Arnal v. Arnal

609 S.E.2d 821, 363 S.C. 268, 2005 S.C. App. LEXIS 35
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 7, 2005
Docket3943
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 609 S.E.2d 821 (Arnal v. Arnal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arnal v. Arnal, 609 S.E.2d 821, 363 S.C. 268, 2005 S.C. App. LEXIS 35 (S.C. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

*276 HEARN, C.J.:

David Arnal (Husband) appeals from the final order of the family court which granted the parties a divorce, divided the marital property, imputed income to Husband, established child support and visitation, and required him to pay attorneys’ fees and guardian ad litem fees. Laura Lawton Arnal (Wife) also appeals, contesting the equitable distribution and the determination of marital property. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.

FACTS

The parties were married in 1995. In 1999, they had a son who was diagnosed with Down’s Syndrome. Both prior to and during the parties’ marriage, Husband was employed by Wife’s father in his development company. Wife’s father, Charles Fraser, was one of the main developers of Hilton Head Island, where the parties resided. The parties separated in 1999, shortly after the child was born.

Wife and child now reside in Brevard, North Carolina in a home purchased by one of two trusts under which she is a beneficiary. Father remained in Hilton Head and started his own consulting and land development business. Wife’s main source of income is from the family trusts. She is also employed part time in order to be able to devote time to the child’s special needs.

This case has a very litigious history. Wife initiated the action seeking custody of the child, child support, division of the property, and ultimately a divorce. Husband answered, requesting joint legal custody, equitable division, and rehabilitative or lump sum alimony.

A temporary hearing was held in January 2000, in which the parties were granted joint legal custody, with Wife having physical custody and decision-making authority with regard to the child’s treatment. That temporary order granted Husband visitation in Brevard only and required him to pay $621.78 a month in child support.

In May 2000, Husband moved for a change of custody as a result of Wife’s failure to begin therapies for the child. Additionally, Husband contended Wife had failed to complete the *277 child’s vaccinations. By the time of the hearing, Wife had commenced therapy and completed the vaccinations, so the change in custody was denied.

Husband then moved to compel discovery and to amend his pleadings to seek custody of the child. In return to Husband’s motion, Wife sought the following relief: psychological testing of the parties; sole custody; sanctions for Husband’s failure to comply with Rule 11, SCRCP; and a restraining order against Husband. The court compelled Wife to comply with discovery, declined sanctions against Husband, dismissed the motion for a restraining order, and continued the issue of custody of the child. Wife’s request for psychological testing was abandoned.

In October 2000, the family court denied Wife’s request for sole custody and granted Husband overnight visitation in the Brevard area and visitation in Hilton Head once a month. A second order required Husband to answer interrogatories and produce requested documents.

Thereafter, Wife filed a rule to show cause against Husband seeking to compel him to pay his portion of the medical expenses for the child. The court found Husband in contempt and ordered him to pay the expenses and $1,000 in attorney’s fees. Wife filed a subsequent rule to show cause in December 2000, after Husband faded to pay medical expenses and failed to respond to discovery requests. Husband had complied by the date of the hearing, so the court did not hold him in contempt, though it reserved the issue of legal fees, required Husband to pay the medical expenses, and ordered him to produce documents.

In February 2001, upon Wife’s motion, the family court reviewed Husband’s visitation. The court concluded that because the child “ha[d] been suffering illnesses since December and the final hearing in this matter [was] scheduled shortly, and since it [was] the cold and flu season” it would be in the child’s best interest for all visitation to occur in Brevard rather than having the child travel to Hilton Head pending the final hearing.

Wife subsequently filed a motion to hold Husband in contempt for his failure to respond to discovery and produce documents that he claimed contained a confidentiality agree *278 ment involving' investment property he owned with others. The family court held Husband in contempt and ordered him to pay $10,000 in legal fees to Wife. The same order relieved Husband’s counsel and appointed a new guardian ad litem for the child. Husband did not appeal the contempt order until the filing of the current appeal.

This action was tried in April 2001. In its final order, the family court granted Wife sole custody of the child and gave her the right to control all medical and educational decisions for the child. Husband received visitation on alternating weekends, but the first and third visitation of the month were required to be in Brevard rather than at Husband’s home in Hilton Head. Additionally, the visitation in Brevard was limited to no more than one hour travel, and Husband was required to provide documentation to that effect. The visitation restrictions were to end when the minor reached forty-three months of age. 1

The final order also divided the marital property. The court granted Husband the properties he acquired through his partnership and split the personal possessions. Additionally, in calculating child support, the court imputed income to Husband in the amount of $9,060.62 per month and imputed income to Wife in the amount of $5,012.40 per month. According to their sworn financial declarations filed pursuant to Rule 20, SCRFC, Husband earned $8,656 per month and Wife earned $4,750 per month. Husband was required to pay $1,564 in child support and to pay his pro-rata share (64%) of uncovered medical expenses. The court required Wife to apply for Medicaid and to research and apply for any other financial assistance available in order to pay the costs of caring for the child.

The family court ordered the guardian’s fee to be paid equally by the parties up to the date of trial and required Husband to bear the full cost of the guardian’s fee at trial. The court found Husband should be responsible for the full fee at trial because “the issue of visitation was tried primarily *279 because [Husband] would not accept the Guardian ad Litem’s recommendations.” Finally, after analyzing the appropriate factors, the court ordered Husband to pay $65,000 in attorneys’ fees in addition to the $10,000 and $1,000 awards previously ordered.

Husband filed a motion for reconsideration, challenging many aspects of the family court’s order. The motion was denied in October 2001.

Subsequent to the final order, Wife filed a rule to show cause seeking to hold Husband in contempt on the grounds that: Husband failed to pay uncovered medical expenses, Husband failed to pay his August child support in full, Husband failed to provide documentation he was not traveling more than one hour from Brevard, and Husband failed to pay the remaining balance of $500 on the previous attorneys’ fees award of $1,000.

The hearing was held on November 6, 2001.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
609 S.E.2d 821, 363 S.C. 268, 2005 S.C. App. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnal-v-arnal-scctapp-2005.