Cabot v. Cabot

774 N.E.2d 1113, 55 Mass. App. Ct. 756, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 1148
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedSeptember 9, 2002
DocketNo. 99-P-698
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 774 N.E.2d 1113 (Cabot v. Cabot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cabot v. Cabot, 774 N.E.2d 1113, 55 Mass. App. Ct. 756, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 1148 (Mass. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Duffly, J.

By the end of the seven years it took to conclude litigation on a modification complaint that sought parental contribution to college costs, an issue not addressed by the divorce judgment, the parties’ two children both had graduated from college. The defendant, Robert C. Cabot (Robert), appeals from a modification judgment ordering that he repay his former wife, Caroline D. Cabot (Caroline), for her prior contributions to the children’s college expenses.

The modification action was consolidated for trial with a contempt action filed by Caroline.1 Robert appeals the contempt judgment against him2; Caroline cross-appeals from so much of the contempt judgment that fails to nullify or rescind the 1985 agreement that is the basis of the judgment holding Robert in contempt. The appeals from both judgments have been consolidated for review. We affirm the judgments.

Background. We affirmed the parties’ 1982 divorce judgment nisi in Cabot v. Cabot, 18 Mass. App. Ct. 903 (1984). That judgment provided, in pertinent part, that Caroline have physical custody of the parties’ two minor children, a daughter, bom June 20, 1973, and a son, bom February 9, 1975. Robert was to make payments of unallocated support for the children and Caroline.3 Although the trial judge recognized that both children, as had their father before them, attended the Charles River [758]*758School, he made no order obligating Robert to contribute to the cost of private schooling, leaving these expenses to be paid by Caroline. Neither did the divorce judgment address the issue of the children’s college expenses; this was, as we shall discuss, to be expected as they were then in grammar school.

Two years later, Caroline sought initial modification of the divorce judgment. In connection with that action, the parties entered into a stipulation for judgment in March, 1985, that also constituted the parties’ surviving agreement.4 The terms of the agreement were incorporated in a modification judgment.5 It is this agreement that Robert claims bars further modification of the divorce judgment and that Caroline claims should have been rescinded.

The agreement, which we describe in greater detail later in this opinion, required the parties to fund a “Clifford” trust established for the children during the marriage6 with proceeds from the sale of certain real property. Robert agreed that, as [759]*759trustee, he would maintain the principal of this trust in “high income producing securities consistent with the manner in which the funds have been maintained in the past and shall exercise his discretion to this end consistent with the duties he owes as trustee.” Trust income was to be paid at least annually and used to pay the first $14,000 per year of the children’s education costs. To the extent that the children’s “education costs” (a term to which we shall return) exceeded the total of $14,000, the parties agreed they would each pay one-half of the excess.

In March, 1990, Caroline filed a contempt complaint alleging (as later amended and as is relevant to the issues on appeal) that Robert had violated the 1985 modification judgment by failing to pay his share of the children’s private school education expenses; to maintain the assets of the children’s trust in high-yield investments; and to distribute the income from the children’s trust in accordance with the modification judgment. She also filed, in October, 1990, a complaint in which she sought an order that Robert be required to pay the upcoming college tuition and related expenses of their children. The actions were consolidated for trial which commenced in December, 1997, and continued over seven nonconsecutive days, concluding January 18, 1998. Judgments issued in August, 1998, and these appeals followed.

The more than seven-year hiatus between the dates on which the original complaints were filed and the date the trial began was the result of numerous intermediate proceedings and litigation that failed to resolve the disputes which were the subjects of actions appealed from.7

We conclude that the trial judge was warranted in modifying the divorce judgment and in finding Robert in contempt, and also that there was no abuse of discretion inherent in the remedies ordered by the judge.

[760]*7601. The modification judgment. As we have noted, by the time of entry of the 1998 judgment that is the subject of this appeal, the parties’ son was twenty-three, their daughter twenty-five, and both had graduated from college. While awaiting an order assigning responsibility for these expenses, Caroline was largely responsible for assuring that college was paid for. Pursuant to a temporary order issued in June, 1992, Robert was ordered to pay his daughter’s first semester college expenses. The judgment that was entered in 1998 modified the 1982 divorce judgment by ordering Robert to reimburse Caroline for amounts she had contributed to the children’s college educations and requiring that he pay the outstanding loans obtained or guaranteed by Caroline in connection with these college costs.

(a) Status of the 1985 agreement. According to Robert, the following provision in the 1985 agreement precludes modifica-tian of the divorce judgment:

“In consideration of the foregoing agreement of modificatian the parties hereto after being fully informed of their rights under Stansel v. Stansel[8] agree on the finality of the terms of this agreement as to alimony, child support, education and medical expenses.”

He argues that the reference in this provision to “education” is clear and encompasses “college education” and that the trial judge erred in admitting extrinsic evidence to explain and vary the term.

Robert goes on to argue that, even if we were to conclude that “education” refers solely to pre-college education and that the agreement is silent on the issue of college costs, as a fully integrated, surviving agreement it can be modified only upon [761]*761“countervailing equities,” a showing not made here, and not merely upon materially changed circumstances. See McCarthy v. McCarthy, 36 Mass. App. Ct. 490, 493 (1994) (“more than a material change in circumstances or, to use the analogous term, a ‘countervailing equity,’ ” is required to modify surviving agreement). This is because (he argues) the integrated agreement governs all of the parties’ obligations to one another, including the children’s future college expenses; the failure to make provision in the agreement for the payment of these college expenses reflects the parties’ intention that neither party was obligated to pay them. See ibid.

The trial judge found that the agreement “was intended to provide a mechanism for payment of and apportionment between the parties of the children’s private school expenses through high school only,” and further that “[tjhe issue of college expenses was . . . rather postponed for a later determination in that it was premature ([the children] were only 11 and 9 respectively), and Robert was in any event unwilling to address the issue of college at that time” (emphasis original).

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Bluebook (online)
774 N.E.2d 1113, 55 Mass. App. Ct. 756, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 1148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cabot-v-cabot-massappct-2002.