In re Marriage of Thornton

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 17, 2007
Docket3-05-0722 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of In re Marriage of Thornton (In re Marriage of Thornton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Marriage of Thornton, (Ill. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

No. 3--05-0722 Filed April 17, 2007.

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

THIRD DISTRICT

A.D., 2007 ______________________________________________________________________________

In re MARRIAGE OF ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of the 10th Judicial Circuit, WADE S. THORNTON, ) Peoria County, Illinois, ) Petitioner-Appellee, ) ) and ) No. 99--D--375 ) ROSIEMARY THORNTON, ) ) Honorable Stephen Kouri, Respondent-Appellant. ) Judge, Presiding.

JUSTICE McDADE delivered the opinion of the court:

The respondent, Rosiemary Thornton, has appealed the order of the circuit court of

Peoria County granting the oral request of her former spouse, Wade S. Thornton, to terminate his

obligation to make maintenance payments to her. Respondent also asks this court to change our

decision in In re Marriage of Snow, 322 Ill. App. 3d 953, 750 N.E.2d 1268 (2001), which she

interprets as holding that the filing of a petition is not required prior to a hearing on the

termination of maintenance pursuant to the conjugal cohabitation provision of section 510(c) of

the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act (750 ILCS 5/510(c) (West 2004)). She

prays that we reverse Snow and find the filing of a petition necessary to maintain an action to

abate maintenance. Finally, respondent has requested that we remand this matter and order the trial court to enter judgment in her favor on the issues of maintenance and of all other debts and

obligations of the petitioner, including past-due mortgage payments owed to her by petitioner as

set forth in their marital settlement agreement.

In the original opinion issued in this appeal, we affirmed the trial court on all three

issues. In re Marriage of Thornton, No. 3--05--0722 (August 9, 2006). We now vacate that

Opinion and, for the reasons that follow, we reaffirm our decision in Snow, reverse the trial

court’s order finding the obligation to pay maintenance had abated, and remand the matter for

consideration of respondent’s requests for extended, increased and permanent maintenance and

petitioner’s responsibility of compliance with the other debts and obligations he had pursuant to

the judgment of dissolution and its included marital settlement agreement.

BACKGROUND

In June 1999, Wade Thornton petitioned for dissolution of his marriage to the respondent

Rosiemary Thornton. The parties reached a settlement agreement, and a judgment for

dissolution of their marriage incorporating that agreement was entered on March 19, 2001. By

the terms of the settlement agreement, Wade agreed, inter alia, to pay maintenance in the

amount of $275 per month for 30 months and to pay "one-half (1/2) of the second mortgage on

the marital house his portion of which totals $373.50, commencing with the November 2000

payment until such debt is paid in full."

In September 2004, respondent filed a six-count petition for indirect civil contempt and a

petition for maintenance, alleging that petitioner had failed to make any of the required

maintenance payments and had failed to make payments or comply with obligations as set forth

in the settlement agreement. She sought $8,250 in unpaid maintenance, $15,313 in unpaid

mortgage payments, statutory interest, relief from her obligation to pay creditors for debts

2 assigned to her husband in the settlement agreement but discharged by him in bankruptcy,

execution of the deed quit-claiming the house to her, and payment of attorney fees. She also

sought to increase the amount of maintenance and to make it permanent. In December 2004, the

trial court entered a finding that Wade had not paid any maintenance and that a past-due balance

of $8,250 plus statutory interest remained due. However, the court later reserved that decision

and scheduled an evidentiary hearing on Wade’s oral claim that maintenance had “automatically

terminated due to a person of the opposite sex living congically [sic] with Mrs. Thornton.”.

That evidentiary hearing took place on June 7, 2005. No transcript was made of the

proceedings, but we do have a "bystander’s report" agreed to by the parties and certified by the

court to be "a true and correct depiction of the evidence presented at trial." That report

establishes that Wade Thornton admitted that he had made none of the agreed-upon payments,

but claimed he had no obligation to do so because his brother had moved in with Rosiemary

shortly before entry of the judgment of dissolution and was living with her in a conjugal

relationship. He called two witnesses who both offered some circumstantial support for his

contention that such a relationship existed.

Petitioner’s friend, Gary Irby, testified that he saw the brother’s car outside respondent’s

home on "various occasions." Although Mr. Irby did not live in respondent’s neighborhood, he

claimed to have seen the car outside the house on at least one occasion when he attended a

moving sale in the vicinity in February 2004.

Wade’s aunt, Viola Thornton, was his second witness. Her only evidence was that she

had gone to Rosiemary’s home a couple of times and Wade’s brother was there and that

occasionally the brother would call her and she could tell from her caller ID that he was calling

from Rosiemary’s home. She testified that this occurred in 2004.

3 Respondent testified that she had allowed the petitioner’s brother to move in "out of the

goodness of her heart" because "he did not have a place to stay [and] was in essence, homeless."

She testified that the brother stayed and slept in the basement and that they led separate lives.

She denied that there was at any time any romance or conjugal relationship between them.

No other evidence was presented to the court, and respondent’s description of the

"relationship" stands undisputed.

On June 23, 2005, the trial court entered an order abating in full all maintenance pursuant

to section 510(c) of the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act. 750 ILCS 5/510(c)

(West 2002). The trial court made no findings of fact and offered no reasons for abating

petitioner’s maintenance obligation. The trial court also made no mention in the order of the

mortgage payments or any of the other issues raised in the petition for indirect civil contempt.

Respondent filed a timely motion for reconsideration asking the court to reverse its prior finding

regarding maintenance and to enter an order on petitioner’s other debts and obligations. The

court denied the motion citing, without explanation, In re Marriage of Snow, 322 Ill. App. 3d

953, 750 N.E.2d 1268 (2001). Respondent timely appealed.

ANALYSIS

I. Meaning and Impact of In re Marriage of Snow

Respondent has challenged the validity and effectiveness of the trial court’s order on the

grounds that her former husband had not filed a petition seeking relief from his obligation to pay

maintenance. She apparently believes that this court’s decision in In re Marriage of Snow, 322

Ill. App. 3d 953, 750 N.E.2d 1268 (2001), held that no petition need be filed in order to

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