deLabry v. Sales

134 So. 3d 1110, 2014 WL 444040, 2014 Fla. App. LEXIS 1453
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedFebruary 5, 2014
DocketNo. 4D12-3143
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 134 So. 3d 1110 (deLabry v. Sales) 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.

Bluebook
deLabry v. Sales, 134 So. 3d 1110, 2014 WL 444040, 2014 Fla. App. LEXIS 1453 (Fla. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinions

GERBER, J.

The former wife appeals from the circuit court’s final order granting the former husband’s petition for modification of his child support obligation. The former wife primarily argues that the circuit court erred in finding that the former husband’s child support obligation was modifiable and that his decrease in income was a substantial change of circumstances warranting a reduction. We agree with the court’s findings. Thus, we affirm.

This opinion will break down this case into its six significant stages: (1) the parties’ marital settlement agreement (“MSA”); (2) the parties’ pleadings in the circuit court; (3) the court’s hearing; (4) the court’s final order; (5) the parties’ arguments on appeal; and (6) our reasoning for affirmance.

The Parties’ MSA

The MSA’s child support section stated, in pertinent part, that the former husband was to pay the former wife a stated amount per month in child support until such time as the parties’ eldest child reached majority age or was otherwise no longer eligible for support. Upon the termination of the former husband’s child support obligation for the eldest child, the former husband’s child support obligations for the remaining children would be “recalculated in accordance with the then existing child support guidelines and the Parties[’] then current available incomes, respectively.” This procedure would repeat itself as each child reached majority age or was otherwise no longer eligible for support.

The MSA’s child support section then stated, in pertinent part:

In determining the amount of periodic child support, the Parties have taken into consideration the statutory child support guidelines, the income and “good fortune” of the Husband, the income of the Wife, the current needs of the Children, the rotating custody arrangement and all of the other financial provisions of this Agreement, particularly, the equitable distribution and lump sum alimony provisions, and the impact thereof. Accordingly, the Parties agree that the amount of periodic child support set forth herein is more than reasonable and sufficient. Given that the Parties will have physical custody of the Children on a rotating, equally shared basis, the amount of child support required by this Agreement substantially exceeds the amounts the Court would or could award pursuant to the Child Support Guidelines, particularly since ... the Husband is undertaking to pay all of the costs associated with the Children’s private school tuition through grade eight, medical insurance, uninsured medical expenses and saving for college tuition. At this time, the Husband’s average gross income over the last several years has exceeded [amount], while the Wife has had virtually no income from employment for the last several years. The Parties submit that this is further [1113]*1113evidence of the reasonableness of the amounts for child support required by this Agreement.

Also of significance in the MSA is its property settlement and alimony sections. Those sections provided that, in settlement of all claims between the parties: the former husband would pay an identified lump sum payment to the former wife; the former wife would not be permitted to seek spousal support from the former husband; and the former husband released any claims of entitlement to the former wife’s future compensation.

Of final significance in the MSA is that, in both its alimony and child custody sections, the parties expressly agreed that they could not seek to modify those sections “no matter how the circumstances of either party change.” However, the MSA’s child support section contained no such agreement.

The Parties’ Pleadings in the Circuit Court

The former husband’s petition for modification of child support, filed nearly four years after the final judgment incorporating the MSA, alleged that a substantial change in circumstances had occurred, warranting modification. See § 61.13(l)(a)2., Fla. Stat. (2012) (“The court initially entering an order requiring one or both parents to make child support payments has continuing jurisdiction after the entry of the initial order to modify the amount and terms and conditions of the child support payments .... if there is a substantial change in the circumstances of the parties ....”) (emphasis added). Specifically, the former husband alleged, in pertinent part:

3.Since entry of the final judgment, there has been a substantial change in circumstances requiring a modification in child support.... [A]t the time the Court entered final judgment, [the former wife] was a stay-at-home parent, who was not working outside the home. [The former wife] has returned to the full-time practice of law.
4. [The former husband] ask[s] the court to modify child support as follows: to be consistent with the child support guidelines, parties’ current earnings and earning ability, rotating custody arrangement, and [the former husband’s] other obligations under the parties’ marital settlement agreement.
5. The change requested ... is in the best interest of the children because it will require both parties to contribute to their children’s maintenance and care in accordance with their respective abilities.

The former wife’s response raised three arguments: (1) within the MSA, the parties understood she would return to work and earn income to become financially independent, and therefore, her current employment was not an unanticipated change of circumstances; (2) although the former husband released his right to claim an entitlement to her future compensation, his petition essentially claimed an entitlement to her future compensation; and (3) the conditions stated in the MSA as to when the former husband’s child support obligations would be recalculated had not yet occurred.

The former husband’s reply raised four arguments: (1) a substantial change in circumstances occurred because the former wife had become employed as a lawyer on a full-time basis, earning a substantial six-figure salary, while his income, by comparison, had declined nearly fifty percent since the time of the parties’ dissolution; (2) at the time of the parties’ dissolution, his obligations were calculated on the basis of his average gross income in the preceding years, while the former wife had virtually no income in the preceding years; (3) if the parties intended for the MSA’s [1114]*1114child support provisions to be nonmodifiable, then they would have said so as they did with the MSA’s alimony and child custody provisions; and (4) the MSA provision in which he released any claims of entitlement to the former wife’s future compensation was in exchange for his property settlement with the former wife, and was not a waiver of his statutory right to modification of child support.

The Court’s Hearing

At the court’s hearing, the former husband argued that the MSA’s child support provision was modifiable both as a matter of law and under the MSA’s unambiguous language. As to being modifiable as a matter of law, the former husband relied on Guadine v. Guadine, 474 So.2d 1245 (Fla. 4th DCA 1985), for the proposition: “Nor can any contract divest the courts of their authority to modify child support, for inherent in a court’s authority is the authority to modify child support — regardless of any agreement between the parties.” Id. at 1245 (internal brackets, quotations, and citations omitted).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 So. 3d 1110, 2014 WL 444040, 2014 Fla. App. LEXIS 1453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delabry-v-sales-fladistctapp-2014.