Dax Elliot Carpenter v. Julie Elizabeth Carpenter

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 30, 2020
Docket344512
StatusUnpublished

This text of Dax Elliot Carpenter v. Julie Elizabeth Carpenter (Dax Elliot Carpenter v. Julie Elizabeth Carpenter) 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
Dax Elliot Carpenter v. Julie Elizabeth Carpenter, (Mich. Ct. App. 2020).

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

DAX ELLIOT CARPENTER, UNPUBLISHED January 30, 2020 Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 344512 Eaton Circuit Court JULIE ELIZABETH CARPENTER, LC No. 2008-000929-DM

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: O’BRIEN, P.J., and GADOLA and REDFORD, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff-father appeals1 the trial court’s order denying his motion to set aside a Uniform Child Support Order (UCSO) that increased his child support obligation based on his receipt of veterans’ disability benefits. The same order awarded defendant-mother $3,310.46 in sanctions, including attorney fees and reasonable costs. We affirm.

I. BASIC FACTS

The parties were divorced in July 2009, following an eight-year marriage. Two children were born during the marriage. The judgment of divorce granted the parties joint legal custody, with defendant having sole physical custody of the children. At that time, the parties stipulated to a UCSO indicating that plaintiff would pay $1,050 in child support monthly.

In 2010, defendant enlisted in the United States Army. Over the next two years, several support recommendations were prepared by the Friend of the Court (FOC), but each was met

1 We note that the only portion of the order that is within the scope of an appeal of right is the portion of the order awarding attorney fees and costs. However, given that plaintiff’s challenge to the provisions concerning the child-support-related provisions is directly related to the award of sanctions, we treat plaintiff’s claim of appeal as an application for leave, and we grant leave in order to address the merits of plaintiff’s assertions.

-1- with objections. Thereafter, in September 2012, plaintiff was honorably discharged from the Army at his request due to disability incurred while in the service and motioned the court to recalculate his child-support obligation based on his part-time employment wages. Over a period of nine months, plaintiff’s child support obligation was reduced by agreement of the parties to $168 monthly effective January 2014.2 The UCSO also stated:

a. Defendant reserves the right to petition to modify the order retroactively should it be determined that Plaintiff receives or is granted veteran’s benefits that could have been included in his income under the child support formula and/or veteran’s benefits that could be apportioned as child support.

Plaintiff personally agreed to this term as evidenced by his signature on the stipulations giving rise to the UCSO.

Over the years, plaintiff built up an arrearage, and several show-cause hearings were held. During those hearings, plaintiff denied applying for or receiving veterans’ benefits. It was not until January 2017, when confronted with documentary evidence that he was awarded a service-connected disability benefit, that plaintiff acknowledged receipt of benefits. However, during the subsequent February 2017 show-cause hearing to determine whether plaintiff was in contempt of court for failing to disclose the income, plaintiff would not disclose when he applied for the benefits or when the benefits began. Nonetheless, at the time of the February 2017 show- cause hearing, plaintiff agreed to petition the United States Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) for an apportionment3 of those benefits and indicated that when that was resolved, the parties would return to the court and work together to calculate retroactive support. However, plaintiff’s request was denied by the VA, and the matter returned to the trial court in July 2017.

Plaintiff then acknowledged that he had applied for VA disability benefits in 2012 and began receiving them in 2014. He confirmed that he had listed the parties’ minor children as dependents on his application. He further indicated that the payment amounts varied over the years, and he received some retroactive benefits. At that time, he was receiving $3,321 monthly in VA disability benefits, and records provided by the VA indicated that he had received over $131,000 in benefits through March 2017. Plaintiff also confirmed that the first time he disclosed receiving VA benefits to the FOC was in January 2017. However, he denied purposefully failing to disclose the VA benefits and argued that he should only be required to pay child support based on his earned income.

2 The decrease in child support was effectuated through the entry of three different child support orders with different effective dates, all entered on January 2, 2014. 3 Apportionment is the VA’s direct payment of the dependent's portion of VA benefits to a dependent spouse, child, or dependent parent. The VA decides whether and how much to pay by apportionment on a case-by-case basis. However, the request for apportionment must be submitted by the beneficiary on the required form. See .

-2- Defendant asked for an order providing a retroactive increase in plaintiff’s child-support obligation as agreed to in 2014. However, plaintiff filed a brief arguing that because he was not eligible for retirement benefits, his service-connected disability compensation was not subject to consideration for child support purposes under a variety of federal statutes. He posited that these statutes barred the State of Michigan from enforcing child support obligations based on his status as a non-retiree and explicitly excluded state-court jurisdiction over VA benefits. Further, plaintiff argued that the power to apportion benefits fell to the VA, and defendant had not requested an apportionment. According to plaintiff, this was the procedure outlined by the Office of Child Support in Memorandum IM-98-03,4 and was the only available option for defendant.

In August 2017, the FOC referee who had presided over the matter issued a proposed order in which he found that plaintiff “willfully concealed over $130,000.00 in income for a four-year period,” and that plaintiff “misled” both defendant and the court because he made false statements during the show-cause proceedings and repeatedly refused to provide details about the receipt of VA disability benefits during the February hearing. Further, after concluding that by making those false statements, plaintiff had engaged in conduct that unreasonably protracted the hearing and resulted in an inaccurate child support calculation, the referee indicated that he believed plaintiff was subject to sanctions under MCR 2.114.5 The proposed order was entered despite plaintiff’s objection, motivating him to file a motion to set aside the order.

Shortly thereafter, the FOC office issued recommendations related to the retroactive modification of child support; however, defendant objected on the grounds that the calculations did not take into account plaintiff’s earned income during the relevant times. Eventually, in January 2018, the parties entered into a stipulated child support order reflecting the agreed-upon retroactive modifications based on plaintiff’s wages and VA benefits. Within the stipulated orders, the parties reserved the right to amend or modify based on plaintiff’s motion to set aside the order and verification of plaintiff’s income and insurance premiums.

In support of the motion to set aside the order, plaintiff’s attorney continued to argue that because plaintiff’s disability income was not based on retirement, Congress had protected plaintiff’s benefits and that the federal statutes granting such protections preempted state statutes.

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Bluebook (online)
Dax Elliot Carpenter v. Julie Elizabeth Carpenter, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dax-elliot-carpenter-v-julie-elizabeth-carpenter-michctapp-2020.