In re Marriage of Lopez

2020 IL App (4th) 190416-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 11, 2020
Docket4-19-0416
StatusUnpublished

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Bluebook
In re Marriage of Lopez, 2020 IL App (4th) 190416-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

NOTICE 2020 IL App (4th) 190416-U This order was filed under Supreme FILED Court Rule 23 and may not be cited February 11, 2020 NO. 4-19-0416 as precedent by any party except in Carla Bender the limited circumstances allowed 4th District Appellate under Rule 23(e)(1). IN THE APPELLATE COURT Court, IL

OF ILLINOIS

FOURTH DISTRICT

In re MARRIAGE OF ) Appeal from the J. ANTONIO G. LOPEZ, ) Circuit Court of Petitioner-Appellant, ) Sangamon County and ) No. 96D567 ELENA ORTIZ, ) Respondent-Appellee. ) Honorable ) Matthew Maurer, ) Judge Presiding. ______________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE HARRIS delivered the judgment of the court. Justices DeArmond and Turner concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: The trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying former husband’s motion to terminate maintenance.

¶2 Petitioner, J. Antonio G. Lopez, appeals the trial court’s denial of his motion to

terminate his maintenance obligation to respondent, Elena Ortiz. We affirm.

¶3 I. BACKGROUND

¶4 The parties were married in June 1986 and had two children, Andres (born in 1991)

and Marco (born in 1992). In June 1996, Antonio filed a petition for dissolution of marriage. In

September 1998, the trial court entered a judgment dissolving the marriage, which incorporated

the parties’ marital settlement agreement. At the time of dissolution, Antonio was 42 years old and

working as a cardiologist in Springfield, Illinois. Elena was 39 years old and “a full-time homemaker.” The parties’ marital settlement agreement reflects that Marco, the parties’ youngest

child, had “been diagnosed as severely autistic” and had “special needs for education and medical

treatment due to his autism.” The parties “anticipated that given [Marco’s] disability *** and the

amount of time and attention required of Elena as a result of such disability, Elena [would] be

unable to obtain employment during [Marco’s] minority ***.”

¶5 Under the marital settlement agreement, Antonio agreed to assume the marital

debts, totaling in excess of $156,000. He also agreed to pay Elena $94,720 to facilitate a move by

Elena and the minor children to California, where the parties believed Marco’s special educational

and medical needs could be better met. The parties’ next agreed that Antonio would pay Elena

maintenance of $4500 per month for one year. Maintenance would then increase to $5000 per

month for another year, after which it would be reviewable. With respect to the children, the parties

agreed to joint legal custody. However, Elena would be the primary caretaker of the children and

they would reside with her on a daily basis. Antonio agreed to pay Elena child support of $3562

per month.

¶6 Following the divorce, both parties eventually relocated to California. In January

2006, the trial court transferred the case to San Diego County, California. In October 2006, a Cal-

ifornia court ordered that Illinois law was to be utilized in deciding the issue of maintenance, and

in November 2007, it entered an order continuing Antonio’s $5000 per month maintenance obli-

gation and establishing a maintenance arrearage. In June 2017, Elena asked the California court to

increase spousal support. Antonio responded by seeking termination of his maintenance obliga-

tion. In February 2018, the California court transferred venue of the case back to Illinois to address

the maintenance issue.

-2- ¶7 In March 2018, Antonio filed a motion to terminate maintenance with the Sanga-

mon County, Illinois, circuit court. He asserted that, since the parties’ divorce, there had been a

substantial change in circumstances such that maintenance should be terminated. He pointed out

that the parties’ children were adults, he had been ordered to continue providing support for Marco,

and that he and Elena had been divorced for almost 20 years. Antonio also asserted that although

Elena was capable of being employed, she made no efforts to obtain employment since the mar-

riage was dissolved. Additionally, he asserted that he was 62 years old and suffered from “multiple

medical conditions that could limit his ability to continue working for an extended period of time.”

¶8 In May 2019, the trial court conducted a hearing in the matter, during which both

parties testified. Elena, then age 60, stated she continued to reside with the parties’ youngest child,

Marco, who was then 26 years old and “severely autistic.” She had been Marco’s caregiver for his

entire life and described him as nonverbal and child-like. Marco had behavioral issues and could

not be left alone. Elena testified the parties’ oldest child, Andres, lived independently.

¶9 Regarding her education and work history, Elena testified that she had an associ-

ate’s degree in fashion merchandising. Prior to 1990, she did “some home decorating for friends.”

She also previously worked in the retail field and in the banking field as a bank teller and an

assistant bank manager. Elena had not been employed outside the home since before Andres’s

birth in 1991, and had not sought employment since the parties’ divorce in 1998. She stated that

Marco was her “full-time responsibility” and caring for him “takes up a lot of [her] time.” Elena

acknowledged that, since 2014 or 2015, she was paid $12.50 an hour for being Marco’s caretaker

through a government program in California. In 2018, she received $46,470 through that program,

and in 2019, she expected to make $49,944.

-3- ¶ 10 Additionally, in 2018, a California court increased Antonio’s child support obliga-

tion, requiring him to pay $3674 per month. Elena testified that Antonio continued to pay her

maintenance totaling $60,000 per year, i.e., $5000 per month. Only her maintenance income was

taxable. The income she received through the California caretaking program and for child support

was tax free.

¶ 11 Elena’s most recent financial affidavit in the case, dated May 22, 2019, showed

total monthly living expenses of $9866. She also reported monthly debt payments of $2795.47 and

that her monthly expenses and debts exceeded her monthly income by $387.17 per month. At the

hearing, she acknowledged her reported debts included Andres’s student loan debt and agreed that

she did not cosign for his loans. Nevertheless, she reported owing $52,160 toward Andres’s student

loans and making monthly payments of $1083. Elena’s other reported debts included money owed

for state and federal taxes ($4542), a loan for attorney’s fees ($9400), credit card debt ($247), and

money owed for funeral and burial insurance ($6600). She listed several other debts, totaling over

$4000 that were reportedly “in collection.” However, she acknowledged that the balances for those

debts should be reduced as the balances she listed were from September 2018 and she had been

making payments since that time. Elena also acknowledged that the funeral and burial insurance

she listed was purchased for herself and Marco in April 2018, the month after Antonio filed his

motion to terminate maintenance. Elena testified she paid $600 per month for that insurance.

¶ 12 Elena’s assets included her vehicle with a fair market value of $2000, life insurance

policies for herself and Marco, a checking account in her name with a balance of $200, and a joint

checking account with Andres with a balance of $2500. She acknowledged that the money she

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2020 IL App (4th) 190416-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marriage-of-lopez-illappct-2020.