Edwards v. Campbell

633 S.E.2d 514, 369 S.C. 572, 2006 S.C. LEXIS 254
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 24, 2006
DocketNo. 26194
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 633 S.E.2d 514 (Edwards v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edwards v. Campbell, 633 S.E.2d 514, 369 S.C. 572, 2006 S.C. LEXIS 254 (S.C. 2006).

Opinion

Justice WALLER.

This is a direct appeal from the family court’s order grant-' ing appellant $7,410.28 in past due child support, but denying appellant’s other claims, including a request for compound interest on the child support award. We affirm the family court’s order in material part. However, because appellant is entitled to post judgment interest, we remand this matter to the family court for a calculation of simple post judgment interest on the $7,410.28 award of past due child support.

FACTS

Appellant Lisa Rea Edwards (Mother) and respondent Robert Keith Campbell, Jr. (Father) married in August 1981 and had two sons, one in July 1982 and the other in January 1985. The parties separated, however, and finalized their divorce in 1990. Pursuant to their separation agreement, Father agreed to pay $576.52 per month in child support beginning November 1,1990. In addition, the parties agreed that Father would keep health insurance coverage for the two children and pay the children’s medical bills.

In 1993, Mother brought a contempt action against Father. After a hearing, the family court ordered Father to pay, inter [574]*574alia: (1) $205.34 for past due medical bills of the children; (2) $1,867.32 for an outstanding MasterCard debt; and (3) $5,077.00 still owed for property division.

The instant case relates to Mother’s November 2003 filing of a Rule to Show Cause wherein she claimed Father owed her the following: (1) $38,230.81 in past due child support and alimony;1 (2) $49,714.15 in unpaid medical bills; (3) $7,830.92 stemming from Father’s failure to pay the medical bills and property division items in the 1993 Order; and (4) $24,535.16 in “other child obligations” including expenses for the elder son’s three-year attendance at Camden Military Academy.

The family court held a hearing on the Rule to Show Cause in September 2004. Relying on an article published in the South Carolina Lawyer,2 Mother specifically requested that the family court award compound interest for the past due child support and medical bills.

Through her own testimony and exhibits, Mother claimed that Father was $17,390.16 in arrears on child support; with compound interest, she calculated that Father owed a total of $34,831.23 in past due child support. Regarding past due medical expenses, Mother stated that Father owed $5,678.28. With compound interest, Mother calculated that Father owed a total of $11,002.86 for the medical expenses. Mother also testified that Father owed her on the property division and medical bills portions of the 1993 Order, with the addition of post judgment interest. Finally, Mother stated that Father owed her for half of various other expenses for the children, including non-tuition costs associated with the elder son’s attendance at Camden Military.

On cross-examination, Mother testified to the following, inter alia: (1) her older son turned 18 in 2000; (2) her younger son turned 18 in January 2003; and (3) she collected child support through May 2003. In addition, at the time of the hearing, Mother owed a substantial amount of money in [575]*575unpaid taxes.3 Finally, Mother acknowledged that in the 1993 action, no mention was made regarding any past due child support from 1990 onward; yet in the instant action, she was claiming past due child support from April 1990 through May 2003.

Father testified at the hearing that: (1) he overpaid Mother by at least $20,000 or $24,000; (2) he carried insurance on his sons until they were 18; (3) he usually took the children to the doctor; and (4) he was not given medical bills that he did not pay. Father also testified that although he did not have a record of it, he paid by check within 30 days of the 1993 Order what the court had determined he should pay.

At the conclusion of the hearing, the family court judge indicated she had “credibility issues with both” parties. In the written order, the family court made the following pertinent findings regarding Mother’s past due child support claim: (1) Father did not overpay Mother, but “he owes her substantially less than she claims;” (2) the amount owed by Father would begin with February 1993 because no child support delinquency was found in the 1993 Order; (3) Mother was entitled to $67,452.84 in child support; (4) according to Mother’s own exhibit, Father paid Mother $55,100.00; (5) because Father never sought a reduction in child support when the older child turned 18 in July 2000, Father would be given a $4,942.56 credit; and (6) therefore, Father owed Mother $7,410.28 in past due child support.

The family court specifically denied Mother’s claim for compound interest. In addition, the family court denied Mother’s request for medical expenses. Finally, the family court found Mother’s testimony was not credible regarding her claim that Father did not pay the medical bills and property division items from the 1993 Order.

The family court ordered that the $7,410.28 owed by Father for past due child support should be paid through the Spartan-burg County Clerk of Court “at the rate of $200.00 per month, [576]*576plus a five percent collection cost for a total of $210.00 per month.” Beyond the denial of Mother’s request for compound interest, there was no specific mention of post-judgment interest in the family court’s order.

ISSUE

Did the family court err by denying compound interest on the past due child support, or in the alternative, was it error to fail to award simple post judgment interest?

DISCUSSION

Mother argues that the family court erred in failing to award “some form” of post judgment interest from the date each child support payment became due. Moreover, Mother claims she is entitled to compound interest, or, if that request is denied by this Court, simple interest at the statutory rate. While the family court correctly denied Mother’s claim for compound interest, we agree Mother is entitled to simple post judgment interest.

It is well-settled that “fixed awards of money for equitable distribution shall accrue interest at the post-judgment rate from the date of the judgment, or in the case of specified periodic payments from the date each payment becomes due and owing.” Casey v. Casey, 311 S.C. 243, 245-46, 428 S.E.2d 714, 716 (1993) (emphasis added). In Thornton v. Thornton, 328 S.C. 96, 492 S.E.2d 86 (1997), this Court made clear that while Casey involved an equitable division award, the same principle applies to past due alimony and child support. We explained as follows:

Here, Husband was ordered in the 1982 divorce decree to make monthly payments of alimony and child support to Wife. That decree constituted the “judgment” ordering the periodic payments. The fact that Wife had to get a contempt order in 1994 because of Husband’s failure to meet his alimony and child support obligations does not mean the 1994 order was the first judgment ordering such payments. To alter the interest requirement in the way Husband suggests would reward Husband for failing to meet his obligations when they were due.

[577]*577Id. at 114, 492 S.E.2d at 96. Thus, the Casey

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Bluebook (online)
633 S.E.2d 514, 369 S.C. 572, 2006 S.C. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-campbell-sc-2006.