Cowan v. Cowan

2001 OK CIV APP 14, 19 P.3d 322, 72 O.B.A.J. 651, 2000 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 130, 2001 WL 168099
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedAugust 25, 2000
Docket93446
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2001 OK CIV APP 14 (Cowan v. Cowan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cowan v. Cowan, 2001 OK CIV APP 14, 19 P.3d 322, 72 O.B.A.J. 651, 2000 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 130, 2001 WL 168099 (Okla. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

*324 MEMORANDUM OPINION

BUETTNER, J.

T1 Plaintiff/Appellant/Cross-Appellee Cathy Cowan (now Fisher) (Mother), appeals from an order of the trial court which awarded an amount of child support arrearage, but which also determined that laches barred recovery of nine years' worth of arrearages. Defendant/Appellee/Cross-Appellant Stanley Cowan (Father), appeals from the trial court's decisions holding him in contempt for failure to pay four months of child support from October 1984 to January 1985, and denying Father's application to hold Mother in contempt for failing to comply with the visitation ordered in the decree. Mother asserts that the equitable defense of laches is not available to bar recovery of unpaid child support. We agree and reverse and remand for a new determination of the arrearages owed to Mother. Father asserts that the statute of limitations for contempt proceedings is three years and that the trial court was therefore barred from finding him in contempt for failure to pay child support more than three years before Mother filed her application. We reverse the trial court's decision on Mother's contempt application because we find that dormaney bars collection of child support which accrued in 1984 and 1985. We affirm the trial court's denial of Father's contempt application.

T2 Mother and Father were married in 1981. Two children were born of the marriage. The divorce decree was entered September 5, 1984 and filed January 27, 1986. Pursuant to the decree, custody of the children was awarded to Mother. Father was granted visitation in Texas 1 the last weekend of each month, as well as one month during the summer. Each party was ordered to disclose to the other party the children's whereabouts on June 15 and July 15 of each year . 2 A holiday visitation schedule was also included in the decree. The decree further ordered Father to pay $200 per month as child support, commencing on October 1, 1984, and continuing until the children reach majority.

13 The testimony revealed that Father never paid child support or exercised visitation from the time the decree was entered until Mother contacted him in September 1995. Father testified that he failed to pay child support in part because Mother's family told him the parties' children were dead. Father made little effort to determine the truth of this allegation. Mother conceded that she failed to inform Father of the children's whereabouts as required by the decree, but she asserted that her mother's address in Tulsa remained the same and that Father could have contacted her through her mother. Father testified that Mother's mother would not give him information regarding Mother or the children. Mother testified that she lived in Texas for two years after the decree was entered and then returned to Tulsa. Mother testified that she had used at least three different last names since the entry of the decree. While she was living in Tulsa, Mother occasionally sought to find Father, but was unsuccessful until she located him in Sallisaw in 1995. At the time of trial in February 1999, Father had paid all child support due from August 1994 through January 1999, without interest, however.

14 Mother filed her application for contempt August 6, 1997. Mother alleged Father owed $62,530 in unpaid child support and interest 3 Father filed his answer and counterclaim for contempt September 25, 1997. Father alleged Mother was in contempt for denying Father's visitation rights from the time of the decree through September 1995.

T 5 Trial on these issues was held January 6, 1999. In its order, the trial court held 1) Mother never attempted to notify Father of the whereabouts of the children as required by the decree; 2) Mother failed to make any effort to collect child support; 8) Father made no child support payments immediately *325 following the decree; 4) Father should have made child support payments until January 1985 (which amounted to $900); 5) Father acknowledged his obligation to pay child support from August 1994 until August 1995 and Mother is to have judgment for the statutory arrears (interest) from August 1994 through August 1995 up to the time of payment in June 1998; 6) Father is further ordered to pay interest on other specific late payments made during 1996 and 1997; 7) Mother's claim for child support from January 1985 through August 1994 is barred by laches and Father therefore has no obligation for child support during that period; 8) there was no evidence of a specific denial of visitation and accordingly, the court did not find Mother to be in contempt; and 9) Father was found guilty of contempt for failure to pay child support from September 1984 through January 1985 and was sentenced to 30 days in jail with the purge fee set at $900.

16 Mother relies on this court's opinion in Aguero v. Aguero, 1999 OK CIV APP 38, 976 P.2d 1088, for its holding that equitable defenses such as laches, estoppel, waiver, and release are not available to obligor parents in actions to recover unpaid child support. In Aguero, the parties divorced in 1987 and the father never paid the full amount of child support owed each month. In 1997, DHS filed an application for contempt citation in which it alleged arrearages of $44,650. At the hearing, the parties disputed the amount of arrearages owed, but both parties agreed that the father had failed to pay over $20,000. The father alleged that the mother acquiesced in the reduced and sporadic child support payments he made and asked the court for equitable relief and a finding that no back support was owed. The trial court applied the law of waiver and equitable estoppel and awarded Mother an arrearage of $3,150. In determining whether equitable defenses were available to an obli-gor parent in an action for unpaid child support, this court examined three cases: McNeal v. Robinson, 1981 OK 48, 628 P.2d 358; Kissinger v. Kissinger, 1984 OK CIV APP 52, 692 P.2d 71; and Thrash v. Thrash, 1991 OK 32, 809 P.2d 665.

17 The Aguero court determined that, while those cases appeared to support the use of equitable defenses in child support cases, upon closer inspection, MeNeal actually only provided for equitable reltef where an obligor parent has alternatively satisfied his obligation to support his children, in the form of voluntary expenditures for the benefit of the children or assuming physical custody of the children. In fact, McNeal never used the phrase "equitable defenses" to excuse nonsupport of an obligor parent's children.

18 In Aguero, this court further determined that in Kissinger, this court erroneously extended McNeal to allow a finding that the mother waived her right to enforce unpaid child support, a finding that the Aguero court termed "expanding MceNeal far beyond what we perceive as its intended reach."

19 In Thrash, the trial court ordered a large arrearage and on appeal, the father asserted equitable defenses in asserting that the mother waited seven years to enforce the terms of the decree. The Supreme Court found that no set of facts had been presented to support the father's equitable defenses.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Marriage of Sager
2010 OK CIV APP 130 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 2010)
State ex rel. Department of Human Services, Child Support Enforcement v. Tarrant
2006 OK CIV APP 2 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 2005)
Merritt v. Merritt
2003 OK 68 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2003)
Hedges v. Hedges
2002 OK 92 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2002)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2001 OK CIV APP 14, 19 P.3d 322, 72 O.B.A.J. 651, 2000 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 130, 2001 WL 168099, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cowan-v-cowan-oklacivapp-2000.