Allard v. Allard

856 S.W.2d 64, 1993 Mo. App. LEXIS 573, 1993 WL 118179
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 20, 1993
DocketNo. WD 46424
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 856 S.W.2d 64 (Allard v. Allard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allard v. Allard, 856 S.W.2d 64, 1993 Mo. App. LEXIS 573, 1993 WL 118179 (Mo. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

SHANGLER, Judge.

The wife brought a motion, and the husband a cross-motion, to modify the order of dissolution of marriage entered in October 1985. The care and custody of the minor children born of the marriage, Douglas Harold Allard III, born November 15, 1972, and Christopher Corey Allard, born April 12, 1975, was awarded to the wife. The husband was ordered to pay through the Circuit Court of Vernon County $175 per month per child as support.

The dissolution decree incorporated into the judgment the separation agreement previously entered into by the parties. A term of the separation agreement provided:

OTHER CONTRACTUAL AGREEMENTS: Husband shall pay for a four-year college education for each of the children at a Missouri state-supported university which include room, board, tuition, books, college incidentals, and said child’s necessary clothing. So long as Husband does pay those things, regarding a college education aforementioned, then the child support shall abate regarding said child. Husband shall maintain a policy of life insurance on himself payable to each child in an amount sufficient to insure this college education.... So long as Husband pays child support as provided herein or as otherwise modified by the court, Husband shall receive the federal and state tax exemptions for each child as a dependent and Wife shall not claim said exemptions on her tax returns.

The older son, Doug, commenced matriculation at Southwest Missouri State University [SMSU] in August 1991. The motions were heard in May 1992.

The wife’s motion to modify came in three Counts. Count I sought the court to order the husband to pay the college ex[66]*66penses of son Doug subject to offset of grant money, and for an attorney fee. Count II sought for the support order as to each child, Douglas and Corey, to be increased to a level compatible with the guidelines of Supreme Court Rule 88.01, based upon the present financial circumstances of the parents. The pleading also sought an attorney fee. Count III sought to enforce the obligation of the husband under the “Other Contractual Agreements” provision of the settlement agreement to pay, in lieu of child support, for a four-year college education of son Doug, then enrolled at SMSU. The pleading claimed that, in breach of agreement, the husband refused to pay the costs of a college education for Doug for the 1991-1992 school year, which amounted to $7787.

The husband answered Count I that son Doug was employed and so able to contribute towards his college expenses, that the income of the wife was such that she should also contribute towards Doug’s college education, and that the ■ husband lacked the resources to pay for an attorney. The husband asked the order of the court that the wife contribute to pay his attorney fee. The husband’s answer to Count II was that he was presently paying child support to son Doug in excess of the Rule 88.01 guidelines, and pleaded also that all future child support payments be made payable directly to son Doug. The answer to Count III alleged that the college expenses pleaded did not take into account son Doug’s earnings, grants and scholarships awarded to him, among other sums. It alleged also that the settlement agreement provision invoked by the wife allows the husband the option to pay either the college education costs or the $175 per month awarded as support for each child, and that one option abates the other.

The husband’s cross-motion to modify, in effect, realleged for affirmative relief, the numerous grounds pleaded in the answer to the three counts of the wife’s motion. It sought the court to modify the decree of dissolution so that (1) the husband pay all sums ordered for the support of son Doug directly to him; (2) the order of support for son Doug be made to conform to Rule 88.01; (3) the wife be required to pay a reasonable monthly sum towards the support of son Doug; and (4) the wife be ordered to pay a reasonable attorney fee for the husband.

The court sustained part of Count II and Count III of the wife’s motion, and denied the husband’s motion. As to Count II the court adjudged that there was no change of circumstance so substantial as to make the prior award of child support unreasonable under Rule 88.01. The court also determined that the wife was entitled to an award of a reasonable attorney fee against the husband. As to Count III the court adjudged $7450.50 in favor of the wife, the cost of son Doug’s college education for his freshman year at SMSU. That sum was subject to a credit of $4575/ leaving a balance due of $2893.50.

The husband was denied any relief on his cross-motion.

Accordingly, the court entered these terms of judgment:

On the wife’s motion:
Count I was denied.

On Count II, an award to the wife of $175 per month against the husband for the support of son Corey, with no further support due the wife if the husband “pay the costs of Corey’s college education as he contractually agreed.”

On Count II, an award to the wife against the husband for her attorney fee in the sum of $953.16.

On Count III, an award to the wife against the husband for $2893.50, the balance due for the costs of son Doug’s freshman year at SMSU, payable with interest at 9% per annum, “with all sums due payable to the parties’s son, Douglas Harold Allard III.”

On the husband’s cross-motion:
Relief was denied on the cross-motions.

[67]*67The husband appeals the grant of relief to the wife on Count II and Count III of her motion. The husband argues that award of $953.16 as attorney fee for the wife against the husband under Count II was erroneous as an abuse of discretion. He argues also that the award of the college expenses for son Doug under Count III was erroneous because it was based on an agreement that is so vague as to be void and unenforceable.

The husband appeals also the denial of his cross-motion in that, in adjudicating the order in favor of the wife, the judgment failed to consider the earnings of son Doug while at college, loans and other resources available for those expenses, as well as the wife’s “duties to assist in support,” and established no criteria for course hours and satisfactory completion of academic work.

At the time the dissolution decree was entered in 1985, the wife was employed as a teacher’s aide and the husband was with the Missouri State Highway Department. He also had a paper route with the Joplin Globe. In the last calendar year prior to the dissolution, 1984, the wife earned $4648. The husband earned $20,653 from his employment and $2798 from the paper route. The motions to modify were heard in May 1992. During 1991, the calendar year prior to the hearing the wife, now employed at a Nevada bank, earned $19,-230. The husband earned $26,868 from his employment and showed a loss of $1279 from the paper route. The wife since February 1992 works some 57 hours per month at Nevada Mental Health Clinic with gross earnings of $242.45 per month.

The husband has made the child support payments of $175 per month per child and maintained health insurance on his two sons as the 1985 decree provided. The sons, Doug and Corey, have worked part-time since they were sixteen. Corey earned between $3000 and $3500 during 1991. Doug earned $7744.54 from three jobs during 1991. It included $1274 from employment at SMSU during his freshman year.

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Bluebook (online)
856 S.W.2d 64, 1993 Mo. App. LEXIS 573, 1993 WL 118179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allard-v-allard-moctapp-1993.