Karen Patricia Alcalde v. Michael C. Alcalde

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJune 24, 2026
Docket3D2025-1756
StatusPublished

This text of Karen Patricia Alcalde v. Michael C. Alcalde (Karen Patricia Alcalde v. Michael C. Alcalde) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Karen Patricia Alcalde v. Michael C. Alcalde, (Fla. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida

Opinion filed June 24, 2026. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.

________________

No. 3D25-1756 Lower Tribunal No. 08-20982-FC-04 ________________

Karen Patricia Alcalde, Appellant,

vs.

Michael C. Alcalde, Appellee.

An Appeal from a non-final order from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Ivonne Cuesta, Judge.

Fell Law Group, PLLC, and Brian D. Fell (Plantation), for appellant.

Francisco J. Vargas, for appellee.

Before LOGUE, LINDSEY, and GORDO, JJ.

LOGUE, J.

The issue raised on appeal is whether the trial court abused its

discretion by applying the equitable defense of laches to deny the former wife’s request for child support arrearages for the seven-year period of time

the former wife and former husband reconciled and cohabitated following

their dissolution of marriage. Based on the trial court’s credibility

determinations and the facts of this case, we affirm.

BACKGROUND

The parties divorced in October 2008. Pursuant to their marital

settlement agreement (“MSA”), the parties agreed that the former husband

would keep the marital home and be responsible for the existing mortgage

and all expenses related to the home. The parties also agreed that the former

husband would pay the former wife $800 per month in child support for the

parties’ minor son and their expected child. The MSA contained (1) a

reconciliation provision that provided that the MSA would remain in full force

and effect even if the parties attempted to reconcile, reconciled, or

cohabitated, and (2) a modification and waiver provision requiring that all

modifications or waivers of provisions be in writing.

It is undisputed that the parties reconciled when the former wife and

the parties’ minor children moved into the former husband’s home on

October 1, 2009, and this reconciliation lasted through June 2015, when the

former wife and the parties’ youngest child moved out. Prior to the

cohabitation period, the former husband was current on his child support

2 obligations to the former wife. Further, after the parties separated again in

June 2015, the parties’ fourteen-year-old child remained residing with the

former husband and infrequently visited the former wife.

Following the seven-year cohabitation period, the parties engaged in

substantial litigation. On December 30, 2016, the former wife filed a petition

requesting to modify timesharing, parental responsibility, and the parenting

plan, and she also alleged the former husband stopped paying child support

in September 2009. Thereafter, the trial court entered a timesharing order on

October 16, 2017, reserving jurisdiction to address child support based on

the timesharing order.

In June 2019, the former wife filed the motion at issue in this appeal—

Motion to Enforce Delinquent Child Support and Other Relief—seeking to

enforce back child support from the date of their cohabitation on October 1,

2009. In response, the former husband asserted that the former wife’s motion

should be denied based on laches for (1) the cohabitation period—October

1, 2009 through June 2015, and (2) the post-cohabitation period through

December 30, 2016, when the former wife first asserted a claim for

retroactive child support.

Following this Court’s decision and remand in Alcalde v. Alcalde, 340

So. 3d 529, 531 (Fla. 3d DCA 2022), the trial court conduct an evidentiary

3 hearing on the issues of delinquent child support and laches as ordered by

this Court. Id. At the evidentiary hearing, the former husband and former wife

contradicted each other on key factual issues.

The former husband testified that when he and the former wife started

to cohabitate, the former wife told him, “I’m not going to sweat you for the

$800 because we’re living together,” and during the entire cohabitation

period, the former wife never asked him to pay child support. The former

husband also testified that he paid almost all of the household and children’s

expenses, totaling approximately $3,500 per month. He paid these expenses

from cash he obtained from the operation of an illegal marijuana grow house

that he operated until he was arrested. He testified that the former wife was

aware that the cash he used came from the operation of the illegal grow

house.

The former husband also testified that, if he knew the former wife would

claim child support for the cohabitation period, he would have either kept a

log of all cash payments or paid the former wife $800 per month in child

support and then charge her for rent and other household-related expenses

to offset the $800. He would not have allowed her to live rent free in his

house. The former husband also acknowledged that he learned in 2016 that

the former wife was going to pursue child support arrearages but he did not

4 attempt to compile records to prove he had paid the household expenses

because the funds came from the operation of his illegal marijuana grow

In contrast, the former wife testified that, during the cohabitation period,

she never told the former husband that she would not “sweat” him for the

child support payment. Further, she always intended to claim the unpaid child

support because she “was paying everything” with the money she earned,

and the former husband made no financial contributions to the household.

She also denied knowing anything about the marijuana grow house until the

former husband was arrested.

The former husband also testified as to the parties’ litigation following

the cohabitation period, including several motions filed by the former wife

and a domestic violence action she filed against him that was later

dismissed. He also testified that he had spent about $92,000 on attorney’s

fees, and a prior judge ordered the former wife to pay him about $41,000 of

those fees. At the hearing, the trial court took judicial notice of the entire

dissolution of marriage file and the domestic violence case.

At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court requested that the

parties submit proposed orders. After receiving the parties’ proposed orders,

the trial court entered the order under review. In the order, the trial court

5 repeatedly found the former wife’s testimony was not credible.

The trial court concluded that the former wife’s claim for child support

arrearages was barred by the equitable doctrine of laches for the

cohabitation period and through December 30, 2016, when the former wife

first sought child support. The trial court also stated that its “ruling does not

foreclose the Former Wife’s right to seek retroactive or prospective child

support from December 30, 2016, forward. That issue is preserved for

determination at the separately scheduled hearing on the calculation of any

such support obligation.” Importantly, the trial court also found:

[T]here was no evidence presented that limiting the enforcement period as set forth in this Order would negatively impact the present or future welfare of either child. The older child is now emancipated and residing with the Former Husband, and the parties currently exercise shared timesharing of their minor daughter. Accordingly, the Court finds this ruling does not impair the children’s interests and serves the broader goal of equitable resolution.

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Related

Ticktin v. Kearin
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Karen Patricia Alcalde v. Michael C. Alcalde, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/karen-patricia-alcalde-v-michael-c-alcalde-fladistctapp-2026.