Harper v. Harper

977 So. 2d 312
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 5, 2008
Docket07-1203
StatusPublished

This text of 977 So. 2d 312 (Harper v. Harper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harper v. Harper, 977 So. 2d 312 (La. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

RENE WINDHAM HARPER
v.
RANDOLPH WALLACE HARPER.

07-1203

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

March 5, 2008.
Not Designated for Publication.

DAVID L. CARRIERE, Law Office of David L. Carriere, Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellant: Rene Windham Harper.

JACK DERRICK MILLER, Attorney at Law, Counsel for Defendant/Appellee: Randolf Wallace Harper.

Court composed of DECUIR, PETERS and AMY, Judges.

PETERS, J.

Rene Windham Mire, formerly Rene Windham Harper, appeals certain aspects of a trial court judgment which modified a prior trial court judgment relating to the custody, visitation, and support of her two children. Randolph Wallace Harper, Ms. Mire's former husband and the father of the two children at issue, answered the appeal, objecting to the trial court's decision to make the judgment retroactive to the date Mr. Harper filed the motion for reduction of child support. For the following reasons, we affirm.

DISCUSSION OF THE RECORD

This litigation arose after an employment accident sustained by Mr. Harper affected his rights and obligations to his two children born of his marriage with Ms. Mire. While the record before this court begins with pleadings filed by Mr. Harper on June 30, 1997, wherein he sought a decrease in his child support obligation and a modification of his visitation arrangements, the litigation had apparently been going on for some time.[1] Other pleadings in the record establish the birth dates of the two children born of the marriage between the litigants. Taylor Harper was born on February 2, 1987, and Blake Harper was born on November 3, 1988.

In his June 30, 1997 pleading, Mr. Harper referenced a May 30, 1995 judgment wherein he was ordered to pay Ms. Mire $692.00 per month as support for his two children. He asserted that subsequent to that judgment he sustained an employment related injury which greatly reduced his income.[2] After the filing of a number of other pleadings raising other issues, the parties met with a hearing officer for the 15th Judicial District. This meeting resulted in a stipulated hearing officer recommendation.[3] With regard to Mr. Harper's child support obligation, the stipulated recommendation was that Mr. Harper owed his former wife $2,495.00 in past due child support and that Mr. Harper's monthly child support obligation be suspended effective June 1, 1997. The stipulated recommendation contemplated that both the arrearage and the accumulated suspended payments would ultimately be paid through the funds Mr. Harper would receive from a yet-to-be litigated personal injury suit pending in Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana. The trial court accepted this hearing officer's recommendation and adopted it as a judgment of its own on June 19, 1998. The trial court judgment was filed in this record on June 22, 1998. The pertinent language of the hearing officer's recommendation and judgment as accepted by the trial court reads as follows:

IT IS ORDERED that child support due and payable by RANDOLPH WALLACE HARPER unto RENE WINDHAM MIRE in these proceedings on behalf of the minor children, Taylor Harper and Blake Harper, be and is hereby suspended, effective with the support payment due on July 1, 1997 and continuing until further orders of this Honorable Court;
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that RANDOLPH WALLACE HARPER is found to be in arrears on his child support obligation as of June 31, 1997 in the amount of Two thousand four hundred ninety-five and 00/100 ($2,495.00) Dollars, said arrearage to be determined in this stipulated judgment but to accrue no legal interest pending further orders of this Court;
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the child support obligation of RANDOLPH WALLACE HARPER in the sum of Six hundred ninety-two ($692.00) Dollars per month, now to be due and owing from July 1, 1997 forward, until further orders of this Court, shall be suspended, pending resolution of a personal injury claim that he has filed in the 14th Judicial District Court, Parish of Calcasieu, under Docket No. 98-974, said claim being entitled as follows:
RANDOLPH "RANDY" WALLACE HARPER INDIVIDUALLY AND ON BEHALF OF HIS MINOR CHILDREN, TAYLOR ALEXANDER HARPER AND BLAKE LEE HARPER
VERSUS
FALRIG OFFSHORE, INC., ET AL
In anticipation of eventual receipt of funds sufficient to address RANDOLPH WALLACE HARPER's current economic loss, child support payable to RENE WINDHAM MIRE shall continue to accrue in the amount previously ordered, namely Six hundred ninety-two ($692.00) Dollars per month, pending further orders of this Court;
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that all accrued child support due RENE WINDHAM MIRE, including the arrearage determined herein as well as the suspended child support, shall be paid from funds available to RANDOLPH WALLACE HARPER, after satisfaction of file expenses and all attorneys fees incurred in connection with and related to the above referenced litigation bearing Calcasieu Parish Docket No. 98-974, prior to receipt of any funds by RANDOLPH WALLACE HARPER;

The offshore litigation did not produce the result anticipated by Mr. Harper. On December 26, 2000, Mr. Harper filed a new rule seeking a reduction in child support and a modification of the June 19, 1998 judgment.[4] In this pleading, Mr. Harper asserted that when his personal injury suit went to trial, the jury returned a significant verdict, but held him to be seventy-five percent at fault in causing his own injuries.[5]

The issues raised by this pleading were presented to a hearing officer on January 31, 2001. In her conference report filed May 24, 2001, the hearing officer recommended that Mr. Harper's monthly support obligation be reduced to $354.00 commencing December 26, 2000. This recommendation was followed further down in the report with the following language:

By agreement, the parties will split the tax deductions. The new reduced amount will be effective as of June 1, 2001 with the accrued decreased amount from 12-26-00 until June 1, 2001 to be satisfied out of the Defendant's personal injury case as will the previously accrued child support as per judgment signed 6-3-98.

We interpret this somewhat confusing language to mean that Mr. Harper's monthly obligation was reduced to $354.00 effective December 26, 2000, but that he would not be required to make a monthly payment until June 1, 2001. The arrearage that might accrue between December 26, 2000, and June 1, 2001, would be satisfied from the funds derived from the offshore claim and still in trust. On May 29, 2001, Ms. Mire filed an objection to the hearing officers' finding.[6]

Despite Ms. Mire's objection and the continuous filing of pleadings and objections by both litigants, the trial court did not address the growing issues until a hearing held August 15, 2005. The judgment arising from this hearing constitutes the basis of the appeal now before us.

At the beginning of the August 15, 2005 hearing, the trial court and the litigants agreed that the issues to be addressed revolved around the language of the hearing officer's recommended judgment, which the trial court adopted as its own by the June 19, 1998 judgment,[7] and the effect of Mr. Harper's December 26, 2000 motion to modify that judgment. The trial court then heard testimony from Walker Marshall Sanchez, a Lake Charles, Louisiana attorney who represented Mr. Harper in 1998. According to Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
977 So. 2d 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harper-v-harper-lactapp-2008.