A.M.L. v. J.W.L.

98 So. 3d 1001, 2012 WL 3516848, 2012 Miss. LEXIS 398
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 16, 2012
DocketNo. 2010-CA-01357-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 98 So. 3d 1001 (A.M.L. v. J.W.L.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A.M.L. v. J.W.L., 98 So. 3d 1001, 2012 WL 3516848, 2012 Miss. LEXIS 398 (Mich. 2012).

Opinions

RANDOLPH, Justice,

for the Court:

¶ 1. The “Child Custody, Support and Property Settlement Agreement” (“Agreement”) between A.M.L. and J.W.L., incorporated into their February 2002 “Final Judgment of Divorce,” provided that they would share “joint legal custody” of their four daughters, with A.M.L. having “primary physical custody” and J.W.L. having frequent visitation. The Agreement also [1005]*1005provided for, inter alia, child support, medical expenses and reimbursement, college expenses, and life insurance naming the children as beneficiaries. In the following years, J.W.L. became effectively estranged from his two oldest daughters, and ceased overnight and weekend visitation with both. In 2008, A.M.L. filed a “Petition for Modification and/or Clarification of Final Judgment of Divorce” (“Petition”) and J.W.L. responded with a “Counterclaim for Modification of Custody and Other Relief’ (“Counterclaim”). A.M.L.’s Petition requested full “legal and physical custody” of the children, an increase in child support, clarification of several Agreement provisions, contempt orders against J.W.L. for his alleged failure to comply with various Agreement provisions, and attorney fees. J.W.L.’s Counterclaim sought “full legal and physical custody” of their two youngest daughters, with attending modifications of Agreement provisions regarding child support, medical expenses, and college expenses.

¶ 2. Following trial, the Chancery Court of Madison County, Mississippi, entered its “Opinion and Judgment on Petition for Modification and/or Clarification of Final Judgment of Divorce” (“Opinion and Judgment”). Regarding child custody, the chancellor found a “material change in circumstances ... which warrants modification of custody and the transfer of primary physical and legal custody of [the three youngest children] to [J.W.L.,] based upon conduct of the children which was attributed to A.M.L. “impos[ing] little or no discipline.”1 Yet the chancery court delayed ordering custody modification, holding such ruling in abeyance, “subject to the parties adhering to” several court-imposed conditions. Thus, A.M.L. retained physical custody of the children. The “Opinion and Judgment” also modified J.W.L.’s child-support and college-expense obligations, and denied A.M.L.’s request for attorney fees. Following the denial of post-trial motions filed by A.M.L. and J.W.L.2 with respect to the rulings now challenged on appeal,3 A.M.L. filed “Notice of Appeal” and J.W.L. filed “Notice of Cross-Appeal.”

FACTS

¶ 3. A.M.L. and J.W.L. were married in 1985. During the course of their marriage, the couple had four daughters: A.B.4 (born September 6,1989), C.D. (born June 19, 1991), W.X. (born August 12, 1994), and Y.Z. (born September 16, 1996).5 On February 6, 2002, a “Final Judgment of Divorce—Irreconcilable Differences” between A.M.L. and J.W.L. was entered by the chancery court.

¶4. The Agreement, incorporated into the “Final Judgment of Divorce,” provided that A.M.L. and J.W.L. would share “joint legal custody,” that A.M.L. would have [1006]*1006“primary physical custody,” and that J.W.L. would have frequent visitation. The Agreement further stated that J.W.L. would pay $2,400 per month in child support. Regarding medical expenses, the Agreement provided that J.W.L. “shall pay all of the non-covered medical and dental expenses provided that [A.M.L.] shall not incur any expense on behalf of the children in excess of $200 without prior consultation with [J.W.L.], except in cases of emergency where prior notice is not possible.” (Emphasis added.) The Agreement added that any required reimbursement for non-covered medical and dental expenses “shall” occur “within thirty (30) days of receipt of ... proof of payment.” As to college expenses, the Agreement stated that:

[t]he parties agree that should any child have the aptitude and desire to attend college, the parties agree that they should provide at least a four year college education for their children, subject to their respective financial abilities at the time. They agree to attempt to reach Agreed Orders for the provision of such education for their children in the future and if they are unable to agree, then such issues may be presented to the [c]ourt by either party for adjudication. In the meantime, [J.W.L,] agrees to purchase two (2) MPACTs or comparable prepaid college plans on or before December 31, 2002 which the parties agree may be utilized to cover tuition. All EE Savings Bonds owned by the parties or their children at the time of this Agreement shall be applied to the children’s college education.

The Agreement also provided that J.W.L. “will maintain a life insurance policy in the amount of $1,000,000 upon himself, with the minor children as beneficiaries.... Each party shall provide written proof of such insurance coverage within thirty (30) days of the written demand by the other party.” (Emphasis added.)

¶ 5. Following the divorce, the parties agree that their oldest child, A.B., began having disciplinary problems and declining grades in school. According to A.B., the divorce made her “really upset” and she “became really rebellious about everything[,] ... to anyone.” In her estimation, there was “[p]robably not” anything her parents could have done to prevent her conduct. According to J.W.L., he responded by refusing to allow A.B. to “come over and spend the night with us[6] on weekend visitation[,]” but that she was invited to come for visitation on Monday afternoons “[i]f she would ... behave in a civil fashion ....”7

¶ 6. Soon thereafter, in 2004, A.B. (then fourteen years old) began dating a twenty-one-year-old,8 and would sneak out of A.M.L.’s home in the middle of the night on several occasions. A.B. testified that A.M.L. responded by “grounding me from friends, from the phone[,] anything that I was interested in to try to prevent me from doing stuff....”9

[1007]*1007¶ 7. Subsequently, a serious allegation arose after A.B. reported to a friend that she had been raped by a boy at church. According to A.B., that friend then “told her mom and her mom told [A.M.L.] and the story got mixed up as far as each time it went down the line.”10 Ultimately, C.D. (the second oldest daughter) overheard A.M.L. discussing the incident, told one of her friends, and, according to A.M.L., “this girl understood [C.D.] to be saying that she wondered if [J.W.L.] had sexually molested A.B.... This girl ... shared [that information] with her parents[11] who then went forward and had her talk to [the Department of Human Services (“DHS”) ].” Following investigation, DHS found no evidence of physical or sexual abuse by J.W.L.12

¶ 8. But because of the DHS investigation, J.W.L. also restricted his visitation with C.D. According to J.W.L., “I ... said I would be happy to have her visit with me on the weekday visitation but not have her come over and spend the night.... ” While C.D. explained that the DHS investigation was precipitated by a misunderstanding, J.W.L. testified that he “couldn’t afford” to visit with her further, “from the standpoint that if she made ...

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 So. 3d 1001, 2012 WL 3516848, 2012 Miss. LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aml-v-jwl-miss-2012.