Green v. Green

579 P.2d 1235, 176 Mont. 532, 1978 Mont. LEXIS 813
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 12, 1978
Docket14002
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 579 P.2d 1235 (Green v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green v. Green, 579 P.2d 1235, 176 Mont. 532, 1978 Mont. LEXIS 813 (Mo. 1978).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE SHEEHY

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal, having been classified under the Internal Operating Rules of this Court as one for submission on briefs without oral argument, comes on regularly for consideration and decision.

The appeal is taken from an order of the District Court, dated August 31, 1977, in which order the respondent wife, Mary Jane Green, was granted an increase in child maintenance payments from $120 per month to $220 per month against appellant husband, Fredrick Lewis Green, Sr. The appeal arises from the District Court of the Eighth Judicial District, Cascade County.

The parties to this action were married to each other twice and divorced twice. They were first married in Great Falls, Montana, on August 25, 1961. This marriage ended in divorce on October 15, 1965. One child was born as a result of that marriage, Robert James Green, who was born June 17, 1963. The parties remarried on August 17, 1970, which second marriage continued until they were again divorced on October 24, 1972, in the District Court, Cascade County. In the second divorce action, a property settlement agreement was made whereby appellant Green would pay support for Robert in the amount of $ 120 per month and pay his medical, hospital and dental bills. The property settlement agreement was incorporated in the divorce decree.

On April 14, 1976, respondent wife filed her petition for modification of the divorce decree in the District Court, seeking to have *534 the child maintenance payments increased from $ 120 per month to $220 per month. Appellant husband counter-petitioned for custody of the minor child. Testimony was had before the District Court on April 22, 1976, and the matter of custody and support was referred to the Cascade County Court of Conciliation. Judge R. J. Nelson, who had been presiding in the case, retired before decision was rendered on December 31, 1976. Judge H. William Coder took over the case as of January 1, 1977. Both parties stipulated in the District Court that the matte could be submitted to the court on the record already made. The Court of Conciliation had filed its confidential report on November 6, 1976.

In an order dated April 5, 1977, the presiding judge ordered support payments increased to $220 per month beginning April 1977, and denied the husband’s counter-petition for custody. On April 22, 1977, the husband moved the District Court to set aside its findings, setting out grounds, among others, that “there was no evidence considered by the court which would render the divorce decree on file dated October 27, 1972, unconscionable and therefore no basis for modifying said divorce decree”. The motion requested the court to set aside its order of April 5, 1977. On August 31, 1977, the District Court entered its order saying the matter had been held in abeyance, that the court had fully considered the matter, and that the court’s order of April 5, 1977, was reinstated.

Apart from the increase in child maintenance payments, the order of April 5, 1977 also awards attorney fees of $250 and $4.50 costs to the wife. Except for those changes, the original divorce decree remains in full force and effect as to all other particulars. Appellant does not appeal from that portion of the District Court order denying custody to the father. He bases his appeal upon the. contention that the trial court abused its discretion in modifying the divorce decree to increase the child support payments when there was no showing or finding of a change of circumstances so substantial and continuing as to make the terms unconscionable within the meaning of section 48-330(l)(a), R.C.M. 1947. In support thereof appellant contends (a) respondent wife made no show *535 ing of change of circumstances at the modification hearing, (b) the court made no such finding when increasing the support order, and (c) the prior order setting child maintenance at $ 120 per month is not unconscionable.

The divorce decree occurred before, and the petition for modification was filed after, passage of the Uniform Marriage and Divorce Act, Chapter 536, Laws of 1975. Jurisdiction to entertain the petition for modification is found in section 48-341(3), R.C.M. 1947.

The transcript of the April 22, 1976 hearing on the petition for modification is skimpy in detail concerning the financial situation of the parties at the time of the hearing and at the time of the divorce. This is so because at the outset of the hearing the presiding judge announced that the matters of custody and support would be referred to the Cascade County Court of Conciliation for a report. Counsel for both parties not only did not object to this procedure, but seemed to join in the court’s wish for such a report.

The transcript of the April 22, 1976 hearing does reveal, however, that the respondent is a housewife who works part-time as a legal secretary and that her gross earnings for the year prior to the hearing amounted to $2,515. Additionally, she received the support payments of $120 per month from the husband and social security payments by virtue of the presence in her home of a daughter by a previous marriage whose father was deceased. The social security payments, however, would have terminated a year from the hearing date. The total income of the wife for the year prior to the hearing was $4,500 to support herself and her family, including the minor son of the parties.

The testimony of the husband, on the other hand, revealed that he had remarried since the last divorce from respondent. He is the owner of a garbage disposal service in Great Falls and his average income for the previous four years was net $26,800. He owns a home valued at $86,000. He estimated that his yearly income, excluding his present wife’s income, would amount to $20,000.

The report of the Court of Conciliation, to which the matter was *536 then referred by the District Court, is a part of the District Court file, but is confidential. The wife submitted to the Court of Conciliation a full report of her assets, income and monthly expenses. Substantially, it is the same as her testimony except that it is reported that she owns a home on which the purchase price is approximately $32,000 and for which she owed approximately $23,000' at the time of the report. The husband did not wish to submit his financial statement to the Court of Conciliation. This was not out of obstinacy, but rather due to his desire not to have spread upon the public record the financial structure and operation of his garbage contracting business. The husband, therefore, authorized his attorney to write a letter to the Court of Conciliation advising what his financial situation was in rather general terms. There it is revealed that the net annual income of the husband for the year preceding the petition for modification was substantially in excess of the figure to which he testified at the hearing. We will honor his wish for confidentiality by not setting forth here the amount of such net annual income. It is enough to say that based upon such income, his payments of $120 per month to the wife for maintenance of the minor child is so insufficient as to be unconscionable, almost as a matter of law. The figure given to the Court of Conciliation did not include the income of his present wife. It also appears the husband has no children by his present wife.

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Bluebook (online)
579 P.2d 1235, 176 Mont. 532, 1978 Mont. LEXIS 813, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-green-mont-1978.