSF), Shana was required to pay Brian $1,051 in monthly child support. In lieu of monthly payments, the parties agreed that Shana would transfer $100,000 from one of her retirement accounts to Brian. Consistent with this agreement, ¶ 6 in the “custody, parenting time, and support” section of the consent judgment states:

1 The couple’s eldest child has since reached the age of majority.

-1- See attached Uniform Child Support Order [UCSO]. The parties acknowledge, and as reflected in the [UCSO] Deviation Addendum, and the Settlement Agreement between the parties dated March 20, 2020,[2] Wife has prepaid Husband $100,000 from her 401K as outlined in paragraph 19 in lieu of any claim he may currently have or have in the future for child support from Wife to Husband.

Paragraph 19 falls within the property division section of the consent judgment. It lists the various pensions and retirement plans each party holds. It states, “Out of Wife’s Fidelity PepsiCo Savings Plan, $100,000 shall be transferred to Husband by way of a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (“QDRO”) as outlined in paragraph 6. Husband shall pay for the cost of drafting the QDRO.” The UCSO deviation addendum attached to the judgment further provides, “Wife has transferred $100,000 in retirement funds to Husband in full satisfaction of any claim he may have to the receipt of child support,” and that “$100,000 in retirement funds were transferred to Husband from Wife in full satisfaction of any claim to child support.”

Although the documents indicated that Shana had already transferred $100,000 to Brian, that transfer had not been completed.3 And it soon became clear that the equal parenting-time arrangement would not go as planned. The children were living with their mother fulltime and spent “maybe one overnight per month” with their father. Shana waited to seek any relief “to see if the children would eventually visit with their father and if [Brian] would insist on enforcing the parenting time schedule set forth in the Judgment.” Neither occurred.

Seven months after entering into the consent judgment of divorce, Shana filed a “motion for relief from judgment and child support.” Citing MCR 2.612(C)(1)(b), Shana characterized the failed parenting-time arrangement as newly discovered evidence that negated her child support obligation under the MCSF. “Had it been known at the time of entry of the Judgment of Divorce that [Brian] would effectively have no parenting time, [Shana] would not only have not agreed to a lump sum transfer of retirement funds in lieu of child support, but would have required [Brian] to pay child support” to her. In addition to setting aside the $100,000 transfer provisions in the divorce judgment, Shana requested that the court recalculate the child support award based on her fulltime custody of the children.

Brian challenged Shana’s request for relief, but did not claim that he had exercised his parenting time and did not seek to enforce the parenting-time provision in the divorce judgment. Rather, Brian contended that the $100,000 transfer was part of the property settlement. He asserted that the court was bound by this division reached through fair negotiation. Supporting that the one-time transfer was part of the property division and not in lieu of child support, Brian contended, was that a parent cannot bargain away a child’s right to future financial support. “Provisions that attempt to put a ceiling on child support available in the future are unenforceable and misleading,” Brian argued. In any event, Brian asserted, a motion for relief from judgment was the wrong tool for seeking modification of a child support order. But no motion to modify

2 The settlement agreement is not part of the lower court record. 3 At the Friend of the Court (FOC) hearing, Brian’s counsel stated that the pandemic “slow[ed]” the QDRO process.

-2- child support would eliminate Shana’s separate duty under the property settlement to transfer $100,000 to him, he insisted.

Shana responded that she was willing to stipulate that the challenged provision in the judgment of divorce was unenforceable and void. The parties’ child support obligations would then need to be recalculated based on the change in circumstances. If the court found the challenged provision enforceable, Shana urged the court to exercise its power under MCL 552.17 to modify the order. Shana further challenged Brian’s characterization of the $100,000 transfer as part of the property division, pointing out that the plain language of the consent judgment and UCSO deviation addendum provided that the one-time transfer was in lieu of child support.

A Friend of the Court (FOC) referee conducted a hearing. In the referee’s report and recommendation, the referee noted that ¶ 6 of the consent judgment “does outline the transfer” and referred to the deviation addendum to the UCSO. The referee continued, “MCR 3.211(D)(1) provides that the terms of the UCSO shall govern if the terms of the judgment or order conflict with the [UCSO].” The UCSO deviation addendum indicated that the $100,000 transfer had already occurred. “While the deviation addendum indicates that the transfer occurred, [Shana’s] counsel explained that the transfer has not occurred due to the time required to prepare a QDRO.” The referee found “a sufficient change in circumstances to review child support,” as Shana claimed the children were living almost exclusively with her. But pursuant to MCL 552.603, any recommended change in the support order could be prospective only. The referee agreed with Brian’s position that the parents could not bargain away the children’s future right to support, but noted that they had reached a settlement to ensure adequate support into the future. The courts were bound by that agreement. The proper method to attack that settlement provision was through an appeal of the divorce judgment, not in a collateral attack to the child support order, the referee ruled:

By failing to appeal the original judgment of divorce, [Shana] has effectively stipulated her consent to its provisions, including the original determination of child support. [Shana’s] agreement to pay [Brian] is clear and documented both in the JOD and UCSO. Because the transfer has not occur[red] does not, in this Referee’s opinion, invalidate the agreement reached by the parties.

Shana objected to the FOC recommendation.

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