Cheryl Ann Payne v. William Horace Payne

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 23, 2019
Docket342865
StatusUnpublished

This text of Cheryl Ann Payne v. William Horace Payne (Cheryl Ann Payne v. William Horace Payne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cheryl Ann Payne v. William Horace Payne, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

CHERYL ANN PAYNE, UNPUBLISHED May 23, 2019 Plaintiff/Counterdefendant- Appellant,

v No. 342865 Keweenaw Circuit Court WILLIAM HORACE PAYNE, LC No. 2013-000720-CK

Defendant/Counterplaintiff- Appellee.

Before: SHAPIRO, P.J., and BORRELLO and BECKERING, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff Cheryl Payne appeals the trial court’s post-judgment order modifying defendant William Payne’s obligation to pay her living expenses under the parties’ 2010 settlement agreement. For the reasons stated below, we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Cheryl and William were married for 25 years. William is a successful musician. Cheryl is a homemaker who did not earn outside income. They divorced in 2010. The financial aspects of the judgment of divorce were all agreed to by the parties in a written settlement agreement.

The agreement divided the real and personal property into two essentially equal portions. The financial part of the settlement agreement divided some accounts in half. There were also three sources of future income streams: two pensions and royalty payments. The pensions were divided into equal interests and Cheryl was to receive 40% of William’s royalty income. In addition, William will pay Cheryl traditional monthly spousal support of $1500 until she reaches the age of 66.

Relevant to this appeal, William was also required to continue making deposits into a joint bank account (household account) for the purpose of payment toward Cheryl’s “legitimate living expenses,” described as “commonplace expenditures routinely incurred in ordinary course of life,” including but not limited to her property taxes, car payments, utility bills, prescription

-1- costs, medical and dental costs, insurance premiums, co-pays, dry cleaning expenses, lawn work, gardening, plow service costs, pet expenses, and accountant fees. The provision prohibited the use of these funds for “luxury goods or services.” This obligation also terminates when Cheryl reaches the age of 66.

William’s annual obligation to the household account was set at $35,000. The parties agreed that once Cheryl began drawing monthly benefits from William’s pensions, which she was required to do when William did, there was to be a setoff of 90% of Cheryl’s pension payments against William’s obligation. At the age of 67, William could petition the trial court to reevaluate his obligation “based upon and limited to such issues such as Cheryl A. Payne’s actual living costs and sources of present and projected future income, and William H. Payne’s present and projected future income.”

In January 2013, Cheryl filed an action seeking to enforce the settlement agreement and claiming that William failed to complete several actions required by the agreement. Cheryl asserted in part that William failed to make required deposits into the household account and failed to pay her share of royalties. William counterclaimed, asserting in part that Cheryl was misusing the household account. William turned 67 during the pendency of that case, and in April 2016, he filed a motion to terminate his obligation to pay Cheryl’s household expenses.

In December 2016, the parties reached an agreement resolving Cheryl’s claims; the household account obligation was the sole remaining issue. The parties agreed that Cheryl would provide a list of her household expenses prior to a review hearing.

The hearing was held in November 2017, at which time Cheryl was 60 and William was 68. The trial court received numerous exhibits into evidence and heard testimony from the parties, William’s accountant and Cheryl’s tax preparer.

In January 2018, the trial court issued a written opinion and order reducing William’s obligation toward the household account to $12,521.71 annually. The court decided that William had sufficient income to continue contributing to the household account. The court then found that Cheryl’s annual income was $61,000, but determined that it would not consider Cheryl’s pension income for purposes of the reevaluation because the parties’ agreement “addressed the effect of pension,” i.e., it reduced William’s obligation by 90% of the pension payments. The court also ruled that it would not consider Cheryl’s spousal support as part of her income. Thus, for purposes of reevaluating the household account obligation, the court determined that Cheryl’s relevant annual income was $28,476. The court then found that Cheryl’s “actual legitimate living expenses” were $54,079.21. Accordingly, the court determined that Cheryl’s relevant income was insufficient to pay her living expenses and she was experiencing a “shortfall” of $25,603.21.

The court then applied the parties’ agreement to set off 90% of Cheryl’s pension income against the household account obligation. According to the trial court’s opinion, Cheryl received $14,535 in pension payments in 2016, and William was therefore entitled to a reduction of his obligation equivalent to 90% of that sum, which amounts to $13,071.50. Thus, the trial court reduced the “shortfall” of $25,603.21 by $13,081.50 to determine that William’s new annual household account obligation was $12,521.71.

-2- II. ANALYSIS

A. HOUSEHOLD EXPENSES

On appeal, Cheryl argues that trial court made multiple errors in calculating her annual household expenses. We disagree.1

Cheryl first argues that the trial court clearly erred by failing to include the costs of food, entertainment, clothing as part of her household expenses. We agree with Cheryl that these expenses constitute “actual living costs” and thus possibly could have been considered by the trial court in reevaluating the household account obligation either as items to be paid from the household account or as expenses outside the account that must be paid out of her own income. However, Cheryl failed to present evidence of those costs at the hearing. Specifically, she did not include those costs in the exhibit listing her household expenses, and she did not represent them as items paid from that account. Nor did Cheryl present any other evidence from which the trial court could have made findings as to how much of her income she spends on those items. Accordingly, we find no error in the trial court not accounting for those costs in its reevaluation.

Cheryl next argues that the trial court clearly erred in failing to consider future costs, such as increased health insurance costs and proposed repairs, in determining her actual living expenses. With respect to health insurance, Cheryl’s list of expenses included her actual health insurance costs for 2016 to 2017. The trial court noted that the insurance premium increased by $88 in 2017 and the court adjusted Cheryl’s annual expense calculation accordingly. However, she contends that the trial court erred by not including future health insurance increases in its calculations. The trial court noted that while Cheryl requested the consideration of future expenses, the parties’ agreement did not authorize such considerations. Indeed, the settlement agreement allowed only for consideration of “actual” expenses. Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary (11th ed) defines “actual,” in part, as “existing or occurring at the time . . . .” More to the point, the agreement specifically allowed for consideration of the “present and projected future income” of each party but makes no reference to projected future expenses. Accordingly, future expenses are beyond the scope of the parties’ reevaluation criteria, and the trial court did not clearly err in rejecting Cheryl’s request to consider those costs.

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Bluebook (online)
Cheryl Ann Payne v. William Horace Payne, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cheryl-ann-payne-v-william-horace-payne-michctapp-2019.