Hibbens v. Hibbens

2015 UT App 278, 363 P.3d 524, 800 Utah Adv. Rep. 4, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 297, 2015 WL 7352666
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedNovember 19, 2015
Docket20140826-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2015 UT App 278 (Hibbens v. Hibbens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hibbens v. Hibbens, 2015 UT App 278, 363 P.3d 524, 800 Utah Adv. Rep. 4, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 297, 2015 WL 7352666 (Utah Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Judge J. FREDERIC VOROS JR.

authored this Opinion,

in which Judge KATE A. TOOMEY and Senior Judge RUSSELL W. BENCH concurred. 1

Opinion

VOROS, Judge;

1 Lisa V. Hibbens (Wife) and Mark H. Hibbens (Husband) divorced in 2006. At the time of the divorce, Wife and Husband had three minor children. The divorce decree required, among other things, that Husband make the payments on the second mortgage on Wife's parents' house and pay child support,. By 2018, Wife had retired the second mortgage on her parents' house, and two of the three children had reached the age of 18. Both parties asked the court to modify the decree. After a bench trial, the trial court found a substantial and material change in cireumstances. It extinguished Husband's obligation to make payments on the retired mortgage, terminated his child support obligation with respect to the adult children, increased his child support for the minor child, and ordered Wife to repay child support overpayments. Wife appeals, We affirm,.

BACKGROUND

The Mortgage

T2 The 2006 divorce decree (the Decree) awarded Wife the marital home and required her to assume the mortgage on it. It also required Husband to assume the second mortgage on Wife's parents' house (the Mortgage). Wife's parents died the following month. She sold the marital home and moved into her parents'. house. In February 2007, Wife told Husband that she planned to refinance the Mortgage, after which he would not have to make payments on it, Wife refinanced the Mortgage in January 2008 but did not inform Husband of the refinance. In the meantime, due to health issues, Husband moved in with Wife and her partner, During this time, Husband continued to make partial payments on the (by then retired) Mortgage, paid child support, paid Wife some rent, and contributed to the utilities.

13 When Husband learned in December 2009 or January 2010 that Wife had refinanced the Mortgage, he stopped making *526 payments on it. From the time of the refinance until Husband stopped making the ' Mortgage payments, he paid Wife $9,600 toward the Mortgage. In August 2010, Husband's then-flancée exchanged Facebook messages with Wife. Wife acknowledged that she told Husband he did not have to pay the, Mortgage: > .

[Husband] was court ordered to pay off the loan <... on my parents' house.... The payment was $575.00 with a balance of $45,000. .I told [Husband] he does not have to pay that off,; I will. He accepted and no longer has to make that payment.

Wife testified at trial that she only intended to relieve Husband of his obligation to pay the Mortgage temporarily. In December 2010, Wife emailed Husband and asked if he would "resume paying the $575 mortgage payment." Husband replied, "What mortgage payment, it got rolled into the refi< nance. You said onee you did that I was no longer responsible."

¶4 The trial court found that a substantial and material change in the parties' ciream-stances had occurred since entry of the Decree. The court concluded that the "parties did not anticipate an assumption of the [Mortgage] by the party who had not previously been ordered to pay." 'The court found Husband's testimony regarding the Mort gage credible and 'found Wife's testimony regarding the Mortgage not credible. The court explained that the message Wife sent to Husband's then-fiancée made no qualifications regarding Husband's obligation for the Mortgage and did not support her testimony. In light of these facts, the court ordered that Husband "is no longer required to pay any sums to [Wife] relating to the [Mortgage]."

Child Support

¶ 5 At the time of divoree, Wife and Husband had three minor children., Wife's average monthly income was $1,925.21; Husband's average monthly income | was $4,158.83. The Decree required Husband to "pay $962.00 per month in child support in conformance with the Utah Child Support guidelines." The Decree also provided that Husband's child support obligation would continue "until all children are no longer attending college." Husband and Wife both acknowledged at trial that they were unaware of this provision at the time of the divorce.

¶ 6 By the time the court issued its decision on the parties' petitions to modify, only one of the three children remained a minor. The other two children had turned 18 and graduated from high school. Neither had attended college. One had married, and neither had any special needs.

¶ 7 Since the divorcee, Wife had become permanently disabled. As a result, the trial court found that Wife had a monthly income of $895 per month. Thus, the trial court found Wife's monthly income suffered a 53% decrease, constituting a material change under Utah law. The trial court also found that Wife's disability constituted a permanent condition, "which materially changes her employment potential and her ability to earn income." Finally, the trial court concluded that because the Decree contemplated that the children would attend. college, the fact that neither of the adult children had attended college constituted a substantial and material change in cireumstances.

¶ 8 Based on these changes in the parties' circumstances, the trial court modified Husband's child support obligation. The court first determined that "[the child support provision in the Decree is unusual and constitutes a 'deviated' child support order." The trial court terminated Husband's child support obligations with respect to the two adult children. The court increased Husband's child support for the minor child to $517 and ordered that obligation to continue until the child turns 18 or graduates from high school, whichever occurs later. The court made its child support modifications effective as of February 2018, the date the parties filed their cross-petitions. Accordingly, it awarded Husband $7,565, "representing the overpayment of child support from February 2013 through June 2014."

ISSUES ON APPEAL

¶ 9 «Wife raises two issues on appeal. First, she contends that the trial court erred in relieving Husband of his obligation to pay *527 the Mortgage. Second, she contends that the trial court erred in modlfymg Husband's child support obligation.

, ANaL¥YsIq

I. The Mortgage

110 Wife contends that the trial court erred in terminating Husband's obligation to pay the Mortgage. Specifically, she argues that the trial court could terrmnate Husband's obligation to pay the Mortgage only if the court found that Wife "intentional{ly] and distinctly" waived her right to receive payments. - Husband responds that the trial court's ruling "was not dependent on the trial court's application of the law on waiver. It was based upon the normal standard applied in divorcee modification cases-whether a substantial change in cireumstances has oc; curred since the entry of the decree that supports a modification of the decree."

¶ 11 We agree with Husband. This round of litigation arose from the parties' cross-petitions to modify the Decree based on a substantial change in circumstances,. The trial court did find that Wife told Husband that he no longer had to make payments on the second mortgage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2015 UT App 278, 363 P.3d 524, 800 Utah Adv. Rep. 4, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 297, 2015 WL 7352666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hibbens-v-hibbens-utahctapp-2015.