Black v. Black

2008 UT App 465, 199 P.3d 371, 619 Utah Adv. Rep. 37, 2008 Utah App. LEXIS 460, 2008 WL 5246314
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedDecember 18, 2008
Docket20071014-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2008 UT App 465 (Black v. Black) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Black v. Black, 2008 UT App 465, 199 P.3d 371, 619 Utah Adv. Rep. 37, 2008 Utah App. LEXIS 460, 2008 WL 5246314 (Utah Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

McHUGH, Judge:

¶ 1 Kim S. Black (Wife) appeals the trial court's Order terminating alimony retroactively to June 2001, the date when Jon Cornell Black (Husband) filed his first petition to modify the divorce decree to end his alimony obligations (the First Petition). 1 Wife claims that under Utah Code section 30-3-5(10), see Utah Code Ann. § 30-3-5(10) (2007), 2 alimony can be terminated only as of the date cohabitation was established judicially. In the alternative, Wife asserts that if retroactive termination is available, it can relate back only to June 2005 when Husband filed an amended petition that added cohabitation as a ground for termination of alimony (the Amended Petition). Husband cross-appeals, claiming that the trial court should have terminated alimony as of the date cohabitation began. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

¶2 Wife and Husband married on June 7, 1980, and divorced on July 3, 1989. They have one son, who was born in 1982. Throughout the marriage, Husband was disabled. While Wife was acting as Husband's guardian and conservator, Husband failed to file a response to the divorce petition Wife *373 filed with the district court. The divorce decree, which was entered by default, awarded Wife monthly alimony of $750.

T3 In June 2001, Husband filed the First Petition to modify the divorcee decree to terminate alimony. This First Petition was based on the fact that although Husband and Wife had been married for only nine years, Husband had already paid alimony for twelve years. 3 Thereafter, Husband served Wife with interrogatories and requests for the production of documents. Wife was nonecom-pliant, responding late and incompletely. In addition, Wife's answer to Interrogatory No. 2 was false. Interrogatory No. 2 asked Wife to "[list all persons, if any, who reside with you, giving [his or her] name, age and relationship." Wife responded that only her son lived with her, despite the fact that she had been living with Ted Tomlin since the fall of 2000.

T 4 The parties allowed the proceedings to languish until June 2005, when just weeks before trial, Husband filed the Amended Petition seeking to modify the divorce decree on the additional ground of cohabitation, see id. 4 The trial court accepted Husband's Amended Petition and continued the trial date. Subsequently, the court again postponed trial and held Wife in contempt for interference with witnesses. Following trial in November 2007, the court concluded that Wife and Tomlin were cohabitating and ter-minatéd alimony retroactively to the date of the First Petition. In so doing, the trial court noted "[the general rule ... that the date of the modification of support or alimony is tied to the date that the petition for modification is filed." See generally Utah Code Ann. § 78B-12-112(4) (Supp.2008) ("A child or spousal support payment under a support order may be modified with respect to any period during which a modification is pending, but only from the date of service of the pleading. 5

ISSUE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW

15 Wife argues that the trial court incorrectly relied on Utah Code section 78B-12-112(4) when it terminated alimony retroactively to the date of the First Petition. Instead, Wife asserts that section 30-3-5(10) controls this issue because it more specifically relates to the termination of alimony upon the establishment of cohabitation. Compare Utah Code Ann. § 78B-12-112(4), with Utah Code Ann. § 30-3-5(10). Relying on section 30-8-5(10), Wife contends that the trial court erred in terminating alimony retroactively, as opposed to terminating it only with respect to future payments after proof of cohabitation.

T6 Husband likewise asserts that the trial court incorrectly relied upon section 78B-12-112(4) and that section 80-8-5(10) specifically governs the termination of alimony due to cohabitation. Husband's argument diverges from Wife's, however, with respect to the trial court's power to apply the termination of alimony retroactively under section 30-3-5(10). Husband claims section 830-3-5(10) permits termination of alimony retroactively from the date cohabitation is shown to have begun.

17 We review a trial court's statutory interpretations under a correction of error standard with no deference to the trial court. See Brinkerhoff v. Brinkerhoff. 945 P.2d 113, 115 (Utah Ct.App.1997). " 'We will interpret a statute according to its plain language, unless such a reading is unreasonably confused, inoperable, or in blatant contravention of the express purpose of the statute.'" Id. at 116 (quoting Perrine v. Kennecott Mining Corp., 911 P.2d 1290, 1292 (Utah 1996)). We also must give effect to the *374 legislature's use of each word by avoiding interpretations that render any part of the statute superfluous. See Johansen v. Johansen, 2002 UT App 75, ¶ 7, 45 P.3d 520.

ANALYSIS

18 Utah Code section 80-8-5(10) reads: "Any order of the court that a party pay alimony to a former spouse terminates upon establishment by the party paying alimony that the former spouse is cohabitating with another person." Utah Code Ann. § 30-3-5(10) (2007). We agree with the parties that section 30-3-5(10), unlike section 78B-12-112(4), specifically addresses termination of alimony based on cohabitation. Compare id., with Utah Code Ann. § 78B-12-112(4). The plain language of section 30-3-5(10) indicates the legislature's express mandate that the order imposing alimony terminate automatically upon the establishment of cohabitation, thereby eliminating any future alimony obligations. See Utah Code Ann. § 30-3-5(10). Even Wife concedes, however, that "section 80-[3-5](10) is silent regarding the court's power to retroactively terminate alimony based on cohabitation." See generally id. Consequently, section 80-3-5(10) does not address the issue before us.

T9 Despite the trial court's reliance on section T78B-12-112(4), that section is likewise unhelpful to our analysis. We are unaware of any Utah cases, and the parties have cited none, where section 78B-12-112(4) has been applied to terminate alimony, retroactively or prospectively, on the grounds of cohabitation. We conclude that section 78B-12-112(4) is therefore inapplicable here.

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Bluebook (online)
2008 UT App 465, 199 P.3d 371, 619 Utah Adv. Rep. 37, 2008 Utah App. LEXIS 460, 2008 WL 5246314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/black-v-black-utahctapp-2008.