Ganaway v. Ganaway

2017 Ohio 1009
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 20, 2017
DocketCA2016-05-039
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2017 Ohio 1009 (Ganaway v. Ganaway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ganaway v. Ganaway, 2017 Ohio 1009 (Ohio Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

[Cite as Ganaway v. Ganaway, 2017-Ohio-1009.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

TWELFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO

WARREN COUNTY

KARYN M. GANAWAY, : CASE NO. CA2016-05-039 Plaintiff-Appellee, : OPINION : 3/20/2017 - vs - :

MICHAEL D. GANAWAY, :

Defendant-Appellant. :

APPEAL FROM WARREN COUNTY COURT OF COMMON PLEAS DOMESTIC RELATIONS DIVISION Case No. 01DR25721

Andrea N. Hicks, 224 Reading Road, Mason, Ohio 45040, for plaintiff-appellee

Engel & Martin, LLC, Mary K. Martin, 5181 Natorp Boulevard, Mason, Ohio 45040, for defendant-appellant

M. POWELL, J.

{¶ 1} Defendant-appellant, Michael Ganaway ("Father"), appeals a decision of the

Warren County Court of Common Pleas, Domestic Relations Division, finding him in

contempt for failing to pay one-half of his daughter's college-related expenses in accordance

with the terms of a joint shared parenting plan.

{¶ 2} The parties are the parents of two daughters, Meghan born in 1996, and Warren CA2016-05-039

Allyson born in 1998. The parties were divorced in 2001; parental rights and responsibilities

were allocated pursuant to a joint shared parenting plan incorporated into the divorce decree.

On November 3, 2003, with consent of the parties, the trial court modified the joint shared

parenting plan as follows:

The parties further agree to equally divide the college expenses for both children, such expenses to include tuition, books, room and board, and transportation expense, through an undergraduate degree, at any post high school institution.

{¶ 3} Twelve years later, Meghan enrolled as a freshman at the University of

Alabama for the 2015-2016 school year. On July 27, 2015, Father moved for a declaratory

judgment, seeking a judgment he was no longer required to pay one-half of Meghan's college

expenses because of his filing for bankruptcy in 2011. Father argued his bankruptcy

discharge extinguished his obligation to equally pay for the children's college expenses. The

magistrate denied Father's motion, finding that his obligation to pay for college expenses was

a support obligation and therefore not dischargeable in bankruptcy.

{¶ 4} On August 12, 2015, plaintiff-appellee, Karyn Ganaway ("Mother"), filed a

motion for contempt against Father, alleging Father had not paid one-half of Meghan's

college expenses as required by the 2003 amended joint shared parenting plan. In

preparation for a hearing on her motion, and anticipating Father's inability-to-pay defense,

Mother served Father's counsel with discovery requests. The requests for discovery were

ignored. Mother's counsel sought to resolve the discovery dispute informally with Father's

counsel. Despite several emails and telephone calls, discovery responses were not

forthcoming.

{¶ 5} On January 11, 2016, Mother filed a motion to compel discovery. Following a

telephone conference with the magistrate, Father provided partial responses to the discovery

requests. However, Father did not provide all the requested documents, failed to answer all

-2- Warren CA2016-05-039

of the interrogatories by responding several times with "n/a," did not include a verified

signature page, and provided no explanation for his failure to comply with the discovery

requests. Father's failures further included the failure to identify the persons he anticipated

calling as witnesses at the hearing on Mother's contempt motion. Consequently, Mother filed

a second motion to compel discovery, requesting that Father be barred from asserting any

defense to her contempt motion and from introducing evidence in support of his inability-to-

pay defense.

{¶ 6} On January 28, 2016, the magistrate issued a "Decision Regarding Discovery"

(the "discovery ruling"). Finding Mother's proposed sanction to be a drastic remedy to

Father's discovery noncompliance, the magistrate instead barred Father from introducing any

documents not provided to Mother's counsel prior to January 25, 2016 (the date of Mother's

second motion to compel), and from calling any witnesses. The magistrate also ordered

Father to pay $1,724.97 for Mother's attorney fees. Father did not challenge the magistrate's

discovery ruling. The trial court subsequently adopted the magistrate's ruling.

{¶ 7} A hearing on Mother's contempt motion was held in February 2016. Consistent

with the magistrate's discovery ruling, Father was not allowed to call witnesses or present

documents not identified in his discovery responses prior to January 25, 2016. Mother

testified that Father owed $3,601.75 for his share of Meghan's freshman fall semester tuition

and that he had not contributed at all to Meghan's freshman spring semester tuition. Father

testified as to his annual income and monthly expenses, admitted he did not fully pay his

one-half share of Meghan's freshman college expenses, and asserted he was financially

unable to comply with the 2003 amended joint shared parenting plan.

{¶ 8} On March 1, 2016, the magistrate issued a decision finding Father in contempt.

The magistrate found that Father failed to demonstrate he was unable to pay for Meghan's

college expenses: -3- Warren CA2016-05-039

Clearly Father has not even attempted to decrease his expenses in order to pay for college. Father voluntarily entered into the agreement to pay for college back in 2003 and has done little or nothing to prepare himself to execute his share of the college expenses. Knowing that he had executed the 2003 agreement, Father should have been saving all along for the college expenses.

The magistrate further found that while Meghan was a high school senior and preparing to

attend college, Father chose instead to purchase two new Volkswagen vehicles and

contributed over $7,000 to his 401K plan.

{¶ 9} The magistrate sentenced Father to ten days in jail. The magistrate further

provided Father the opportunity to purge the contempt charge by (1) making a $5,000 lump

sum payment to the University of Alabama toward Meghan's tuition bill before May 19, 2016,

the date scheduled for the final sentencing and purge hearing, (2) paying Mother's previously

ordered attorney fees of $1,727.94 prior to the sentencing and purge hearing, and (3)

effective May 1, 2016, contributing $1,200 a month to the University of Alabama for Meghan's

tuition until Father's one-half share of Meghan's college expenses is paid in full.1

{¶ 10} Father filed objections to the magistrate's decision both by and through his

counsel and pro se. In response to the trial court's inquiry, Father indicated he wanted the

trial court to proceed on his pro se objections only. On April 29, 2016, the trial court

overruled Father's objections and adopted the magistrate's contempt decision. The trial court

found that

[t]here is nothing so dire about Father's situation that makes him patently unable to pay for his daughter's college expenses. * * * [I]t is Father who needs to adjust his cost of living in order to provide for his daughter's college expenses. There is nothing unreasonable about the expenses that Father owes. Father agreed to this obligation in a 2003 Entry. Father had many years to plan and save accordingly. Nothing in the record indicates that any substantial changes have occurred to significantly

1.

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2017 Ohio 1009, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ganaway-v-ganaway-ohioctapp-2017.