Dalton v. Dalton
This text of 304 So. 2d 511 (Dalton v. Dalton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
John E. DALTON, Appellant,
v.
Constance S. DALTON, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
Irwin L. Langbein, West Palm Beach, for appellant.
Albert T. Sims, West Palm Beach, for appellee.
BROWN, CECIL H., Associate Judge.
This interlocutory appeal is from an order dated January 18, 1974, entered following *512 a hearing on September 7, 1973 in the lower court. The hearing was on a motion by appellee to have appellant cited for contempt for his failure to pay support for two children over eighteen years of age, and who became adults by operation of law on July 1, 1973. See Chapter 73-21, Laws of Florida.
The question arose from an agreement between the parties, dated August 6, 1971, and incorporated by reference in a Final Judgment of Dissolution of Marriage entered August 31, 1971. The only portions of that agreement relevant here are the following:
* * * * * *
"... Three children were born of the marriage:
Constance Ann Date of birth: August 19, 1953
Nancy Savage Date of birth: October 12, 1954
* * * * * *
"(3) SUPPORT OF CHILDREN
The Husband in this Agreement is chiefly concerned with the welfare and development of the parties' children. He is financially unable to make commitments in regards to college education and other areas of potential need. When and where he determines a child evidences a true need, he will participate as he is able, if the support monies routinely allocated do not cover the requirements.
"The Husband, during his lifetime and during the minority of the children, shall pay to the Wife ... These payments shall terminate upon marriage, self-supporting status, coming of age or an indefinite moving from the home of the parental custodian of each child whichever shall first occur. Said payments shall not be made while a child is in college, unless her attendance at college permits her to live at home.
* * * * * *
"Until the children have all attained majority by age or marriage, the Husband will maintain Blue Cross-Blue Shield ..."
The order from which this appeal is prosecuted contained the following finding:
"... that it was the parties' intent at the time they entered into the Property Settlement Agreement on August 6, 1971, which was subsequently incorporated into the Final Judgment of Dissolution of Marriage entered August 31, 1971, to have the Husband's obligation for support of his daughters continue until they reached the age of twenty-one (21) years."
That court required appellant to pay support which had accrued for the two oldest daughters subsequent to July 1, 1973. That finding and order have been assigned as error, briefed and oral argument presented thereon before this Court.
While this Court has not had occasion previously to pass upon this point, either this question or questions closely allied thereto have been before each of our sister appellate courts. The opinions in those cases, however, are of such recent vintage that the learned judge of the lower court did not have the benefit of them at the time of the entry of his order under attack here. Those cases are in the chronological order of their appearances in the advance sheets: White v. White, Fla.App. 1974, 296 So.2d 619; Ackerly v. Ackerly, Fla.App. 1974, 296 So.2d 66; Daugherty v. Daugherty, Fla.App. 1974, 293 So.2d 394; Finn v. Finn, Fla.App. 1974, 294 So.2d 57; Field v. Field, Fla.App. 1974, 291 So.2d 654.
In Field, supra, the lower court, while considering a petition of the husband filed in November, 1972, for modification of alimony and child support, sua sponte, changed the termination date for child support payments from twenty-one (21) to eighteen (18). The Appellate Court held this to be a misinterpretation of Chapter 73-21, Laws of Florida and reversed.
*513 In Finn, supra, the original Final Judgment was silent as to when child support would terminate. It does not appear from the opinion the children were even referred to as minors. Upon subsequent stipulated facts that the children became eighteen years of age in September, 1973; that the father thereupon stopped paying child support; that the children were not physically or mentally disabled and were now in college, the lower court, construing Chapter 73-21, required the father to pay support until the children reached the age of twenty-one. This order was affirmed upon the apparent theory that the children were still dependent and that the order requiring support, having been entered before the enactment of Chapter 73-21, constituted an existing obligation to pay support until the children reached twenty-one.
In Daugherty, supra, there is a reference in the opinion to the word "minor" which might lend some credence to a possible reference to the use of the word minor in the Final Judgment there under consideration. Otherwise it is indistinguishable on its facts from Finn, upon which authority Daugherty was reversed. In Ackerly, supra, the facts are again indistinguishable from what appears of record from those in Finn. The Appellate Court citing Field nevertheless held the right to maintenance and support pre-existed within the purview of the language in Chapter 73-21 and affirmed.
In the case sub judice, the lower court heard no testimony, received no evidence, reconciled no disputed issues of fact. In an instrument filed in the record and entitled "Index of Supplementary Appendix to Appellant's Brief on Interlocutory Appeal", we find an order of the lower court dated June 4, 1974, in the following words:
"On hearing on the motion of the former husband John E. Dalton for an order establishing testimony, the court finds
"That at the hearing held September 7, 1973 no testimony was tendered or introduced by either party concerning the parties' intent at the time they entered into the property settlement dated August 6, 1971, as to whether the husband's obligation for support of his daughters should continue until they reached the age of 21 years, other than that agreement itself."
The finding as to the intent of the parties was made by an examination of the contract between the parties and therefore is not entitled to the weight which would otherwise be accorded the findings of a Chancellor when the record reaches an appellete court. In West Shore Restaurant Corp. v. Turk, Fla. 1958, 101 So.2d 123, Mr. Justice O'Connell affirmed this proposition in the following language:
"... In such a case the presumption of correctness of the rulings of the chancellor are not as strong as where the evidence is conflicting or where the chancellor heard the witnesses himself. Harmon v. Harmon, Fla. 1949, 40 So.2d 209, 212; Holland v. Gross, Fla. 1956, 89 So.2d 255, 258.
"The presumption of correctness due the ruling of a chancellor based on a written record, where his effort has been directed to determining the probative force and legal effect of the written record, is slight for the reason that we have everything before us that he had before him and we have the same opportunity to weigh it as did the chancellor."
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