Larson v. Larson

569 N.E.2d 406, 30 Mass. App. Ct. 418, 1991 Mass. App. LEXIS 214
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedApril 1, 1991
Docket90-P-1297
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 569 N.E.2d 406 (Larson v. Larson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Larson v. Larson, 569 N.E.2d 406, 30 Mass. App. Ct. 418, 1991 Mass. App. LEXIS 214 (Mass. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

Laurence, J.

The present appeal contests the validity of Probate Court contempt judgments against Richard A. Larson (Richard) for refusing to make child support payments to Judy R. Larson (Judy), as required by a separation agree *419 ment (the agreement) incorporated into, but explicitly surviving, the parties’ divorce judgment. 1 Richard presents several arguments against the judgments and the judge’s refusal to set them aside on his motions. All of them condense to a single proposition: that the Probate Court lacked jurisdiction to enter the judgments. Richard’s position, however, is based upon a misreading of a prior opinion of this court and a misapplication of principles of res judicata and related doctrines. We, accordingly, affirm the judgments.

1. The prior proceedings. Richard, a surgeon, and Judy, a homemaker, obtained a judgment of divorce nisi from the Middlesex Probate and Family Court on March 31, 1983. The judgment ordered the parties to comply with the provisions of the agreement, which expressly survived the judgment with independent legal significance. The agreement required that Richard would pay Judy, as unallocated alimony for her support and that of the three children of the marriage (who were then nineteen, sixteen, and thirteen years old), the sum of $2,500 per month. 2

The agreement provided that the monthly payments were to continue until certain specified events. The only terminating event relevant to this litigation was to occur when all of the children became “emancipated according to law.” The record is silent as to what the parties intended by that phrase. Upon that event, Richard’s payments to Judy would cease to include child support and would equal thirty percent of his annual gross earned income. The agreement also obligated Richard to pay the children’s educational and related expenses. Finally, it declared that any “dispute or misunderstanding arising under this [ajgreement as to the meaning, *420 interpretation, application or performance of any provision of this [agreement . . . shall be submitted to the Middlesex Probate and Family Court if the parties are unable to resolve the question by mutual agreement.”

When the youngest child, Elizabeth, turned eighteen on April 1, 1987, Richard unilaterally decreased the amount of his monthly payments to Judy to one-twelfth of thirty percent of his annual gross earned income, which had by then been much diminished as a result of his voluntary reduction of the level of his medical practice. On August 24, 1987, Judy filed a complaint for contempt alleging that Richard’s reduction in payments as of April 1, 1987, and each month thereafter violated the divorce judgment.

It was “apparent that Richard’s reduction in support payments was pursuant to the emancipation clause of the agreement.” Larson v. Larson, 28 Mass. App. Ct. 338, 339 n.l (1990) (Larson I). Richard appears to have implicitly adopted the position that Elizabeth’s eighteenth birthday on April 1, 1987, had triggered the support termination provision of the agreement and that the monthly child support obligation had thereupon ceased. 3 Inexplicably, however, neither party referred to or relied upon the agreement in the course of the proceedings on Judy’s 1987 complaint for contempt. Instead, they tried the case on the single legal theory that G. L. c. 208, § 28, governed Judy’s entitlement to child support.3 4 Richard submitted as the outcome-determinative is *421 sue that Judy failed to satisfy one of the two statutory standards authorizing the court to order support for a child between the ages of eighteen and twenty-one, namely, whether Elizabeth was “principally dependent” upon her for maintenance. See Larson I, supra at 339-341.

The judge disagreed with Richard and found for Judy on the “sole question” whether Elizabeth was “principally dependent” upon her. Id. at 340. 5 On the first appeal, in addition to criticizing the judge’s application of G. L. c. 208, § 28, Richard advanced a contention not made below: “that the judge erred in determining that Elizabeth was not ‘emancipated according to law’ as provided in the separation agreement . . . [because] under Massachusetts law a child becomes emancipated upon attaining the age of eighteen years.” Larson I, supra at 340.

This court, however, rejected Richard’s belated new argument in Larson I. We observed that the case had been tried below solely on the theory of the applicability of G. L. c. 208, § 28, reminded Richard of the settled principle that the theory of law on which by assent a case is tried cannot be disregarded when the case comes before an appellate court for review, and stated unambiguously that “[w]e, therefore, do not consider the question whether Elizabeth was emancipated as matter of law upon attaining the age of eighteen.” Larson I, supra at 341. We affirmed the contempt judgment on the issue of principal dependency under G. L. c. 208, § 28, and authorized Judy to file a petition for appellate costs and fees.

2. The present proceedings. On April 1, 1990, when Elizabeth, then a college junior, became twenty-one, Richard again curtailed his child support payments, without explanation. On May 29, 1990, Judy filed a new complaint for contempt for the full amounts of the April and May, 1990, pay- *422 merits. 6 Richard, who had by that time left Massachusetts to reside in Maine, was personally served on June 13, 1990, with copies of the complaint and the summons, which ordered him to appear at the Probate Court at 9:00 a.m. on August 1, 1990. At some point in early June, 1990, Richard’s then attorney also received copies of these documents from Judy’s attorney.

Meanwhile, Judy, acting pursuant to the authorization of Larson /, supra at 343-344, had filed a petition with this court for counsel fees and costs in connection with the first appeal on May 24, 1990. Though given a reasonable time to respond to the petition, Richard failed to do so, and neither he nor his counsel appeared at the scheduled June 26, 1990, hearing on the petition. On June 26, 1990, Richard was ordered by this court to pay Judy $9,193.57 as counsel fees and costs on or before July 26, 1990. The order further provided that “[a]ny proceedings necessary to enforce payment are to be brought in the Probate Court.” On July 27, 1990, Judy, having heard nothing from either Richard or his counsel, amended her complaint for contempt by adding claims for his failure to pay the fees and costs awarded by this court, as well as for his continued failure to make $2,600 payments for June and July, 1990.

At the appointed August 1, 1990, contempt hearing before the Probate Court, neither Richard nor his counsel was present.

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Bluebook (online)
569 N.E.2d 406, 30 Mass. App. Ct. 418, 1991 Mass. App. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larson-v-larson-massappct-1991.