In Re the Marriage of Bliss

609 P.2d 1209, 187 Mont. 331
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 9, 1980
Docket14702
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 609 P.2d 1209 (In Re the Marriage of Bliss) 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
In Re the Marriage of Bliss, 609 P.2d 1209, 187 Mont. 331 (Mo. 1980).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE SHEA

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The husband appeals from an order of the Yellowstone County District Court which modified his child support payments and awarded attorney fees to the wife for representation necessitated by the husband’s initiation of the original petition to modify the divorce decree in relation to visitation and to permit him to inspect the home of the parties for the purpose of making repairs. He also appeals from a subsequent order of the trial court which awarded $3,000 to the wife as attorney fees and costs anticipated for defending his appeal to this Court.

This dispute centers around a property settlement agreement entered into by the parties one month before their divorce. The agreement provided for child custody and child support and stated that the husband should have sole interest in the family home. The husband agreed to pay the wife $100 per month for the support of the parties’ minor daughter, with the proviso, however, that they were not to begin until the expiration of five years. He contends, however, that he made house payments as a substitute for child support.

The agreement provided for child custody in the wife, but it appears that child support was tied into the house payments. It permitted the wife to live in the house rent-free for a five year period. *333 If, on the other hand, the wife moved out of the house before the expiration of the five year period, monthly child support payments in the amount of $ 100 would start immediately. The husband also informed the wife that he would assume responsibility for the house payments which amount to $ 162 per month. The husband was not represented by counsel. Four days after the wife filed her petition for dissolution of the marriage, the husband signed a document incorporating the terms previously mentioned. The husband was still not represented by counsel.

In dissolving the marriage, the trial court entered an order which incorporated the parties’ agreement and ordered the parties to comply with its terms.

A year and a half after the dissolution, the husband petitioned the court to provide a child visitation schedule, and also to obtain an order permitting him to inspect the parties’ home for the purpose of making repairs. The wife filed a reply and a counterpetition, and sought an order which would divide the property and order the sale of the parties’ home. The counterpetition, furthermore, alleged that the husband had not paid any child support since the dissolution, and asked that the husband not only pay back support but that he be required to pay $ 150 per month for the support of his minor daughter. The wife also requested reasonable attorney fees.

The trial court refused to make a property division. The end result is that the wife is to stay in the home and the husband continues to make the monthly $162 payments. However, the trial court, in addition to this, ordered the husband to commence monthly $150 payments to the wife for child support. Additionally, the order provided that the husband was to pay $2,250 for back child support. This figure represented the time period between the time the wife filed her counterpetition and the time that the order for child support was entered.

The trial court then filed an amended judgment. It set out a visitation schedule for the husband, but also provided that child support payments of $ 150 per month were in addition to payments *334 provided for by the so-called property settlement agreement. The order also provided for an award of $750 attorney fees to be paid by the husband to the wife’s attorney. The husband appeals from both the child support order and the attorney fee order.

After the husband filed his notice of appeal, the wife filed a motion in District Court asking for attorney fees and costs anticipated to be incurred in defending her husband’s appeal. The trial court entered an order, ordering the husband to pay $3,000 in attorney fees and anticipated costs. The husband was ordered to make this payment on or before June 29, 1979. On June 28, 1979, the husband petitioned this Court for a writ of supervisory control. We issued an order staying the order of payment of $3,000 in fees so that the issue could be considered along with the other issues involved in this appeal.

The wife argues that by the terms of the agreement incorporated into the divorce decree the husband did not have to pay child support for the first five years. Thus she now contends that the trial court’s October 1978 order requiring child support payments, is not a modification of the original decree. The record on the whole, however, establishes that the wife’s rent-free rental of the parties’ house was agreed upon as a substitute for direct child support payments denominated as such. The wife did not dispute the husband’s testimony that he had informed her that he would make mortgage payments on their house and allow her to live in the house for five years rather than paying her directly for child support.

The husband’s testimony is further supported by the provision of the divorce decree that the husband would commence direct child support payments should the wife move out of the house. The husband has not had to do this, however, because since the divorce the wife has lived in the house and the husband has continued to make the mortgage payments. Thus we conclude that the trial court’s finding that no child support payments have been made since the parties’ divorce is not supported by substantial evidence. Clearly, therefore, the trial court’s order requiring the husband to pay $ 150 *335 per month for child support, is a modification of the support payments incorporated in the divorce decree.

The trial court did not enter the appropriate findings and conclusions by which this Court can review an order modifying child support payments. Section 40-4-208(2)(b), MCA, authorizes a trial court to modify child support payments only “upon written consent of the parties”, or upon a showing that “substantial and continuing” circumstances make the child support provisions “unconscionable.” In her proposed findings the wife requested $150 per month as a reasonable sum for child support. The trial court adopted her finding in its order which stated: “$150.00 per month for the support and maintenance of the minor child is a reasonable sum . . .” This finding is clearly insufficient upon which to predicate a modification of the child support provisions in compliance with section 40-4-208(2)(b). This section requires formal findings that substantial and continuing circumstances make the terms of child support unconscionable. See, Gianotti v. McCracken (1977), 174 Mont. 209, 569 P.2d 929; See also, Kronovich v. Kronovich (1978), 179 Mont. 335, 588 P.2d 510. Absent the necessary findings, this Court will not independently search the record to determine if there is nonetheless an evidentiary basis for the order modifying the child support provisions. It is clear, therefore, that this case must be remanded to the trial court for entry of the appropriate findings.

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Bluebook (online)
609 P.2d 1209, 187 Mont. 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-bliss-mont-1980.