In Re the Marriage of Hall

798 P.2d 117, 244 Mont. 428, 1990 Mont. LEXIS 282
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1990
Docket90-050
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 798 P.2d 117 (In Re the Marriage of Hall) 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 Hall, 798 P.2d 117, 244 Mont. 428, 1990 Mont. LEXIS 282 (Mo. 1990).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE TURNAGE

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Jodi Rae Hall (now Jodi Rae Bangart) appeals the decision made by the Thirteenth Judicial Court, Carbon County, which denied her *430 Petition for Income Deduction, denied a retroactive child support increase for 1987, modified her requests for retroactive child support increases for 1988 and 1989, and modified her award of attorney fees. We affirm in part, and reverse and remand in part.

Appellant raises the following issues:

1. Did the District Court err in denying appellant’s Petition for Income Deduction?

2. Did the District Court err in determining that retroactive child support increases should be effective January 1, 1988, rather than January 1, 1987?

3. Did the District Court err in determining 1988 child support to be $235.00 per month and 1989 child support to be $255.00 per month?

4. Did the District Court err in awarding the appellant’s attorney fees of $1,125.00?

Jodi Rae Hall and Robert Walker Hall were divorced on August 3, 1981, following a five-year marriage. One child, Shawn David Hall, was bom during the marriage on August 7, 1976.

The parties’ Custody, Support and Property Settlement Agreement (hereinafter Agreement), which was incorporated into the Final Decree, granted Jodi sole custody of Shawn and granted Robert reasonable visitation rights to Shawn. Additionally, the Agreement called for Robert to pay Jodi monthly child support payments of $175.00, and specified that if either party initiated court proceedings concerning this Agreement, the unsuccessful party would pay the prevailing party’s attorney fees.

In 1986, when Robert was seriously in arrears with his child support payments, Jodi moved the District Court for a show cause hearing, requesting the court to hold Robert in contempt for failing to pay child support as specified in the Agreement. Robert and Jodi, in a Stipulation approved by an Order filed on January 7, 1987, agreed, among other things, to the following: 1) Robert owed Jodi $3,357.20 in delinquent child support payments, 2) Robert owed Jodi $290.74 for Jodi’s attorney fees and costs, 3) Robert would increase his monthly child support payment from $175.00 to $200.00 effective November 1, 1986, 4) Robert would pay Jodi $35.00 monthly toward the delinquent child support arrearage until paid, 5) Robert would pay Jodi’s attorney $35.00 monthly toward the above mentioned attorney fees and costs until paid, 6) Jodi would be responsible for Shawn’s health insurance, 7) if Robert’s income increased, the above *431 payments would be renegotiated, 8) Robert must provide Jodi with an annual sworn statement, beginning every January 1st, hereafter, as to his total monthly income, and 9) if Robert or J odi were to initiate a court action with regard to this agreement, the unsuccessful party would pay the prevailing party’s attorney fees.

In June, 1987, Robert and Jodi orally modified the Stipulation and Order. Robert and Jodi, however, disagree as to the terms of the oral modification. In any event, Robert decreased his monthly child support payment beginning in June, 1987, from $200.00 to $180.00, which resulted in total payments to Jodi of $215.00, $180.00 for child support payment and $35.00 toward the delinquent child support payment.

Beginning January 1,1987, to the present, Robert failed to provide Jodi with annual sworn statements of his monthly income, which Robert agreed to provide by the terms of the Stipulation and Order. Through this same time period, however, Robert consistently paid Jodi $215.00 a month, $180.00 for child support and $35.00 toward the pre-1987 child support delinquency. Two years later, on June 15, 1989, Jodi filed a Petition for Income Deduction, a Motion to Increase Support, a Motion for Order to Show Cause, and on November 3,1989, a Motion for Attorney’s Fees.

On December 11,1989, the District Court: 1) denied Jodi’s Petition for Income Deduction because Jodi failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that Robert was three months in arrears in child support payments as specified in § 40-5-304, MCA, and the 1989 amendments to § 40-5-204, MCA, which provide for an exception to the three-month delinquency requirement for income deduction, was not applicable here because the statute’s effective date was January 1,1990,2) granted in part and denied in part Jodi’s Motion to Increase Child Support, with the court taking into consideration Robert’s children from a subsequent marriage, and 3) granted in part and denied in part Jodi’s motion for attorney fees based upon her partial success of this court action. From these decisions, Jodi appeals.

1. Did the District Court err in denying appellant’s Petition for Income Deduction?

Petition for Income Deduction, Jodi requested that Robert be subject to withholding of his income regarding his child support payments, based upon his still outstanding pre-1987 delinquent child support obligation and the disputed child support payments following the June, 1987 oral agreement, under § 40-5-301, et. seq., MCA. *432 Income deduction, however, is allowed only when payments are considered delinquent. Section 40-5-304, MCA, provides:

“Nonpayment of child support required by any order of a district court or by a similar order of a court of another jurisdiction becomes delinquent under this part when the amount owed is equal to 3 months of child support payments.”

The District Court found that Jodi did not prove that Robert was delinquent in an amount equal to three months of child support payments because of the intervening January 7,1987 Stipulation and Order, which dealt with the pre-1987 delinquency and altered the 1981 Agreement. Additionally, because the terms of the 1987 oral agreement are disputed and the agreed upon amount of Robert’s child support payment is unclear, the District Court held that Jodi did not prove by a preponderance of the evidence that Robert was delinquent in an amount equal to three months of child support with regard to any child support payments due after June, 1987.

Jodi, however, argues that it does not matter whether Robert was delinquent in an amount equal to three months of child support under the January 7, 1987 Stipulation and Order, and the 1987 oral agreement; it matters only that Robert was over three months delinquent under the 1981 Agreement. We disagree and hold that Robert is not delinquent in an amount equal to three months in his child support obligation because of the intervening January 7,1987 Stipulation and Order, as well as the 1987 oral agreement, both of which altered the terms of the 1981 Agreement. To hold otherwise would result in repeated litigation with regard to modification of agreements, stipulated and approved by court order, and executed oral agreements.

Jodi further argues that even if Robert is not determined to be three months delinquent in child support payments, Robert is still subject to income deduction because of the 1989 amendments to § 40-4-204, MCA, which provide for automatic withholding of child support payments with regard to modifications of existing child support agreements. See § 40-4-204(5), MCA.

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Bluebook (online)
798 P.2d 117, 244 Mont. 428, 1990 Mont. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-hall-mont-1990.