Jamie Steven Perrodin v. Lycia Eagen Perrodin

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 8, 2022
Docket2021CA0759
StatusUnknown

This text of Jamie Steven Perrodin v. Lycia Eagen Perrodin (Jamie Steven Perrodin v. Lycia Eagen Perrodin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jamie Steven Perrodin v. Lycia Eagen Perrodin, (La. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

J NO. 2021 CA 0759

4,

rl JAMIE STEVEN PERRODIN

l VERSUS

LYCIA EAGEN PERRODIN

Judgment Rendered. MAR 0 8 2022

Appealed from the 17th Judicial District Court In and for the Parish of Lafourche State of Louisiana Case No. 134681

The Honorable Marla M. Abel, Judge Presiding

Leslie J. Clement, Jr. Counsel for Defendant/Appellant Thibodaux, Louisiana Lycia Eagen Perrodin

Melanie Chatagnier Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellee Thibodaux, Louisiana Jamie Steven Perrodin

BEFORE: McDONALD, THERIOT, AND WOLFE, JJ. THERIOT, J.

This appeal arises from the denial of a motion to reinstate spousal support.

For the reasons set forth herein, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Jamie Perrodin and Lycia Perrodin were married in 1999. In 2018, Jamie

filed a petition for divorce. Lycia filed a reconventional demand, requesting

spousal support. Pursuant to a July 10, 2018 stipulated judgment, the parties

agreed that Jamie would pay Lycia $ 1, 500. 00 per month in interim spousal

support, effective March 2, 2018, Lycia would continue to live in the former

matrimonial domicile until the judgment of divorce, and Jamie would pay the

monthly mortgage note.

In September 2018, Lycia filed a rule to increase spousal support, alleging a

material change in circumstances had occurred since the July 2018 stipulated

judgment. Lycia alleged that she had recently been diagnosed with Guillain-Barre

Syndrome and West Nile Virus and is unable to work because of her

circumstances. On November 28, 2018,' the parties entered a consent judgment,

stipulating that Lycia was free from fault in the breakup of the marriage and

agreeing that Jamie would pay interim spousal support in the amount of $2, 600. 00

per month, beginning October 1, 2018.

On January 15, 2019, Lycia filed a rule seeking final spousal support. The

parties were divorced by judgment signed on March 7, 2019. In a stipulated

judgment signed May 23, 2019, the parties agreed that Jamie would pay final

spousal support in the amount of $2, 600. 00 per month from May 2019 through

September 2019, and then would pay final spousal support in the amount of

1, 400. 00 per month from October 2019 through September 2020. The stipulated

judgment further provided that the parties would list the former matrimonial

This judgment was signed by the trial court on April 29, 2019. domicile for sale by July 1, 2019, and that Jamie would continue to pay the

monthly mortgage note, subject to a right of reimbursement upon partition of the

community property.

On December 11, 2019, Lycia filed a rule to modify spousal support,

alleging that a material change in circumstances had occurred since the last

stipulated judgment and requesting an increase in final spousal support. The

hearing on the rule was continued a number of times, primarily due to COVID- 19,

and in October of 2020, the parties agreed to submit memoranda, along with

affidavits and other evidence, for the court to consider in lieu of a live hearing on

the rule. To this end, Lycia filed a supplemental rule to modify spousal support,

along with a memorandum and exhibits. Among the exhibits, Lycia filed an

income and expense affidavit dated October 22, 2020. Included in her " current,

ongoing expenses," which totaled $ 6, 300. 00 per month, was monthly rent in the

amount of $ 1, 500. 00. Lycia also filed an affidavit dated October 22, 2020, in

which she stated that her monthly expenses had significantly increased since the

May 2019 stipulated judgment. In this affidavit, Lycia stated that " there is now a

contract for [the former matrimonial domicile] to be sold in early November of this

year ... [ and] I need to find another place to live and a place to store some of the

contents of the home. Because of this, I will have rental expenses which I did not

previously have."

On December 7, 2020, after considering the parties' submissions, the trial

court rendered judgment denying Lycia' s rule to modify spousal support,

concluding that she had failed to prove a substantial and continuing material

change in circumstances since the last award for support. In written reasons for

judgment, the trial court noted that despite Lycia' s assertions that her mental and

physical condition had deteriorated since the May 2019 stipulated judgment, the

medical records presented actually showed that her physical condition had

3 remained the same, if not improved, since that time. The trial court further noted

that the only change in circumstances apparent from the medical records is Lycia' s

increased alcohol use. The trial court pointed out that Lycia has the education to

be gainfully employed and has failed to show that she does not have the ability to

earn a sufficient income. Finally, the trial court noted that Lycia' s allegations of

increased expenses were not supported by credible evidence or were of her own

choosing.

On December 17, 2020, only ten days after the trial court' s most recent

judgment denying her rule to modify spousal support, Lycia filed another rule to

modify/reinstate spousal support, again alleging a material change in

circumstances. In this rule, Lycia alleged that since the former family home was

sold in November 2020, she was required to move out and incur rental expenses.

Additionally, she alleged that her physical and psychological condition had further

deteriorated.

A hearing was held on April 8, 2021, at which Lycia filed a new income and

expense affidavit dated March 16, 2021, showing monthly expenses totaling

3, 579. 50, which is $ 2, 720. 50 less per month than the amount listed in the

affidavit filed with her previous rule. This new amount included a monthly rental

expense of $ 1, 300. 00. 2 Lycia also filed a copy of her apartment lease executed

December 30, 2020, reflecting a monthly rent of $ 1, 300. 00 and a $ 1, 300. 00

damage deposit; however, Lycia testified at the hearing that she only paid $ 200. 00

towards the deposit and was currently three months behind on rent payments.

Although the only income Lycia listed in her affidavit was $ 192. 00 per month in

food stamps, she testified regarding other funds she had received. Lycia testified

that she borrows money from friends to pay expenses, such as the $ 200. 00 per

2 Although her October 22, 2020 income and expense affidavit submitted in connection with the most recent rule included $ 1, 500.00 in monthly rental/ mortgage expenses, Lycia explained at the hearing on the instant rule that the 1, 500. 00 was just an anticipated expense, not one she actually incurred.

11 month she pays her maid. In total, Lycia testified that she has borrowed

13, 500. 00 from friends to meet expenses since her spousal support was reduced.

She also testified that she sold the parties' household furnishings for approximately

800. 00, which Jamie had allowed her to keep, and that Jamie had given her

13, 300. 00 in exchange for her agreement to accept a lower offer on the house,

which sum would not be included in the partition.

Noting that Lycia' s current monthly rent is actually less than the amount

listed for monthly housing expenses in her previous rule to modify support, the

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Related

Richards v. Richards
147 So. 3d 800 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2014)

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Jamie Steven Perrodin v. Lycia Eagen Perrodin, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jamie-steven-perrodin-v-lycia-eagen-perrodin-lactapp-2022.