In re the Marriage of Matar

300 P.3d 144, 353 Or. 446, 2013 Ore. LEXIS 276
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 2013
DocketCC C032405DRC; CA A143331; SC S060064
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 300 P.3d 144 (In re the Marriage of Matar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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 Matar, 300 P.3d 144, 353 Or. 446, 2013 Ore. LEXIS 276 (Or. 2013).

Opinion

WALTERS, J.

In this domestic relations case, we decide that, pursuant to ORS 107.1041 and ORS 107.135(15),2 a court may enforce an agreement between parents not to seek modification of the child support terms of a stipulated judgment of dissolution unless to do so would violate the law or contravene public policy. We also decide that, in this case, father did not demonstrate that enforcement of his nonmodification agreement with mother violated the law or contravened public policy. Consequently, we affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals and the judgment of the circuit court. Matar and Harake, 246 Or App 317, 270 P3d 257 (2011).

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The relevant facts are undisputed and are taken from the record. In February 2005, the parties stipulated to a judgment dissolving their marriage. At that time, the parties had been married for seven years and had two minor children, then ages four and six. The judgment provided that the parties would have joint legal custody of their children, with mother having primary physical custody and father having reasonable parenting time. It also required that father pay child support of $1,750 per month, which exceeded by $8 the presumptively correct amount indicated by application of the Oregon Child Support Guidelines Formula (Child Support Formula).3 The judgment provided [449]*449that neither party would seek modification of that support obligation:

“This agreement has been made with the understanding that child support will not be reduced and shall continue to be paid until the children are 21 years old. The parties stipulate that neither will seek a support modification due to income changes of the parties, nor due to a change of circumstances. For example, the child support amount will remain consistent even if Father has the children 50% of the time. This is a deviated support arrangement and came about due to the position of this case and the original decree’s order of judgment.”

The judgment further provided that “[n] either party shall be awarded or pay spousal support because of the child support agreement reached by the parties” and that “[t]he parties have reached complete agreement on the terms of their dissolution with regard to marital assets and debts, custody, parenting time, and child support as set forth herein.” Both parties were represented by counsel, and father did not object to or appeal the entry of the stipulated judgment at the time.

In 2009, father filed a motion to require mother to appear and show cause why father’s child support obligation should not be reduced based on an alleged reduction in his monthly income from $7,300 to $6,200 and his support of two additional children.4 Mother filed a response and pleaded an affirmative defense of waiver, attaching and incorporating by reference a copy of the parties’ stipulated judgment. Mother also filed a motion to dismiss and asserted that father’s agreement not to seek a reduction in [450]*450child support due to a change in his income barred father from seeking modification of the stipulated child support award.

The parties agreed that the court should decide, as a preliminary matter, the legal issue raised by mother’s motion to dismiss, and both parties filed memoranda in support of their positions. Father argued that (1) “child support is a right of the child not of the parents, and there is a strong public policy against parties contracting around the [Child Support Formula]”; (2) the terms of marital settlement agreements may not deprive a court of its authority to modify child support due to a substantial change in circumstances; and (3) because father had demonstrated a substantial change in circumstances, enforcement of the nonmodification provision violated public policy and was unenforceable.

At a hearing on mother’s motion, the trial court indicated that it intended to grant the motion but, understanding that father was considering an appeal, scheduled a second hearing and asked that the parties present the evidence that they would have presented had mother not sought dismissal of the proceeding. At the conclusion of that second hearing, the court entered a Supplemental Judgment of Dismissal and, as requested by mother, made specific Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law. The court found that father had shown a substantial change in circumstances through reduction in his income but that he had entered into a nonmodification agreement that neither divested the court of jurisdiction nor violated public policy. Therefore, the court concluded, the parties’ nonmodification agreement was enforceable, and father’s motion for modification should be dismissed.

As the trial court anticipated, father appealed. In the Court of Appeals, father argued that the parties’ non-modification agreement was necessarily contrary to public policy, because it prevented the court from ensuring that father’s child support obligation conformed with the Child Support Formula and, in doing so, divested the court of its role in protecting children. Father also asserted that the legislature could not have intended that ORS 107.104 and ORS [451]*451107.135(15) apply to provisions of marital settlement agreements pertaining to child support and that the trial court had erred in dismissing father’s motion for modification.

The Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment of the trial court. Matar, 246 Or App at 319. The court reasoned that ORS 107.104(1) and ORS 107.135(15)(a) create a presumption in favor of enforcing stipulated agreements resolving suits for marital dissolution, annulment, and separation — a presumption that applies to the child support terms in those agreements. Id. at 320. An agreement that purported to divest the court of authority to modify child support would not be enforceable. However, the court held, Oregon law does not prohibit parties from waiving the right to seek modification of child support; such agreements are enforceable unless they violate the law or contravene public policy. Id. at 322. In this case, the court concluded, the parties’ agreement did not do so, and the trial court did not err. Id. at 323. We allowed father’s petition for review to consider the relationship between two sets of statutes: (1) those that impose child support obligations and establish procedures and standards for determining and modifying child support; and (2) those that provide for judicial enforcement of the terms of marital settlement agreements.

Before this court, father essentially renews his previous arguments. First, he argues that the legislature did not intend the statutes that provide for judicial enforcement of martial settlement agreements (ORS 107.104 and ORS 107.135

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Matar and Harake
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
300 P.3d 144, 353 Or. 446, 2013 Ore. LEXIS 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-matar-or-2013.