Kenneth E. Smith v. Sandra K. Smith

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 2008
Docket2008-CA-00683-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Kenneth E. Smith v. Sandra K. Smith (Kenneth E. Smith v. Sandra K. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kenneth E. Smith v. Sandra K. Smith, (Mich. 2008).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2008-CA-00683-SCT

KENNETH E. SMITH

v.

SANDRA K. SMITH

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/25/2008 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. DAN H. FAIRLY COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: RANKIN COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: JULIE ANN EPPS E. MICHAEL MARKS ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: SANDRA K. SMITH (PRO SE) NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - DOMESTIC RELATIONS DISPOSITION: REVERSED AND REMANDED -10/29/2009 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE WALLER, C.J., LAMAR AND PIERCE, JJ.

PIERCE, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Kenneth E. Smith (Kenneth) and Sandra K. Smith (Sandra) were granted a divorce

on June 14, 1989, in Rankin County. Consistent with the final divorce decree, Sandra was

ordered to pay $125 per month in child support to Kenneth. Kenneth filed a petition for

contempt on December 19, 2007, in which he alleged that Sandra owed $24,000 in past-due

child support. This case was then referred to a family master subject to the final approval of

the chancellor.

¶2. Sandra conceded at trial that she was in contempt but claimed a credit against the

$24,000 arrearage. The family master found that Sandra was entitled to a credit of $14,000 for sums Sandra allegedly had withheld from her paycheck and for time the child allegedly

had lived with Sandra. Based on the credits allowed by the family master, Sandra was found

to be in civil contempt of court and to owe a balance of $10,000 in child-support arrearage.

In addition, he awarded attorney’s fees and court costs to Kenneth. These findings were

accepted by the chancellor, becoming a judgment of the trial court. Kenneth timely appeals,

arguing that the judgment amount was improperly reduced by the trial court.1

FACTS

¶3. Kenneth and Sandra (now Sandra Spurlock) were granted a divorce in Rankin County

on June 14, 1989. One child was born to this marriage, Nicki Charm Smith (Nicki), on

February 17, 1988, with custody granted to Kenneth upon divorce. Consistent with the final

divorce decree, the trial court ordered Sandra to pay $125 per month as child support to

Kenneth, in addition to the child’s medical, dental, and hospital expenses, with the first child-

support payment to begin July 1, 1989.

¶4. Kenneth filed an action for contempt in December 2007 for past-due child support in

the sum of $24,000.2 At trial, Sandra sought credit against the $24,000 alleged past-due

child-support amount, claiming she had paid $35 per week from March 1991 until November

1994 for child support that was withheld by her employer while she was employed at Ram-

1 Heretofore, the findings of the family master that have been approved by the chancellor and thus become a judgment of the trial court will be referred to as the findings of the trial court for purposes of clarity. 2 The $24,000 total was gathered from a personal spreadsheet titled “Nicki’s Child Support Payments” that Kenneth had maintained since the divorce decree in 1989 until Nicki’s eighteenth birthday in February 2006. Kenneth did not seek child support beyond February 2006, because Nicki no longer lived with either parent or depended on their support.

2 Fab, Inc., (Ram-Fab) in Crossett, Arkansas.3 Sandra also sought credit for the time period

between March 2002 and April 2004 when Sandra claimed Nicki lived with Sandra and not

Kenneth.

¶5. Sandra produced only testimonial evidence of the withholding from her wages during

employment in Arkansas. Sandra explained that her lack of documentation was because

Ram-Fab had undergone many personnel changes, and while Ram-Fab had searched for the

documents, Sandra had been told the records were lost and/or destroyed. In response to

Sandra’s testimony, Kenneth denied receiving any of the $35-per-week payments. No

documentation or records were provided to confirm or deny these payments by either side.

¶6. Sandra likewise provided only testimonial evidence that Nicki had lived with her from

March 2002 until April 2004, stating that she had fed Nicki, that Nicki had slept in Sandra’s

house, that Sandra had supported Nicki, and that Sandra had taken Nicki to school every day.

No documentation or records were provided to confirm or deny this testimony at trial, except

for a Department of Human Services Affidavit of Accounting in which Kenneth stated that

Nicki no longer lived with him after her eighteenth birthday.4

¶7. Testimony provided by Nicki corroborated that she had spent time in her mother’s

care “off and on,” but Nicki disputed her actual residence at the time. Kenneth disputed that

Nicki had lived with Sandra, but stated that Nicki had divided time among Kenneth’s home,

3 No court order for withholding was entered by the court. This is asserted as an out- of-court, voluntary action by Sandra. 4 This issue becomes further convoluted in the affidavit in which Kenneth’s mother stated that Nicki lived with her as of February 26, 2006, and did not mention Nicki living with either parent. No further information about that statement was provided.

3 Kenneth’s mother’s home, and Sandra’s home at the child’s will, but she had lived with

¶8. The trial court noted that the testimony of the parties was extremely unclear. The trial

court stated that “testimony from both sides has been very confusing, very sporadic about

payments received, about payments that were supposedly made – supposedly credited.” The

trial court also stated that there was confusion as to where the child lived, who she lived with,

and who was responsible for the child’s support at various periods of time. Finally, the trial

court established that “if the child was living with the mother then she should be entitled to

credits.”

¶9. In issuance of the final decree, the trial court credited Sandra $14,000 against the

child-support judgment for the payments made “while [Sandra] was working in Arkansas that

were withheld from her paycheck and for the periods of time that the child lived with

[Sandra] and that [Sandra] was responsible for the child’s support.” 5 Thus, the trial court

found the child-support arrearage to be $10,000.

¶10. The trial court ordered that Sandra pay $200 per month until the judgment is paid in

full, including the legal interest rate of eight percent. The trial court also ordered Sandra to

pay $750 in attorney’s fees, $107 in court costs, and a $35 process fee within sixty days of

the hearing. This judgment was approved in totality by the chancellor on March 25, 2008.

LEGAL ANALYSIS

5 The trial court does not state how the $14,000 total was calculated. However, trial testimony showed that Sandra, on her own behalf, requested and affirmed that she was seeking $11,000 in credits against her $24,000 arrearage.

4 ¶11. The parties did not disagree that Sandra was, in fact, in contempt for failure to pay

child support. Kenneth appeals only the credit applied to the child support owed and the

determination of the amount of credit.

¶12. Domestic-relations matters are reviewed under the limited substantial-

evidence/manifest-error rule. Evans v. Evans, 994 So. 2d 765, 768 (Miss. 2008) (citing

Giannaris v. Giannaris, 960 So. 2d 462, 467 (Miss. 2007)). This means a chancellor’s

findings will not be disturbed unless the chancellor was “manifestly wrong, clearly

erroneous, or an erroneous legal standard was applied.” Id. at 768. This Court will find

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Kenneth E. Smith v. Sandra K. Smith, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenneth-e-smith-v-sandra-k-smith-miss-2008.