Bondy v. Levy

812 P.2d 268, 119 Idaho 961, 1991 Ida. LEXIS 66
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 7, 1991
DocketNo. 18214
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 812 P.2d 268 (Bondy v. Levy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bondy v. Levy, 812 P.2d 268, 119 Idaho 961, 1991 Ida. LEXIS 66 (Idaho 1991).

Opinion

BAKES, Chief Justice.

This is a breach of contract action filed by respondent Marcia Bondy (Bondy) against her former husband, appellant Paul Levy (Levy). The contract in this case was a property settlement and custody agreement signed in March, 1985 (settlement agreement). Bondy brought her action to recover allegedly deficient support payments owed under the settlement agreement. The district court awarded Bondy $18,250, representing part of the deficient payments she had initially claimed, as well as moneys accrued and owing up to the time the district court entered judgment. Levy appeals this ruling.

Bondy and Levy were married on May 2, 1977; they were divorced on May 31, 1985. They have two children. In March, 1985, the parties entered a settlement agree[963]*963ment. This agreement was approved by the court and, except for child support and child custody portions, the agreement was not incorporated into the divorce decree. The agreement settled Bondy’s claim for child support by requiring Levy to make payments to Bondy and further requiring Bondy to support the children from these payments.

This type of agreement is known as a “Lester” agreement, entitling the parties to certain tax benefits.1 Typically, such agreements require the husband to make payments of a certain amount and allow him thereafter to obtain a deduction from taxes for the payment. Through the agreement, Levy provided Bondy with funds which she would use to provide for all the children’s needs. The payments were $1,500 a month, $1,000 of which was used to cover all the children’s needs, and $500 of which was allowed to cover “overhead,” including Bondy’s income tax costs resulting from the support arrangement.

In April, 1985, the parties made a written modification of the contract. The modification dealt with Bondy’s duty to pay back to Levy $1,000 per month if Levy had custody of the children for a majority of the month. The modification in turn required Levy to provide for all the children’s needs when he had majority custody.

In September, 1986, Levy became disabled and was hospitalized in Spokane, Washington. In October, 1986, Bondy met Levy in Spokane and allegedly told him not to make any payments “as long as he was ill.” Levy, however, continued paying $500 per month, the same as he had been doing when he had full custody. Levy made payment for November and December, 1986, by a $1,000 check dated November 20, 1986, which has been credited by Bondy as $500 for November and $500 for December, 1986.

Levy moved to Boise in November, 1986, residing in Bondy’s home for a time with the children. On January 27, 1987, Levy wrote a letter to Bondy in which he allegedly confirmed the existence of the oral agreement and waiver of contract payment and requested a renegotiation of the contract payment, based upon a renegotiation provision in the contract which was contingent upon changes in the tax law which had recently occurred. In response to Levy’s letter, Bondy’s attorney sent a letter dated January 30, 1987, allegedly acknowledging Levy’s request for modification. The letter stated that Bondy was not expecting Levy to “comply with an agreement you are unable to fulfill.” Bondy’s attorney responded to Levy’s request for modification of the payment by proposing a “change of maintenance to child support if the tax analysis illustrates that purpose.”

A renegotiation did not materialize and on March 9, 1987, Bondy filed a complaint seeking recovery for allegedly delinquent payments owed under the settlement agreement as well as support payments which would accrue up to the time of the court’s judgment. Bondy denied that any contract modifications or agreements had been made and that the April, 1985, amendment to the contract was unconscionable and that the waiver agreement of November, 1986, was null and void because it was oral. On March 9, 1987, Bondy also filed a separate application to modify the parties’ child custody and visitation schedule. Both cases were filed at the magistrate level.

On May 1, 1987, the cases were reassigned to the district court from the magistrate court. On June 8, 1987, Bondy brought a motion for summary judgment on her claim for delinquent payments and a motion to dismiss Levy’s counterclaims and to strike certain defenses in his answer. The district court denied the motion Levy had made for an accounting and granted partial summary judgment to Bondy.

The case was subsequently tried on February 27, 1989, and March 13-15, 1989. The district court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law on May 25, 1989. Levy filed his notice of appeal on August 1, 1989.

[964]*964Appellant raises a number of issues. First, Levy argues that the district court should have dismissed Bondy’s complaint because no cause of action against him existed at the time the complaint was filed. Although the district court found after trial that Levy was entitled to roughly $4,000 dollars in offsets for monies he had spent on the children, the district court also found that he was liable for $1,000 per month during the period that he alleged he was disabled and unable to pay. While technically the offsets which were subsequently found exceeded the arrearages on March 9, 1987, the date that the complaint was filed, by the time the case was tried the trial court found that Bondy was entitled to a substantial judgment, even after the offsets for monies Levy had spent on the children. At the time of the filing of the complaint, the amount of the offsets was unliquidated, and within a month or two after the filing of the complaint the amount of the arrearages owed by Levy exceeded the amount of the offsets which the trial court ultimately concluded were justified. By the time that any motions were heard before the district court, the amount owing to Bondy exceeded the unliquidated offset. Accordingly, we find no error in the district court’s not dismissing the action on these grounds.

Levy argues further that the complaint should have been dismissed under the doctrine of mutually exclusive remedies. Specifically, Levy argues that by filing an action for child support, Bondy was precluded from bringing an action to enforce the contract, as those remedies were mutually inconsistent. “Inconsistency of remedies is defined not as inconsistency between the remedies, but as an inconsistency in the facts relied upon. ‘To make actions inconsistent one action must allege what the other denies, or the allegation in one must necessarily repudiate or be repugnant to the other.’ ” Wolford v. Tankersley, 107 Idaho 1062, 1067, 695 P.2d 1201, 1206 (1985). I.R.C.P. 8(e)(2) specifically provides that, “A party may also state as many separate claims or defenses as he has regardless of consistency and whether based on legal or equitable grounds or on both.” In this case, Bondy was not seeking a remedy based upon inconsistent facts, but was alleging in both proceedings that Levy owed her money for child support. This appears to be the situation analogous to Rule 8(e)(2) of two separate mutually exclusive legal grounds for a single factual claim for child support.2 Under the circumstances of this case, we do not believe Bondy’s action on the contract was inconsistent with or repugnant to her action for child support, or that Levy was unfairly prejudiced by the filing of that action. Wilson v. Hambelton, 109 Idaho 198, 706 P.2d 87 (1985).

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Related

Bondy v. Levy
829 P.2d 1342 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1992)

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Bluebook (online)
812 P.2d 268, 119 Idaho 961, 1991 Ida. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bondy-v-levy-idaho-1991.